Wrap some excessively long lines that are in <screen> tags.

This commit is contained in:
Jim Mock 2000-03-21 07:52:43 +00:00
parent e7332435df
commit 69a8cbf679
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=6817
2 changed files with 50 additions and 14 deletions

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml,v 1.8 1999/09/06 06:53:09 peter Exp $
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml,v 1.9 2000/03/21 07:27:21 jim Exp $
-->
<chapter id="x11">
@ -893,7 +893,10 @@ Mouse device: /dev/ttyd1</screen>
<para>Continuing, we see:</para>
<screen>Beginning with XFree86 3.1.2D, you can use the new X11R6.1 XKEYBOARD extension to manage the keyboard layout. If you answer 'n' to the following question, the server will use the old method, and you have to adjust your keyboard layout with xmodmap.
<screen>Beginning with XFree86 3.1.2D, you can use the new X11R6.1
XKEYBOARD extension to manage the keyboard layout. If you answer 'n' to the
following question, the server will use the old method, and you have to
adjust your keyboard layout with xmodmap.
Please answer the following question with either 'y' or 'n'.
Do you want to use XKB? y
@ -989,7 +992,11 @@ Horizontal sync range: 30-64</screen>
<para>Next, we select the vertical frequency range:</para>
<screen>You must indicate the vertical sync range of your monitor. You can either select one of the predefined ranges below that correspond to industry-standard monitor types, or give a specific range. For interlaced modes, the number that counts is the high one (e.g. 87 Hz rather than 43 Hz).
<screen>You must indicate the vertical sync range of your monitor.
You can either select one of the predefined ranges below that correspond
to industry-standard monitor types, or give a specific range. For
interlaced modes, the number that counts is the high one (e.g., 87 Hz
rather than 43 Hz).
1 50-70
2 50-90
@ -1004,7 +1011,9 @@ Enter your choice: 3 exactly the range of the monitor</s
lot of different hardware, you can let
<command>xf86config</command> do it for you:</para>
<screen>You must now enter a few identification/description strings, namely an identifier, a vendor name, and a model name. Just pressing enter will fill in default names.
<screen>You must now enter a few identification/description strings,
namely an identifier, a vendor name, and a model name. Just pressing enter
will fill in default names.
The strings are free-form, spaces are allowed.
Enter an identifier for your monitor definition: ENTER
@ -1015,7 +1024,14 @@ Enter the model name of your monitor: ENTER</screen>
elderly Diamond SpeedStar Plus with an ET4000 chip, and
unknown Ramdac and Clock Chip. Let's see how we fare:</para>
<screen>Now we must configure video card specific settings. At this point you can choose to make a selection out of a database of video card definitions. Because there can be variation in Ramdacs and clock generators even between cards of the same model, it is not sensible to blindly copy the settings (e.g., a Device section). For this reason, after you make a selection, you will still be asked about the components of the card, with the settings from the chosen database entry presented as a strong hint.
<screen>Now we must configure video card specific settings. At
this point you can choose to make a selection out of a database of video
card definitions. Because there can be variation in Ramdacs and clock
generators even between cards of the same model, it is not sensible to
blindly copy the settings (e.g., a Device section). For this reason,
after you make a selection, you will still be asked about the components
of the card, with the settings from the chosen database entry presented as
a strong hint.
The database entries include information about the chipset, what server to
run, the Ramdac and ClockChip, and comments that will be included in the
@ -1128,7 +1144,8 @@ Do you want me to set the symbolic link? y</screen>
point to your X server. If you don't have a link, you will
not be able to start X.</para>
<screen>Now you must give information about your video card. This will be used for the "Device" section of your video card in XF86Config.
<screen>Now you must give information about your video card. This
will be used for the "Device" section of your video card in XF86Config.
You must indicate how much video memory you have. It is probably a good
idea to use the same approximate amount as that detected by the server you
@ -1278,7 +1295,8 @@ Do you want a virtual screen that is larger than the physical screen? n</screen>
<application>sysinstall</application> just need to write the
configuration file:</para>
<screen>I am going to write the XF86Config file now. Make sure you don't accidently overwrite a previously configured one.
<screen>I am going to write the XF86Config file now. Make sure
you don't accidently overwrite a previously configured one.
Shall I write it to /etc/XF86Config? y

