\it and the other oldfont commands are deprecated and the new forms
(e.g. \mathit) should be used instead. The old forms can lead to a
warning in TeX Live 2015 and an error in TeX Live 2016.
Note that with this commit only affects completion, so LyX still
supports displaying e.g. \it in math if the user enters it without
completion.
This is consistent with 24d01111.
Thanks to Guillaume for the patch.
The external templates requested conversion to these formats, but there was no
converter defined, so plain text export did fail, and there are no obvious ways
to create plain text representations for the files used by these templates.
Now we output the file name as for other templates and also the graphics inset.
This fixes bug #7135.
On TeX Live 2016, Math.lyx gives an error when compiling with
pdflatex. On TeX Live 2015, Math.lyx compiles but the log gives the
following warning:
Usage of deprecated font command `\it'!
This commit amends 67e45aa3.
Provides two new styles:
1. An "In Premable" style that puts whatever is entered into it into the preamble.
This can be used, if one wishes, to include preamble code in the body of the
LyX document.
2. An "In Title" style that will put its contents into the body of the LaTeX
document, but before \maketitle is issued. This is useful for making branches
and notes in title-related material. (If you put these in a Standard layout,
this signals to LyX to output \maketitle, which may then come too early.)
Due to the ForceLocal machinery, no format change is needed.
The external date inset was implemented as a demonstrator for external insets
in general. It was never intended for production code. Now that we have several
external insets defined we do not need the demonstrator anymore. This fixes
bugs #4398 and #9948.
Previously the commandline arguments were processed in an operating system
dependent encoding if running under python 2. Now they are converted to
unicode during the parsing, using the more modern argpase instead of optparse.
The individual conversion methods do no longer need to know anything about
commandline encoding. This fixes a bug similar to #10218 if running under
python 2 which I probably introduced during the python 3 conversion.
The LyX class works now with python 3. Certain file format conversions may
still fail (convert_multiencoding() is a hot candidate), but this will need
to be fixed in the individual modules.
LyX did not distinguish compressed and uncompressed svg files previously.
Therefore XHTML export of vector graphics did use svgz images directly, which
is not supported by browsers. If svg and svgz are treated as two formats then
all works fine. This is also consistent with the loadable image formats
reported by qt: It reports both svg and svgz.
The gunzip dependency in converters is not new (it is already used internally),
but the gzip dependency is new, so it might not be available on windows.
This is not important at the moment, since we do not yet need to convert svg
to svgz, I only added the converter for completeness.
Although the fix affects only a content of a LyX note, it is
still surprising to get a dialog-window demanding creation
a new document if trying to edit the subdocument.
Now that 5mu are added on each side of : (because it is a relation), there is no need to do the same in the definition of \vcentcolon.
This is closer to what is done in mathtools.sty.
Inset-icons are auto-scaled according to their width.
This is problematic, if converted from SVG
with the bounding box set to content (ignoring the page size)
and the content is not square.
OTOH, ignoring page size is done for good reasons - we usually want just
the drawing area when inserting an image into a document.
An invisible square with fixes this problem.
Some icons had spurious invisible elements outside the page -- leading
to too small results in the PDF. These were removed.
(#8738)
For efficiency, we add a new flag to the buffer indicating when changes are
present. This flag is updated at each buffer update, and also when explicitly
requested via a dispatch result flag.
The old text was incorrect and came from the 2.0 release. LyX works fine if
the default python interpreter is python 3, as long as python 2 is available
as well.
Building LyX does also work with python 3, but since I did not check all
special build steps with both cmake and autotools, I kept a note about
possible problems.
The aim of the tutorial is to explain how to use LyX and not special LaTeX issues with \frontmatter, non-TeX fonts etc. Therefore the preamble should kept clean.