@@ -3,18 +3,18 @@ @; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0 @; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0. @(require "scribble-helpers.rkt") -@(require (for-label racket/base "../pollen.rkt")) +@(require (for-label racket/base pollen/core "../pollen.rkt")) -@section{How I Publish: A Quick Tour} +@title{How I Publish: A Quick Tour} This isn’t a tutorial, since these steps probably won’t all work on your computer. Think of these narrations like me talking while I drive. -@subsection{Creating an article} +@section{Creating an article} Open a terminal window. @terminal{@cmd{> cd /path/to/thelocalyarn}} @@ -92,11 +92,11 @@ As you can see, Fossil does an automatic pull before the commit, and another automatic push afterwards. This commit is now visible on the public timeline, and the source code for the article can now be seen on the public repo at @tt{thelocalyarn.com/code/}. -@subsection{Adding notes to an article} +@section{Adding notes to an article} A few days (or years) after doing the above, I receive an email from Marjorie with commenting on @italic{My New Post} and I decide to publish her comments. I open the article in my editor and add some lines to the end: @@ -127,10 +127,10 @@ But if you go to the Blog section, you’ll see the note appearing in its own space right alongside the other articles, as if it were a separate post. It will also appear in a separate entry in the RSS feed. -@subsection{What’s not here yet} +@section{What’s not here yet} Eventually there will be facilities for creating PDF files of individual articles, and print-ready PDFs of books containing collections of articles.