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1.1 ! misho 1: % url.sty ver 1.2 19-Oct-1996 Donald Arseneau asnd@triumf.ca ! 2: % ! 3: % A form of \verb that allows linebreaks at certain characters or ! 4: % combinations of characters, accepts reconfiguration, and can usually ! 5: % be used in the argument to another command. It is intended for email ! 6: % addresses, hypertext links, directories/paths, etc., which normally ! 7: % have no spaces. The font may be selected using the \urlstyle command, ! 8: % and new url-like commands can be defined using \urldef. ! 9: % ! 10: % Usage: Conditions: ! 11: % \url{ } If the argument contains any "%", "#", or "^^", or ends with ! 12: % "\", it can't be used in the argument to another command. ! 13: % The argument must not contain unbalanced braces. ! 14: % \url| | ...where "|" is any character not used in the argument and not ! 15: % "{". The same restrictions as above except that the argument ! 16: % may contain unbalanced braces. ! 17: % \xyz for "\xyz" a defined-url; this can be used anywhere, no matter ! 18: % what characters it contains. ! 19: % ! 20: % See further instructions after "\endinput" ! 21: % ! 22: \def\Url@ttdo{% style assignments for tt fonts or T1 encoding ! 23: \def\UrlBreaks{\do\.\do\@\do\\\do\/\do\!\do\_\do\|\do\%\do\;\do\>\do\]% ! 24: \do\)\do\,\do\?\do\'\do\+\do\=}% ! 25: \def\UrlBigBreaks{\do\:\do@url@hyp}% ! 26: \def\UrlNoBreaks{\do\(\do\[\do\{\do\<}% (unnecessary) ! 27: \def\UrlSpecials{\do\ {\ }}% ! 28: \def\UrlOrds{\do\*\do\-\do\~}% any ordinary characters that aren't usually ! 29: } ! 30: \def\Url@do{% style assignments for OT1 fonts except tt ! 31: \def\UrlBreaks{\do\.\do\@\do\/\do\!\do\%\do\;\do\]\do\)\do\,\do\?\do\+\do\=}% ! 32: \def\UrlBigBreaks{\do\:\do@url@hyp}% ! 33: \def\UrlNoBreaks{\do\(\do\[\do\{}% prevents breaks after *next* character ! 34: \def\UrlSpecials{\do\<{\langle}\do\>{\mathbin{\rangle}}\do\_{\_% ! 35: \penalty\@m}\do\|{\mid}\do\{{\lbrace}\do\}{\mathbin{\rbrace}}\do ! 36: \\{\mathbin{\backslash}}\do\~{\mathord{{}^{\textstyle\sim}}}\do\ {\ }}% ! 37: \def\UrlOrds{\do\'\do\"\do\-}% ! 38: } ! 39: \def\url@ttstyle{% ! 40: \@ifundefined{selectfont}{\def\UrlFont{\tt}}{\def\UrlFont{\ttfamily}}\Url@ttdo ! 41: } ! 42: \def\url@rmstyle{% ! 43: \@ifundefined{selectfont}{\def\UrlFont{\rm}}{\def\UrlFont{\rmfamily}}\Url@do ! 44: } ! 45: \def\url@sfstyle{% ! 46: \@ifundefined{selectfont}{\def\UrlFont{\sf}}{\def\UrlFont{\sffamily}}\Url@do ! 47: } ! 48: \def\url@samestyle{\ifdim\fontdimen\thr@@\font=\z@ \url@ttstyle \else ! 49: \url@rmstyle \fi \def\UrlFont{}} ! 50: ! 51: \@ifundefined{strip@prefix}{\def\strip@prefix#1>{}}{} ! 52: \@ifundefined{verbatim@nolig@list}{\def\verbatim@nolig@list{\do\`}}{} ! 53: ! 54: \def\Url{\relax\ifmmode\@nomatherr$\fi ! 55: \UrlFont $\fam\z@ \textfont\z@\font ! 56: \let\do\@makeother \dospecials % verbatim catcodes ! 57: \catcode`{\@ne \catcode`}\tw@ % except braces ! 58: \medmuskip0mu \thickmuskip\medmuskip \thinmuskip\medmuskip ! 59: \@tempcnta\fam\multiply\@tempcnta\@cclvi ! 60: \let\do\set@mathcode \UrlOrds % ordinary characters that were special ! 61: \advance\@tempcnta 8192 \UrlBreaks % bin ! 62: \advance\@tempcnta 4096 \UrlBigBreaks % rel ! 63: \advance\@tempcnta 4096 \UrlNoBreaks % open ! 64: \let\do\set@mathact \UrlSpecials % active ! 65: \let\do\set@mathnolig \verbatim@nolig@list % prevent ligatures ! 66: \@ifnextchar\bgroup\Url@z\Url@y} ! 67: ! 68: \def\Url@y#1{\catcode`{11 \catcode`}11 ! 69: \def\@tempa##1#1{\Url@z{##1}}\@tempa} ! 70: \def\Url@z#1{\def\@tempa{#1}\expandafter\expandafter\expandafter\Url@Hook ! 71: \expandafter\strip@prefix\meaning\@tempa\UrlRight\m@th$\endgroup} ! 72: \def\Url@Hook{\UrlLeft} ! 73: \let\UrlRight\@empty ! 74: \let\UrlLeft\@empty ! 75: ! 76: \def\set@mathcode#1{\count@`#1\advance\count@\@tempcnta\mathcode`#1\count@} ! 77: \def\set@mathact#1#2{\mathcode`#132768 \lccode`\~`#1\lowercase{\def~{#2}}} ! 