From 00f4e5776af34087c9bfa17d2ef445153bb1c4a9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Robert Alessi Date: Mon, 20 Jun 2016 19:19:42 +0200 Subject: correction of a typo in the documentation --- arabluatex.dtx | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/arabluatex.dtx b/arabluatex.dtx index 5138bb3..9fc3ded 100644 --- a/arabluatex.dtx +++ b/arabluatex.dtx @@ -310,9 +310,9 @@ % \package{arabtex} dates back to 1992. As far as I know, it was then % the first and only way to typeset Arabic texts with \TeX\ and % \LaTeX. To achieve that, \package{arabtex} provided---and still -% does---an Arabic font in \emph{Nasḫī} style and a macro package that -% defined its own input notation which was, as the author stated, -% \enquote{both machine, and human, readable, and suited for +% does---an Arabic font in \arb[trans]{\cap{nasxI}} style and a macro +% package that defined its own input notation which was, as the author +% stated, \enquote{both machine, and human, readable, and suited for % electronic transmission and e-mail % communication}.\footnote{\textcite[2]{pkg:arabtex}.} Even if the % same can be said about Unicode, Arab\TeX\ \textsc{ASCII} input @@ -621,7 +621,7 @@ vowels (see §~3). %\section{Standard Arab\TeX\ input} %\subsection{Consonants} % \Cref{tab:arabtex-consonants} gives the Arab\TeX\ equivalents for -% all of the Arabic consonants. +% all of the Arabic consonants.\linebreak % \newcommand{\dmg}[1]{% % \SetTranslitConvention{dmg}% % \arb[trans]{#1}} -- cgit v1.2.3