Lines Matching refs:argument
335 % \onepageout takes a vbox as an argument. Note that \pagecontents
442 % Parse an argument, then pass it to #1. The argument is the rest of
444 % macro which expects an ordinary undelimited TeX argument.
488 % If a _delimited_ argument is enclosed in braces, they get stripped; so
1098 % @asis just yields its argument. Used with @table, for example.
1102 % @math outputs its argument in math mode.
1143 % We have to reset their definitions in case the @math was an argument
2690 % @kbd is like @code, except that if the argument is just one @key command,
2736 % second argument specifying the text to display and an optional third
2785 % argument is to make the input look right: @dmn{pt} instead of @dmn{}pt.
3472 % Allow an optional argument of an uppercase letter, lowercase letter,
3474 % argument is the same as `1'.
3478 % If we were given no argument, pretend we were given `1'.
3482 % Detect if the argument is a single token. If so, it might be a
3489 % Only one token in the argument. It could still be anything.
3509 % Multiple tokens in the argument. We hope it's a number.
3548 % Call \doitemize, adding a period to the first argument and supplying the
3670 % Put the argument back for the \pickupwholefraction call, so
3977 % ..., but we might end up with active ones in the argument if
4109 % Argument #1 is generated by the calling \fooindex macro,
4121 % like the previous two, but they put @code around the argument.
4199 % These can be used both for control words that take an argument and
4348 % would be for a given command (usually its argument).
4425 % makeinfo does not expand macros in the argument to @deffn, which ends up
4430 % to take a single TeX argument. The case of a macro invocation that
4690 % But this freezes the catcodes in the argument, and can cause problems to
5183 % argument to \message. Therefore, if #1 contained @-commands, TeX
5373 % To test against our argument.
5835 % The first argument is the chapter or section name.
5836 % The last argument is the page number.
6275 % If we're given an argument, typeset it in bold with a colon after.
6382 % the (first) argument ends when '@end verbatim' is reached, ie:
6686 % the argument list (groff manual), and ttsl and tt are not very
6694 % On the other hand, if an argument has two dashes (for instance), we
6874 % Macro bodies are absorbed as an argument in a context where
6981 % <parameter list> is #, then the preceding argument is delimited by
7088 % as an argument (by \parsebrace or \parsearg)
7452 % argument, and \hat is not an expandable control sequence. It could
7737 % #3 is the optional positioning argument; for now, it is ignored. It
7990 % early, just after @documentencoding. Single argument is the language
8031 % This macro is called from txi-??.tex files; the first argument is the