78: \def\set@mathnolig#1{\ifnum\mathcode`#1<32768 ! 79: \lccode`\~`#1\lowercase{\edef~{\mathchar\number\mathcode`#1_{\/}}}% ! 80: \mathcode`#132768 \fi} ! 81: ! 82: \def\urldef#1#2{\begingroup \setbox\z@\hbox\bgroup ! 83: \def\Url@z{\Url@def{#1}{#2}}#2} ! 84: \expandafter\ifx\csname DeclareRobustCommand\endcsname\relax ! 85: \def\Url@def#1#2#3{\m@th$\endgroup\egroup\endgroup ! 86: \def#1{#2{#3}}} ! 87: \else ! 88: \def\Url@def#1#2#3{\m@th$\endgroup\egroup\endgroup ! 89: \DeclareRobustCommand{#1}{#2{#3}}} ! 90: \fi ! 91: ! 92: \def\urlstyle#1{\csname url@#1style\endcsname} ! 93: ! 94: % Sample (and default) configuration: ! 95: % ! 96: \newcommand\url{\begingroup \Url} ! 97: % ! 98: \newcommand\path{\begingroup \urlstyle{tt}\Url} ! 99: % ! 100: % too many styles define \email like \address, so I will not define it. ! 101: % \newcommand\email{\begingroup \urlstyle{rm}\Url} ! 102: ! 103: % Process LaTeX \package options ! 104: % ! 105: \urlstyle{tt} ! 106: \let\Url@sppen\@M ! 107: \def\do@url@hyp{}% by default, no breaks after hyphens ! 108: ! 109: \@ifundefined{ProvidesPackage}{}{ ! 110: \ProvidesPackage{url}[1996/10/19 \space ver 1.2 \space ! 111: Verb mode for urls, email addresses, and file names] ! 112: \DeclareOption{hyphens}{\def\do@url@hyp{\do\-}}% allow breaks after hyphens ! 113: \DeclareOption{obeyspaces}{\let\Url@Hook\relax}% a flag for later ! 114: \DeclareOption{spaces}{\let\Url@sppen\relpenalty} ! 115: \DeclareOption{T1}{\let\Url@do\Url@ttdo} ! 116: \ProcessOptions ! 117: \ifx\Url@Hook\relax % [obeyspaces] was declared ! 118: \def\Url@Hook#1\UrlRight\m@th{\edef\@tempa{\noexpand\UrlLeft ! 119: \Url@retain#1\Url@nosp\, }\@tempa\UrlRight\m@th} ! 120: \def\Url@retain#1 {#1\penalty\Url@sppen\ \Url@retain} ! 121: \def\Url@nosp\,#1\Url@retain{} ! 122: \fi ! 123: } ! 124: ! 125: \endinput ! 126: % ! 127: % url.sty ver 1.2 19-Oct-1996 Donald Arseneau asnd@reg.triumf.ca ! 128: % ! 129: % This package defines "\url", a form of "\verb" that allows linebreaks, ! 130: % and can often be used in the argument to another command. It can be ! 131: % configured to print in different formats, and is particularly useful for ! 132: % hypertext links, email addresses, directories/paths, etc. The font may ! 133: % be selected using the "\urlstyle" command and pre-defined text can be ! 134: % stored with the "\urldef" command. New url-like commands can be defined, ! 135: % and a "\path" command is provided this way. ! 136: % ! 137: % Usage: Conditions: ! 138: % \url{ } If the argument contains any "%", "#", or "^^", or ends with ! 139: % "\", it can't be used in the argument to another command. ! 140: % The argument must not contain unbalanced braces. ! 141: % \url| | ...where "|" is any character not used in the argument and not ! 142: % "{". The same restrictions as above except that the argument ! 143: % may contain unbalanced braces. ! 144: % \xyz for "\xyz" a defined-url; this can be used anywhere, no matter ! 145: % what characters it contains. ! 146: % ! 147: % The "\url" command is fragile, and its argument is likely to be very ! 148: % fragile, but a defined-url is robust. ! 149: % ! 150: % Package Option: obeyspaces ! 151: % Ordinarily, all spaces are ignored in the url-text. The "[obeyspaces]" ! 152: % option allows spaces, but may introduce spurious spaces when a url ! 153: % containing "\" characters is given in the argument to another command. ! 154: % So if you need to obey spaces you can say "\usepackage[obeyspaces]{url}", ! 155: % and if you need both spaces and backslashes, use a `defined-url' for ! 156: % anything with "\". ! 157: % ! 158: % Package Option: hyphens ! 159: % Ordinarily, breaks are not allowed after "-" characters because this ! 160: % leads to confusion. (Is the "-" part of the address or just a hyphen?) ! 161: % The package option "[hyphens]" allows breaks after explicit hyphen ! 