--- loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Authoring_Structure_Tags.tex 2003/06/10 19:29:26 1.1
+++ loncom/html/adm/help/tex/Authoring_Structure_Tags.tex 2005/02/24 22:34:31 1.2
@@ -4,10 +4,10 @@ These tags give the problem a structure
of data and giving the student messages.
\begin{itemize}
-\item \textbf{problem}\index{problem}: Must be the first tag in the file,
-this tag sets up the header of the webpage and generates the submit
-buttons, it also handles due dates properly.
-\item \textbf{part}\index{part}: Must be below \textbf{problem} if it is
+\item \textbf{problem}\index{problem}: This must be the first tag in the file.
+This tag sets up the header of the webpage and generates the submit
+buttons. It also handles due dates properly.
+\item \textbf{part}\index{part}: This must be below \textbf{problem} if it is
going to be used. It does many of the same tasks as \textbf{problem},
but allows multiple separate problems to exist in a single file.
\item \textbf{startouttext\index{startouttext}} and \textbf{endouttext}\index{endouttext}:
@@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ These tags are somewhat special. They mu
occur in pairs. Their use is to mark up the problem so the web editor
knows what sections should be edited in a plain text block on the
web.
-\item \textbf{comment}\index{comment}: Allows one to comment out sections
+\item \textbf{comment}\index{comment}: This tag allows one to comment out sections
of code in a balanced manner, or to provide a comment description
-of how a problem works. Only shows up for the edit target, stripped
+of how a problem works. It only shows up for the edit target, stripped
out for all other targets.
\end{itemize}