From Günter:
> OK, so in TL18 the Ukrainean "auto-date" (7 березня 2019 р.) fails with
> PDF (XeTeX) and DVI (LuaTeX) but not PDF (LuaTeX).
> Strange. Feel free to invert.
New bug in TeXLive 18.
Missing characters with XeTeX and wrong characters with LuaTeX.
Also:
* Remove spurious (Latin) characters from uk/Intro.lyx
* "wrong-output" tag for Cyrillic documents with XeTeX and TeX fonts.
* Do not change font choices when testing with non-TeX fonts.
* Add "nonstandard" tag for documents with requirements outside TeXLive.
* Ignore missing character in legacy Basque document.
Documents used deprecated or lookalike characters missing in
Latin Modern system fonts:
Customization.lyx: "figure dash" instead of "emdash".
revtex4-1: "Angstrom sign" instead of "latin letter A with ring".
Prevents wrong or missing characters with LuaTeX and 8-bit fonts.
Also "uninvert" the corresponding test case and two other
no longer failing "unicodesymbols" exports.
If Document>Settings>Language>Encoding is set to any value except "auto" or "default", we
expect the whole document to use this encoding. Wiht encodings from the CJK package, this means
one big "CJK" environment and no encoding switches.
Characters that are not handled by the CJK package need to be "forced" in lib/unicodesymbols.
This is completed for "euc-cn", the others will follow.
LyX expectedly gives the following warning:
TextClass.cpp (1385): The layout does not provide a list command for
the float `sidebar'. LyX will not be able to produce a float list.
This issue was reported to the maintainer. This commit is consistent
with 00f7a95f.
The cls is obsolete, so all PDF exports are disabled. We keep the
1.6.x and 2.1.x tests because those only check roundtrip
convergence, and do not export to PDF.
It used to give an endless loop, so we "ignored" it (did not run the
test). Now it gives a lyx2lyx warning, which is reported at #11455,
so it is appropriate to invert the test.
The 001-4-latin_utf8x_pdf2 test passes and the
001-4-latin_utf8-cjk_pdf2 test fails, which means that there are
characters in the .lyx file that are only available with
utf8-extended encoding, so the utf8 test is never expected to pass
in the future.
Thanks to Kornel.
utf8-plain (Unicode (utf8 XeTeX)) is a power-user setting
for the input encoding with two use cases:
a) setup of system fonts or
b) setup of input encoding supportuser preamble
in the document class or user preamble.
The test file is an example for use case b.
The Korean splash.lyx is expected to fail with pdflatex. The lyx22x
and lyx23x tests were not failing before because they were exporting
to XeTeX with system fonts, which succeeds. After c9e62dec (which
corrects the export format to the default), the lyx22x and lyx23x
tests should be inverted.
Amend eec3d1eb,7568571a
We are trying to check if the resulting file after lyx2lyx
is compilable, we have to ensure that copying the original file
to the test directory does not mangle use_non_tex_fonts-entry.
These tests failed because of (multiple instances of) the following
warning:
Warning: a buffer should not have two parents!
This warning is expected, because, for example, chapter-1 includes
Bibliography.lyx and chapter-2 includes Bibliography.lyx. thesis.lyx
includes both chapter-1 and chapter-2, so both are loaded (but
hidden), and Bibliography.lyx is loaded (but hidden), and LyX then
sees that more than one buffer includes Bibliography.lyx
The consequence of ignoring this warning is that we will not catch
any future regression that triggers this warning when it should not.
Exception: findadv-21, but it is not a regression,
because this one never passed.
The problem here is, that we cannot differentiate
between enumeration, itemize, description and labeling
environment here.
Now tests findadv-01 ... findadv-20 pass too.
keytest.py: Expanded time for controll keys (like \[Return])
findadv*: expanded time for normal keys
lyxfind.cpp: Handle math equations
The compilations fail because the macro
\DeclareUnicodeCharacter
is not defined. Also the sequence
\ifnum\pdfoutput=\z@
is making troubles.
The exports to previous lyx-versions is disabled too,
because there is no layout defined there.
