Difference between revisions of "Command/startcomponent"
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(Created page with "Documentation for \startcomponent ... \stopcomponent") |
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Line 51: | Line 51: | ||
<cd:wikipage page="Project structure"></cd:wikipage> | <cd:wikipage page="Project structure"></cd:wikipage> | ||
<cd:commandref name="project"></cd:commandref> | <cd:commandref name="project"></cd:commandref> | ||
− | <cd:commandref name="startproduct"></cd:commandref></cd:seealso> | + | <cd:commandref name="startproduct"></cd:commandref> |
+ | <cd:commandref name="environment"></cd:commandref></cd:seealso> | ||
</cd:commandgroup> | </cd:commandgroup> |
Latest revision as of 13:11, 6 September 2020
Contents
\startcomponent ... \stopcomponent
Summary
The environment \startcomponent ... \stopcomponent indicates a component in a product.
Settings
Settings string
Description
\startcomponent...\stopcomponent is the
lowest level component in a project structure. It can contain all kind of commands and text. You can invoke project files (and the environment files the project file links to) with \project; you can invoke component-specific environment files with \environment; and other components with \component. Calls to \product do nothing.
You can type \startcomponent * to indicate that the component's reporting name is the same as the filename (without the extension).
Examples
Example 1
% intro-issue1.tex \startcomponent * \project projectname \chapter{Introduction to issue1} \section{Comment} Introduction to the issue1. \section{How to use this paper} \section{Reading further} \stopcomponent