\documenttype{article} \surtitle{Univ at Albany: Math: W F Hammond: About these GELLMU examples} \title{About the GELLMU examples at this location} \begin{document} The examples here represent different ways of using generalized \latex to generate \abbr{SGML}. In the case of the basic mode examples only the syntatic translator has been used. For each ``regular GELLMU'' example there is a full suite of the files generated by the didactic production system. \begin{display} \begin{tabular}{|l|l|l|l|l|} \hline \tdbc{stem-name} & \tdbc{mode} & document type & \tdbc{command on chern} & \tdbc{syn. trans. function} \\ \hline ReadMe & regular & article & gellmu & gellmu-trans \\ \hline assgt2-custom & regular & article & gellmu & gellmu-trans \\ \hline assgt2-example & regular & article & gellmu & gellmu-trans \\ \hline gamma-iden & regular & article & gellmu & gellmu-trans \\ \hline ghack4 & basic & hack & g2s(*) & gellmu-sgml \\ \hline ghtml & basic & html & g2h & gellmu-html \\ \hline wprod & basic & (x)html(+mathml) & g2x & gellmu-xml \hline \end{tabular} \end{display} (*) By default the script \quostr{g2s} uses the syntactic translator function \quostr{gellmu-trans}, but for \quostr{ghack4} the correct function is \quostr{gellmu-sgml}. Thus, for \quostr{ghack4} the command line on chern should be \display{\quostr{g2s ghack4 sgml}} \end{document}