162: % characters. The "\url" command will *never ever* hyphenate words. ! 163: % ! 164: % Package Option: spaces ! 165: % Likewise, breaks are not usually allowed after spaces under the ! 166: % "[obeyspaces]" option, but giving the options "[obeyspaces,spaces]" ! 167: % will allow breaks at those spaces. ! 168: % ! 169: % Package Option: T1 ! 170: % This signifies that you will be using T1-encoded fonts which contain ! 171: % some characters missing from most older (OT1) encoded TeX fonts. This ! 172: % changes the default definition for "\urlstyle{rm}". ! 173: % ! 174: % Defining a defined-url: ! 175: % Take for example the email address "myself%node@gateway.net" which could ! 176: % not be given (using "\url" or "\verb") in a caption or parbox due to the ! 177: % percent sign. This address can be predefined with ! 178: % \urldef{\myself}\url{myself%node@gateway.net} or ! 179: % \urldef{\myself}\url|myself%node@gateway.net| ! 180: % and then you may use "\myself" instead of "\url{myself%node@gateway.net}" ! 181: % in an argument, and even in a moving argument like a caption because a ! 182: % defined-url is robust. ! 183: % ! 184: % Style: ! 185: % You can switch the style of printing using "\urlstyle{tt}", where "tt" ! 186: % can be any defined style. The pre-defined styles are "tt", "rm", "sf", ! 187: % and "same" which all allow the same linebreaks but different fonts -- ! 188: % the first three select a specific font and the "same" style uses the ! 189: % current text font. You can define your own styles with different fonts ! 190: % and/or line-breaking by following the explanations below. The "\url" ! 191: % command follows whatever the currently-set style dictates. ! 192: % ! 193: % Alternate commands: ! 194: % It may be desireable to have different things treated differently, each ! 195: % in a predefined style; e.g., if you want directory paths to always be ! 196: % in tt and email addresses to be rm, then you would define new url-like ! 197: % commands as follows: ! 198: % ! 199: % \newcommand\email{\begingroup \urlstyle{rm}\Url} ! 200: % \newcommand\directory{\begingroup \urlstyle{tt}\Url} ! 201: % ! 202: % You must follow this format closely, and NOTE that the final command is ! 203: % "\Url", not "\url". In fact, the "\directory" example is exactly the ! 204: % "\path" definition which is pre-defined in the package. If you look ! 205: % above, you will see that "\url" is defined with ! 206: % \newcommand\url{\begingroup \Url} ! 207: % I.e., using whatever url-style has been selected. ! 208: % ! 209: % You can make a defined-url for these other styles, using the usual ! 210: % "\urldef" command as in this example: ! 211: % ! 212: % \urldef{\myself}{\email}{myself%node.domain@gateway.net} ! 213: % ! 214: % which makes "\myself" act like "\email{myself%node.domain@gateway.net}", ! 215: % if the "\email" command is defined as above. The "\myself" command ! 216: % would then be robust. ! 217: % ! 218: % Defining styles: ! 219: % Before describing how to customize the printing style, it is best to ! 220: % mention something about the unusual implementation of "\url". Although ! 221: % the material is textual in nature, and the font specification required ! 222: % is a text-font command, the text is actually typeset in *math* mode. ! 223: % This allows the context-sensitive linebreaking, but also accounts for ! 224: % the default behavior of ignoring spaces. Now on to defining styles. ! 225: % ! 226: % To change the font or the list of characters that allow linebreaks, you ! 227: % could redefine the commands "\UrlFont", "\UrlBreaks", "\UrlSpecials" etc. ! 228: % directly in the document, but it is better to define a new `url-style' ! 229: % (following the example of "\url@ttstyle" and "\url@rmstyle") which defines ! 230: % all of "\UrlBigbreaks", "\UrlNoBreaks", "\UrlBreaks", "\UrlSpecials", and ! 231: % "\UrlFont". ! 232: % ! 233: % Changing font: ! 