Uses the correct shortcuts from lib/bind/sk/menus.bind, but fails nonetheless
because the regex for advanced search cannot find the correct list type.
(That is: it cannot distinguish between 'enumerate', 'itemize', 'labeling', etc.)
These file don't contain the \\origin tag. So the possibly included
files with relative path would not be found. The compilation to
the default pdf would then anyway fail.
Use the LaTeX internal character representation (LICR) macros
provided by lgrenc.def (since version 0.8 from 2013-05-13)
in lib/unicodesymbols. This fixes the PDF bookmarks (except for the
legacy input encoding iso-8859-7) and solves the problem of a missing
"v" character in Libertine LGR fonts (see lyx-users from 2018-01-29).
The ctest unicodesymbols/008-greek-and-coptic_iso8859-7_pdf2" now fails
(due to #9681). This is not a regression, as it is already
"unreliable" (wrong output, Latin character instead of Greek).
Drop compatibility definition of \~ as perispomeni accent
(that was required with lgrenc.def < 0.8).
If, after the 10th iteration, the exported lyx16x file still
differs from the one in the previous iteration, the test
is marked as failing, even if still loadable.
The "bxjsarticle" class only supports export with XeLaTeX and system
fonts.
This commit uses the new exclusion functionality introduced at
10cd5dd2.
The following tests are now ignored:
export/examples/ja/knitr_dvi
export/examples/ja/knitr_pdf
export/examples/ja/knitr_pdf3
export/examples/ja/sweave_dvi
export/examples/ja/sweave_pdf
export/examples/ja/sweave_pdf3
The following tests are no longer ignored:
export/examples/ja/knitr_pdf4_systemF
export/examples/ja/sweave_pdf4_systemF
This allows us to exclude matches of certain patterns in
invertedTests, ignoredTests, unreliableTests, and suspendedTests.
To use this new functionality, prefix "!" to the pattern.
This functionality serves as a workaround in some cases to not being
able to use advanced regular expression techniques, such as
"negative lookahead", with CMake's regular expression engine.
Output of "ctest -N" is unchanged by this commit.
This functionality will be used soon (see next commits).
Patch from Kornel Benko.
The export ja/lilypond_pdf fails because ps2pdf gives an error. It
is thus still inverted, under the category 'externalissues'. As
Jürgen discovered, ps2pdf succeeds if the -dNOSAFER flag is used.
Note that Kornel is seeing strange behavior with the sweave test,
and thus the label of that test might be changed soon (e.g. to
"unreliable"). For discussion, see:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20171001032524.fr5xfngylththwv2%40steph
Handle name may be arbitrary string mathing '[A-Za-z0-9]*'.
This is then used by appending to the commands for the control file.
For instance select 'Alpha' as handle for the control file 'abc'
'COAlpha: abc' ==> open 'abc' for write
'CCAlpha:' ==> close 'abc'
Could not find a suitable tex font for the following tests:
export/doc/uk/Intro_pdf4_texF
export/examples/uk/splash_pdf4_texF
export/examples/minted-filelisting_pdf4_texF
1.) Handle also 'LatexCommand inputminted' in lyxStatus.pm
2.) Add '-shell-escape' to the appropriate converters.
This applies only to the ctest-environment iff calling
the script 'prefTest.pl' in the build directory.
keytest.py: This gives the os some time to update the status.
All keys with modifier and all possible shortcuts are affected.
Shortcut use corrected in findadv-11-in.txt and findadv-17-in.txt
Now, before starting a test with 'TestBegin' in any *-in.txt file
we can create ne shortcuts used by this test.
Defining a shortcut:
UseShortcut "<shortcut>" "<function>"
Actually adding the new shortcuts to be used by the next lyx-session:
PrepareShortcuts
Use example is found in findadv-combined-in.txt
The UseShortcut-entries will be traslated into '\bind "<shortcut>" "<function>"'
and with the PrepareShortcuts-entry added to the active use file 'user.bind'
Function keys are sent to xvkbd as e.g. \[F15], so we should
not split a sequence like "\C\[F15]" into two text pieces.
(Do it like other keys not having a digit in their name (e.g. \[Return]) )