%%% rubric.tex --- Example of using CurVe. %% Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2010 Didier Verna. %% Author: Didier Verna %% Maintainer: Didier Verna %% Created: Thu Dec 10 16:04:01 2000 %% Last Revision: Mon Dec 6 11:04:22 2010 %% This file is part of CurVe. %% CurVe may be distributed and/or modified under the %% conditions of the LaTeX Project Public License, either version 1.1 %% of this license or (at your option) any later version. %% The latest version of this license is in %% http://www.latex-project.org/lppl.txt %% and version 1.1 or later is part of all distributions of LaTeX %% version 1999/06/01 or later. %% CurVe consists of the files listed in the file `README'. %%% Commentary: %% Contents management by FCM version 0.1. %%% Code: \begin{rubric}{The Rubric's Title} \entry*[Key 1] This is an entry with a key. The key is displayed on the left, and you're reading the entry's contents. As you can see, this entry does not belong to a subrubric. \subrubric{A First Subrubric} \entry*[Key 2] This entry belongs to the first subrubric. Before the subrubric, some space is added to separate it from the previous entry. \entry* After the subrubric, some space is also added to separate it from the first entry. Note that this entry has no key. The entries contents are aligned together. \text{\par\itshape This is a piece of text produced by the \texttt{\char`\\text} macro. It spawns the whole text width. If you want to further separate it from the normal entries with vertical space (like here), you can use the \texttt{\char`\\par} command.\par} \entry*[Key 3] This is another entry with a new key. \entry* This is another entry, but this one has no key. Note the text bullet which serves as a visual clue, especially when several entries share the same key. \subrubric{A Second Subrubric} \entry*[Key 1] This entry belongs to the second subrubric. \entry* This one also belongs to the second subrubric. \entry*[Key 2] This is another entry with a new key. \entry* This is another entry, but this one has no key. \subrubric{} \entry*[Key 3] If you want to separate some entries from the subrubric above, you can for instance make an empty subrubric. \entry* You can include other rubrics below. Rubrics can even be split across pages. The titles will then be repeated. \end{rubric} %%% rubric.tex ends here %%% Local Variables: %%% mode: latex %%% TeX-master: "raw" %%% End: