|
"http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd">
The url package
This package in fact provides a enhanced \verb command that
can appear inside other command arguments.
This command is named ``\url '',
but it can be used for any verbatim text, including DOS-like path
names.
Hence, one can insert urls in one's document without worrying about
LATEX active characters :
This is a complicated url: \url{http://foo.com/~user#label%coucou}.which gets typeset as: ``This is a complicated url: http://foo.com/~user#label%coucou.'' Main use for the \url command is to specify urls as arguments to
HEVEA commands for hyperlinks (see section 8.1.1) :
\hevea{} home page is \ahrefurl{\url{http://pauillac.inria.fr/~maranget/hevea/}}It yields : ``HEVEA home page is http://pauillac.inria.fr/~maranget/hevea/''. However the \url command is fragile, as a consequence it
cannot be used inside \footahref first argument (This is a
LATEX problem, not an HEVEA one).
The url package solves this problem by providing the
\urldef command
for defining commands whose body is typeset by using \url :
\urldef{\heveahome}{\url}{http://pauillac.inria.fr/~maranget/hevea/}Such a source defines the robust command \heveahome as the
intended url.
Hence the following source works as expected :
Have a look at \footurl{\heveahome}{\hevea{} home page}It yields: ``Have a look at HEVEA home page''. Using \url inside command definitions with a
# i argument is a bad idea, since
it gives ``verbatim'' a rather random meaning.
Unfortunately, in some situations (e.g, no % , no # ),
it may work in LATEX. By
contrast, it does not work in HEVEA. In such situations,
\urldef should be used.HEVEA implementation is somehow compatible at the ``programming level''. Thus, users can define new commands whose argument is understood verbatim. The urlhref.hva style file from the distribution takes advantage of this to define the \url command, so that it both
typesets an url and inserts a link to it.
\input{urlhref.hva} Have a look at \url{http://pauillac.inria.fr/~maranget/hevea/}It yields ``Have a look at http://pauillac.inria.fr/~maranget/hevea/''. The urlhref.hva style file (which is an HEVEA style file and not a LATEX style file) can be adequate for bibliographic references, which often use \url for its typesetting power.
Of course, loading urlhref.hva only makes sense when
all arguments to \url are urls... |