234: % The "\UrlFont" command selects the font. The definition of "\UrlFont" ! 235: % done by the pre-defined styles varies to cope with a variety of LaTeX ! 236: % font selection schemes, but it could be as simple as "\def\UrlFont{\tt}". ! 237: % Depending on the font selected, some characters may need to be defined ! 238: % in the "\UrlSpecials" list because many fonts don't contain all the ! 239: % standard input characters. ! 240: % ! 241: % Changing linebreaks: ! 242: % The list of characters that allow line-breaks is given by "\UrlBreaks" ! 243: % and "\UrlBigBreaks", which have the format "\do\c" for character "c". ! 244: % The differences are that `BigBreaks' have a lower penalty and have ! 245: % different breakpoints when in sequence (as in "http://"): `BigBreaks' ! 246: % are treated as mathrels while `Breaks' are mathbins (see The TeXbook, ! 247: % p.170). In particular, a series of `BigBreak' characters will break at ! 248: % the end and only at the end; a series of `Break' characters will break ! 249: % after the first and after every following *pair*; there will be no ! 250: % break after a `Break' character if a `BigBreak' follows. In the case ! 251: % of "http://" it doesn't matter whether ":" is a `Break' or `BigBreak' -- ! 252: % the breaks are the same in either case; but for DECnet nodes with "::" ! 253: % it is important to prevent breaks *between* the colons, and that is why ! 254: % colons are `BigBreaks'. ! 255: % ! 256: % It is possible for characters to prevent breaks after the next following ! 257: % character (I use this for parentheses). Specify these in "\UrlNoBreaks". ! 258: % ! 259: % You can do arbitrarily complex things with characters by making them ! 260: % active in math mode (mathcode hex-8000) and specifying the definition(s) ! 261: % in "\UrlSpecials". This is used in the rm and sf styles for OT1 font ! 262: % encoding to handle several characters that are not present in those ! 263: % computer-modern style fonts. See the definition of "\Url@do", which ! 264: % is used by both "\url@rmstyle" and "\url@sfstyle"; it handles missing ! 265: % characters via "\UrlSpecials". The nominal format for setting each ! 266: % special character "c" is: "\do\c{<definition>}", but you can include ! 267: % other definitions too. ! 268: % ! 269: % ! 270: % If all this sounds confusing ... well, it is! But I hope you won't need ! 271: % to redefine breakpoints -- the default assignments seem to work well for ! 272: % a wide variety of applications. If you do need to make changes, you can ! 273: % test for breakpoints using regular math mode and the characters "+=(a". ! 274: % ! 275: % Yet more flexibility: ! 276: % You can also customize the verbatim text by defining "\UrlRight" and/or ! 277: % "\UrlLeft", e.g., for ISO formatting of urls surrounded by "< >", define ! 278: % ! 279: % \renewcommand\url{\begingroup \def\UrlLeft{<url: }\def\UrlRight{>}% ! 280: % \urlstyle{tt}\Url} ! 281: % ! 282: % The meanings of "\UrlLeft" and "\UrlRight" are *not* reproduced verbatim. ! 283: % This lets you use formatting commands there, but you must be careful not ! 284: % to use TeX's special characters ("\^_%~#$&{}" etc.) improperly. ! 285: % You can also define "\UrlLeft" to reprocess the verbatim text, but the ! 286: % format of the definition is special: ! 287: % ! 288: % \def\UrlLeft#1\UrlRight{ ... do things with #1 ... } ! 289: % ! 290: % Yes, that is "#1" followed by "\UrlRight" then the definition. For ! 291: % example, to put a hyperTeX hypertext link in the DVI file: ! 292: % ! 293: % \def\UrlLeft#1\UrlRight{\special{html:<a href="#1">}#1\special{html:</a>}} ! 294: % ! 295: % Revision History: ! 296: % ver 1.1 6-Feb-1996: ! 297: % Fix hyphens that wouldn't break and ligatures that weren't suppressed. ! 298: % ver 1.2 19-Oct-1996: ! 299: % Package option for T1 encoding; Hooks: "\UrlLeft" and "\UrlRight". ! 300: % ! 301: % The End