Difference between revisions of "Marking up"
m (1 revision) |
m (1 revision) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
marked up as bold code. The following markup: | marked up as bold code. The following markup: | ||
− | + | <code>'''CLOSE#chn'''</code> calls OSFIND 0. <code>'''LDA #0'''</code> sets the zero flag. | |
gives the following text: | gives the following text: | ||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
Mark up star commands and examples as bold typewriter text. The following markup: | Mark up star commands and examples as bold typewriter text. The following markup: | ||
− | + | <tt>'''*BBCtoBMP Jarre -mode 1 Jarre/bmp'''</tt> | |
gives the following text: | gives the following text: |
Latest revision as of 19:12, 8 March 2015
Contents
Page titles
Use initial capital letter then lower case for page titles and headings, only capitalising those items that are natually capitalised. For example, "Marking up", "What BASIC is running", "Econet over IP"; not "Marking Up", "What BASIC Is Running", "Econet Over IP".
Headings
If the following standard headings are used, they should be used in this order, as second-level heading (surrounded by two '='s):
- See also
- External links
- References
Numbers
Write numbers in the way that BASIC would understand them, for instance prefix with & for hex, no prefix for decimal, prefix with % for binary. This applies to page titles and the contents of pages. For instance:
- OSWORD 10 reads a character definition
- OSWORD &10 transmits a network packet
BASIC code
Where BASIC or machine code is used within blocks of text it should be marked up as bold code. The following markup:
'''CLOSE#chn'''
calls OSFIND 0. '''LDA #0'''
sets the zero flag.
gives the following text:
CLOSE#chn
calls OSFIND 0. LDA #0
sets the zero
flag.
Star commands
Mark up star commands and examples as bold typewriter text. The following markup:
'''*BBCtoBMP Jarre -mode 1 Jarre/bmp'''
gives the following text:
*BBCtoBMP Jarre -mode 1 Jarre/bmp
Blocks of code
Blocks of code should be marked up as a block of code by indenting each line with at least one space. To give a consistant layout between pages use four spaces. The following markup:
(space)(space)(space)(space)DEFFNf_date(d%,m%,y%):y%=y%-1981:=d%+m%*256+(y%AND15)*4096+(y%DIV16)*32
(space)(space)(space)(space)DEFFNf_time(h%,m%,s%):=h%+m%*256+s%*65536
gives the following text:
DEFFNf_date(d%,m%,y%):y%=y%-1981:=d%+m%*256+(y%AND15)*4096+(y%DIV16)*32 DEFFNf_time(h%,m%,s%):=h%+m%*256+s%*65536
Others notes
It's BBC BASIC and BASIC, not BBC Basic or Basic. Basic refers to the generic language.