Your story will display this passage first. Edit it by double clicking it. <<nobr>> <<endnobr>>
The error is:
can't find matching endnobr Macro not found: endnobr
It looks like it's not a problem with <<nobr>> itself, but something with extra data being saved in the .tws file that's breaking <<nobr>>. So right now I have two .tws files that look exactly the same to the naked eye, but one works, and one doesn't, and the broken one has non-printing data.
Export .twee code from the broken one, import, then it works. I might have pasted in junk data somehow, but I am trying to replicate to see if it's something else. Perhaps about the way Twine saves files.
I am also annoyed that .tws files carry around Save Directory and Build Directory information. Hidden metadata is a bad design.
Comments
file that's breaking <<nobr>>. So right now I have two .tws files that look exactly the same to the naked
eye, but one works, and one doesn't, and the broken one has non-printing data.
Export .twee code from the broken one, import, then it works. I might have pasted in junk data somehow, but I am
trying to replicate to see if it's something else. Perhaps about the way Twine saves files.
I am also annoyed that .tws files carry around Save Directory and Build Directory information.
Hidden metadata is a bad design.
<<nobr>> has a serious limitation - anything after <<endnobr>> in the passage, including a newline, breaks it. does not work.
Use the \ line-continuation symbol.
An example: You could just add \ to every line that would otherwise have <<nobr>> wrapped around it.
I appreciate it.
Edit: I must not be using it correctly, because every time I use it, it replaces '\' with '\r' in the text.
Edit Edit: Okay. I was using the HTML obfuscation swap, and it didn't work. When I turned it off, now it does work. So that's the key, it seems.
i'm using <<silently>> instead of <<nobr>> as a workaround, for now.
[quote]These two lines are one.