texlive[68581] Build/source/texk/web2c/cwebdir/cwebman.tex: [CWEB]

commits+ascherer at tug.org commits+ascherer at tug.org
Wed Oct 18 15:41:52 CEST 2023


Revision: 68581
          https://tug.org/svn/texlive?view=revision&revision=68581
Author:   ascherer
Date:     2023-10-18 15:41:52 +0200 (Wed, 18 Oct 2023)
Log Message:
-----------
[CWEB] Adobe Acrobat Reader is not the only one.

Many Web (sic!) browsers, e.g. Firefox, can display PDF files, as well
as other dedicated PDF viewers, like Okular, Skim, etc.

Modified Paths:
--------------
    trunk/Build/source/texk/web2c/cwebdir/cwebman.tex

Modified: trunk/Build/source/texk/web2c/cwebdir/cwebman.tex
===================================================================
--- trunk/Build/source/texk/web2c/cwebdir/cwebman.tex	2023-10-18 09:58:47 UTC (rev 68580)
+++ trunk/Build/source/texk/web2c/cwebdir/cwebman.tex	2023-10-18 13:41:52 UTC (rev 68581)
@@ -57,9 +57,6 @@
 \noindent
 \TeX\ is a trademark of the American Mathematical Society.
 
-\noindent
-Acrobat Reader is a trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
-
 \bigskip\noindent
 The printed form of this manual is copyright \copyright\ 1994
   by Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.  All rights reserved.
@@ -1147,8 +1144,8 @@
 
 Many people have of course noticed analogies between \.{CWEB} and the
 World Wide Web. The \.{CWEB} macros are in fact set up so that the output of
-\.{CWEAVE} can be converted easily into Portable Document Format,
-with clickable hyperlinks that can be read with Adobe's Acrobat Reader,
+\.{CWEAVE} can be converted easily into Portable Document Format, with
+clickable hyperlinks that can be read with your favorite {\mc PDF} viewer,
 using a widely available open-source program called \.{dvipdfm} developed
 by Mark~A. Wicks. After using \.{CWEAVE} to convert \.{cob.w} into
 \.{cob.tex}, you can prepare and view a hypertext version of the program
@@ -1155,8 +1152,7 @@
 by giving the commands
 $$\vbox{\halign{\.{#}\hfil\cr
 tex "\\let\\pdf+ \\input cob"\cr
-dvipdfm cob\cr
-acroread cob.pdf\cr}}$$
+dvipdfm cob\cr}}$$
 instead of invoking \TeX\ in the normal way. (Thanks to Hans Hagen,
 C\'esar Augusto Rorato Crusius, and Julian Gilbey
 for the macros that make this work.)
@@ -1743,9 +1739,9 @@
  \\pdfURL\{the author\}\{mailto:andreas\\UNDER/github@@freenet.de\}\cr
 or visit \\pdfURL\{his home page\}\{https://github.com/ascherer\}\cr}}$$
 In a {\mc PDF} document, the first argument will appear in blue as
-clickable text; the Acrobat reader, if correctly configured, will then
-redirect those links to the user's browser and open either the
-email client or the HTML viewer. In a hardcopy document, both arguments
+clickable text; the {\mc PDF} viewer, if correctly configured, will then
+redirect those links to the user's browser and open either the email client
+or the {\mc HTML} viewer. In a hardcopy document, both arguments
 will be printed ({\tt the second in parentheses and typewriter type}).
 Certain special characters in an Internet address need to be handled
 in a somewhat awkward way, so that \.{CWEAVE} and/or \TeX\
@@ -1757,7 +1753,7 @@
 others if the depth feature of \.{@*} has been used.
 Such bookmark entries are also known as ``outlines.''
 Moreover, the final group title, `Names of the sections',
-can be opened up to list every section name; Acrobat users can therefore
+can be opened up to list every section name; users can therefore
 navigate easily to any desired section.
 
 The macros of \.{cwebacromac.tex} are careful to ``sanitize'' all the names



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