No newline is written after \begin{document}, such that
the afterParbreak method would return false. This misleads
the code that outputs a display math in an ulem command
to emit a newline command instead of \noindent, causing
latex errors. This occurs only if the math is at the very
start of a document, without anything before it.
- fileformat change
- I could not update the tex2lyx test files because of bug #10440
- maybe the lyx2lyx routine could be improved but since a document can also begin with another layout than "Standard" I could not use the lyx2lyx function put_cmd_in_ert
It should be now possible underlining or striking out any kind
of math inset containing any math construct indigestible to ulem.
While this was already possible for inline math insets, they could
have break if an aligned environment was used, for example.
This is now possible also for diplay math. Even if this can be
nonsensical and not visually perfect, at least no latex errors
should be generated if one tries to.
This should avoid performance problems related to the window update machinery.
Moreover this fixes a crash introduced by 82808fea when closing a file.
Note that GuiWorkArea::Private already had a read_only_ member, but it
was unused.
Also rename LyXVC::vcname() to LyXVC::vcstatus() since it now contains
directly the UI string to be shown.
Font changes are brought inside the \lyxdeleted macro, just before
outputting the latex code for the math inset. The inset writes a
signature before itself and this is checked by \lyxsout for recognizing
a display math. So, the font changes confuse \lyxsout, which also
swallows the first macro at the very start of \lyxdeleted. The result
is that the font changing command is not seen by latex and \sout is also
used to further strike out the formula already striked out by tikz.
This commit makes sure that the expected signature actually appears
just after the opening brace of \lyxdeleted. It also accounts for a
paragraph break occurring just before the math inset, in order to not
introduce too much vertical space, which is noticeable when using
larger font sizes.