From c703a92136ce579282c63c6e31fff76cc84b37ce Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: bringert Date: Tue, 6 Dec 2005 16:33:40 +0000 Subject: Transfer: Changed transfer program file extension from .tr to .tra to avoid collision with Troff file extension. --- doc/transfer-tutorial.txt | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'doc/transfer-tutorial.txt') diff --git a/doc/transfer-tutorial.txt b/doc/transfer-tutorial.txt index 8f5c5179d..3f7c271e8 100644 --- a/doc/transfer-tutorial.txt +++ b/doc/transfer-tutorial.txt @@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ This is done with the ``transfer`` grammar printer: ``` $ gf > i English.gf -> pg -printer=transfer | wf tree.tr +> pg -printer=transfer | wf tree.tra ``` Note that you need to load a concrete syntax which uses the abstract @@ -64,13 +64,13 @@ syntax that you want to create a Transfer data type for. Loading just the abstract syntax module is not enough. FIXME: why? The command sequence above writes a Transfer data type definition to the -file [tree.tr ../transfer/examples/aggregation/tree.tr]. +file [tree.tra ../transfer/examples/aggregation/tree.tra]. = Write transfer code = We write the Transfer program -[aggregate.tr ../transfer/examples/aggregation/aggregate.tr]. +[aggregate.tra ../transfer/examples/aggregation/aggregate.tra]. FIXME: explain the code @@ -88,10 +88,10 @@ $ transferc -i Here, ```` is the path to search for any modules which you import in your Transfer program. You can give several ``-i`` flags. -So, to compile ``aggregate.tr`` which we created above, we use: +So, to compile ``aggregate.tra`` which we created above, we use: ``` -$ transferc aggregate.tr +$ transferc aggregate.tra ``` The creates the Transfer Core file ``aggregate.trc``. -- cgit v1.2.3