handbook: replace \textit by \emph

thanks to [at]pgdr for the suggestion.
This commit is contained in:
Andreas Lauser 2017-01-16 12:34:24 +01:00
parent d0c7c337d5
commit 43764cfc40
3 changed files with 9 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -92,12 +92,12 @@ in the \Cplusplus11 standard.
\section{Polymorphism}
In object oriented programming, some methods often make sense for all
classes in a hierarchy, but what actually needs to be \textit{done}
classes in a hierarchy, but what actually needs to be \emph{done}
can differ for each concrete class. This observation motivates
\textit{polymorphism}. Fundamentally, polymorphism means all
\emph{polymorphism}. Fundamentally, polymorphism means all
techniques in which a method call results in the processor executing code
which is specific to the type of object for which the method is
called\footnote{This is the \textit{poly} of polymorphism: There are
called\footnote{This is the \emph{poly} of polymorphism: There are
multiple ways to achieve the same goal.}.
In \Cplusplus, there are two common ways to achieve polymorphism: The
@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ template mechanism.
\subsection*{Dynamic Polymorphism}
To utilize \textit{dynamic polymorphism} in \Cplusplus, the polymorphic
To utilize \emph{dynamic polymorphism} in \Cplusplus, the polymorphic
methods are marked with the \texttt{virtual} keyword in the base
class. Internally, the compiler realizes dynamic polymorphism by
storing a pointer to a so-called \texttt{vtable} within each object of

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@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ systems is straightforward and can be found, e.\ g., in
\subsection{Basic Definitions and Assumptions for the Compositional
Model Concept}
\textbf{Components:}
The term \textit{component} stands for constituents of the phases which
The term \emph{component} stands for constituents of the phases which
can be associated with a unique chemical species, or, more generally, with
a group of species exploiting similar physical behavior. In this work, we
assume a water-gas-NAPL system composed of the phases water (subscript

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@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ parameters used by a simulation can be obtained by passing
\lstinputlisting[style=eWomsCode, numbersep=5pt, firstline=28, firstnumber=28]{../../tutorial/tutorial1problem.hh}
\end{lst}
For using \eWoms, the central file is the \textit{problem file} as
For using \eWoms, the central file is the \emph{problem file} as
shown in listing~\ref{tutorial1:problemfile}. This file is responsible
for specifying the physical setup of the problem which is to be
simulated. In this context, all problems first need to set up the
@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ at least the following methods:
All of these methods take a single template argument,
\texttt{Context}, and the three function arguments \texttt{context},
\texttt{spaceIdx} and \texttt{timeIdx}. Together, these form the
so-called \textit{execution context}. The execution context can be
so-called \emph{execution context}. The execution context can be
thought of as a collection of all available information for a given
method. Thus, execution contexts a way to abstract away the
differences of discretization schemes. The following methods are
@ -378,7 +378,7 @@ chapter~\ref{sec:fluidframework}.
\item \textbf{Use a Full-Fledged Fluid System} \\
In \eWoms, the canonical way to describe fluid mixtures is via
\textit{fluid systems}\footnote{For a thorough introduction into
\emph{fluid systems}\footnote{For a thorough introduction into
fluid systems and the concepts related to it, see chapter
\ref{sec:fluidframework}}. In order to include a fluid system,
you first have to comment out lines
@ -456,7 +456,7 @@ You can use the fluids of exercise 1b).
\texttt{const auto \&pos=context.pos(spaceIdx, timeIdx);}
When does the front cross the material border? In paraview, the
animation view (\textit{View} $\rightarrow$ \textit{Animation View})
animation view (\emph{View} $\rightarrow$ \textit{Animation View})
is a convenient way to get a rough feeling of the time-step sizes.
\end{enumerate}