View file

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
<!--
The FreeBSD Documentation Project
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml,v 1.8 1999/09/06 06:53:09 peter Exp $
$FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml,v 1.9 2000/03/21 07:27:21 jim Exp $
-->
<chapter id="x11">
@ -893,7 +893,10 @@ Mouse device: /dev/ttyd1</screen>
<para>Continuing, we see:</para>
<screen>Beginning with XFree86 3.1.2D, you can use the new X11R6.1 XKEYBOARD extension to manage the keyboard layout. If you answer 'n' to the following question, the server will use the old method, and you have to adjust your keyboard layout with xmodmap.
<screen>Beginning with XFree86 3.1.2D, you can use the new X11R6.1
XKEYBOARD extension to manage the keyboard layout. If you answer 'n' to the
following question, the server will use the old method, and you have to
adjust your keyboard layout with xmodmap.
Please answer the following question with either 'y' or 'n'.
Do you want to use XKB? y
@ -989,7 +992,11 @@ Horizontal sync range: 30-64</screen>
<para>Next, we select the vertical frequency range:</para>
<screen>You must indicate the vertical sync range of your monitor. You can either select one of the predefined ranges below that correspond to industry-standard monitor types, or give a specific range. For interlaced modes, the number that counts is the high one (e.g. 87 Hz rather than 43 Hz).
<screen>You must indicate the vertical sync range of your monitor.
You can either select one of the predefined ranges below that correspond
to industry-standard monitor types, or give a specific range. For
interlaced modes, the number that counts is the high one (e.g., 87 Hz
rather than 43 Hz).
1 50-70
2 50-90
@ -1004,7 +1011,9 @@ Enter your choice: 3 exactly the range of the monitor</s
lot of different hardware, you can let
<command>xf86config</command> do it for you:</para>
<screen>You must now enter a few identification/description strings, namely an identifier, a vendor name, and a model name. Just pressing enter will fill in default names.
<screen>You must now enter a few identification/description strings,
namely an identifier, a vendor name, and a model name. Just pressing enter
will fill in default names.
The strings are free-form, spaces are allowed.
Enter an identifier for your monitor definition: ENTER
@ -1015,7 +1024,14 @@ Enter the model name of your monitor: ENTER</screen>
elderly Diamond SpeedStar Plus with an ET4000 chip, and
unknown Ramdac and Clock Chip. Let's see how we fare:</para>
<screen>Now we must configure video card specific settings. At this point you can choose to make a selection out of a database of video card definitions. Because there can be variation in Ramdacs and clock generators even between cards of the same model, it is not sensible to blindly copy the settings (e.g., a Device section). For this reason, after you make a selection, you will still be asked about the components of the card, with the settings from the chosen database entry presented as a strong hint.
<screen>Now we must configure video card specific settings. At
this point you can choose to make a selection out of a database of video
card definitions. Because there can be variation in Ramdacs and clock
generators even between cards of the same model, it is not sensible to
blindly copy the settings (e.g., a Device section). For this reason,
after you make a selection, you will still be asked about the components
of the card, with the settings from the chosen database entry presented as
a strong hint.
The database entries include information about the chipset, what server to
run, the Ramdac and ClockChip, and comments that will be included in the
@ -1128,7 +1144,8 @@ Do you want me to set the symbolic link? y</screen>
point to your X server. If you don't have a link, you will
not be able to start X.</para>
<screen>Now you must give information about your video card. This will be used for the "Device" section of your video card in XF86Config.
<screen>Now you must give information about your video card. This
will be used for the "Device" section of your video card in XF86Config.
You must indicate how much video memory you have. It is probably a good
idea to use the same approximate amount as that detected by the server you
@ -1278,7 +1295,8 @@ Do you want a virtual screen that is larger than the physical screen? n</screen>
<application>sysinstall</application> just need to write the
configuration file:</para>
<screen>I am going to write the XF86Config file now. Make sure you don't accidently overwrite a previously configured one.
<screen>I am going to write the XF86Config file now. Make sure
you don't accidently overwrite a previously configured one.
Shall I write it to /etc/XF86Config? y