"Jeremy C. Reed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > An example of my problem is the words (with the punctuation): > (LAN_INET) and (LAN_DMZ) > > I don't want to hyphenate them. I don't want to manually add a > \newline before them. I just want the latex magic to automatically > move it to the next line and justify the line as needed.
But unlike many other systems, (La)TeX evaluates the quality of its output. Penalties are given when lines have to be streached too much, and when reaching a specific "badness" TeX will simply refuse to typeset the line. > This also happens in regular Standard text too, where I have > "(TTL)", "(MSS)", MIB-like variables like net.inet.ip.porthilast and > net.inet.ip.portrange.hifirst, filenames (with backslashes) like > /etc/authpf/authpf.allow, and words that start with a dollar sign > (like $foo). These are all same font. Try using the url package -- it is designed to break long stuff like URLs at good places, such as after a slash. It works nicely for file- and variablenames (of the form $foo_bar_baz) too. -- Martin Geisler GnuPG Key: 0x7E45DD38 PHP Exif Library | PHP Weather | PHP Shell http://pel.sf.net/ | http://phpweather.net/ | http://mgeisler.net/ Read/write Exif data | Show current weather | A shell in a browser
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