diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'examples')
| -rw-r--r-- | examples/gfcc/complin.tex | 8 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/examples/gfcc/complin.tex b/examples/gfcc/complin.tex index accad0bda..32fdb87a7 100644 --- a/examples/gfcc/complin.tex +++ b/examples/gfcc/complin.tex @@ -22,12 +22,13 @@ \newcommand{\heading}[1]{\subsection{#1}} \newcommand{\explanation}[1]{{\small #1}} \newcommand{\empha}[1]{{\em #1}} +\newcommand{\commentOut}[1]{} \newcommand{\rarrow}{\; \rightarrow\;} \newcommand{\nocolor}{} %% {\color[rgb]{0,0,0}} -\title{{\bf Single-Source Language Definitions and Code Generation as Linearization}} +\title{{\bf Declarative Language Definitions and Code Generation as Linearization}} \author{Aarne Ranta \\ Department of Computing Science \\ @@ -994,10 +995,11 @@ editor can work simultaneously on all languages involved. In our case, this means that changes can be done both to the C code and to the JVM code, and they are automatically carried over from one language to the other. +\commentOut{ A screen dump of the editor is shown in Fig~\ref{demo}. \begin{figure} -\centerline{\psfig{figure=demo2.ps}} \caption{ +\centerline{\psfig{figure=demo2.epsi}} \caption{ GF editor session where an integer expression is expected to be given. The left window shows the abstract syntax tree, and the right window the evolving C and @@ -1006,7 +1008,7 @@ are shown in a pop-up window. } \label{demo} \end{figure} - +} \section{Related work} |
