Reordering citations is one case where catching "Citation undefined
on page ..." doesn't catch the need for a bibtex rerun. This patch
ensures the proper ordering is obtained in pdf output without having
to resort to closing and reopening the LyX document.
Most images are generated by development/tools/generate_symbols_images.py, but
some were drawn manually. Now there is no image missing from the ones the
script can generate.
Some macros defined by wasysym.sty work only in text mode: They either
produce an error in math mode, or wrong output. These symbols are now marked
as text symbols, so that no \ensuremath is created for LaTeX export if they
appear inside \text{}, and the correct images are created.
What was previously accomplished by wrapCitation is now customizable in the
layout files. What we provide by default here corresponds roughly to the
LyX 2.0 behavior.
- achicago
- apacite
- apalike
- astron
- authordate
- chicago
- harvard
- mslapa
- named
This allows these citation packages can be Required by the document layout.
LyX handles the package ordering, loading any of these packages before natbib
when both are required by the document layout. For example, apacite can be
used with or without natbib.
The package achicago isn't compatible with natbib out-of-the-box,
but the following compatibility code makes it work:
\usepackage{achicago}
\let\achicagobib\thebibliography
\usepackage[authoryear]{natbib}
\let\thebibliography\achicagobib
\let\UnexpandableProtect\protect
\let\SCcite\astroncite
The old layouts are still there (marked as deprecated). The new ones are more or less correctly reverted (polishment required), but the old ones not yet converted to the new. Once this is done, a further file format change should be made.
These encodings were not defined, since they must not be used as document
encodings (the characters {, } and \ may appear in high bytes, and latex
would be confused). However, they are supported by CJK.sty (which uses a
preprocessor to circumvent the limitations of the latex executable). These
encodings are now defined, but used for import in tex2lyx only.
The test case CJK.tex contained fake tests for shift-jis and big5 (the
japanese and chinese characters were entered using the utf8 encoding), and
therefore the wrong interpretation of these encoding looked as if it worked.
The comments about missing iconv support of shift-jis and big5 were wrong as
well (otherwise shift-jis-plain would not work either).
Actually, the test case showed several problems:
- ERT insets did use layout "Standard", not "Plain Layout"
- The font scale was read correctly, but tex2lyx claimed that it did ignore
the option "scaled=0.95"
- If a third argument of the CJK environment was given, it caused the whole
environment to be put in ERT with a broken encoding. This is now fixed for
the bug test case by using the \font_cjk header variable, but the encoding
problem still exists for unsupported encodings. I'll file a separate bug
for that.
- The CJKutf8 package was not handled in the preamble parsing. Therefore the
chinese comment in the preamble was read with a wrong encoding, and guessing
the document language did not work.
The new file CJKutf8.tex was created by copying and modifying CJK.tex, but
unfortunately it is impossible to tell git to inherit the history of CJK.tex
for the new file (search the web for git svn copy if you want to know details).
Special characters as created by latex_path() where not converted corectly
from LaTeX macros by tex2lyx. Now this is done, even for file names containing
double quotes which are not used for quoting spaces. These file names are not
legal on windows, and will causes probelms in DVI files, but if they occur
tex2lyx does not produce invalid .lyx files.
The fix is basically mechanical, the additional code for fraction like insets
with three arguments was stolen from \unitfrac. As any math package,
stackrel.sty needs a buffer parameter to switch it off.
I also added the two stackrel flavours to the toolbar.
Both problems where caused by the fact that tex2lyx did not handle
natbib/jurabib citations correctly if natbib/jurabib was loaded by the
document class. Therefore it tried to parse the standard \cite syntax, and
did not recognize \citet and \citep.
These are all generated by development/tools/generate_symbols_images.py, the
only manual adjustments were renamings due to case sensitive file systems on
windows.
The \frametitle command is less convenient to use than the \frame argument, but it provides more options (overlay/action and short title). We thus provide this additionally to the option, like beamer itself does.
This has a list-like structure (with \onslide item commands). The previous implementation was rather useless, since it required lots of ERT. Since the new implementation is so different, we use ERT for conersion/reversion.
The lyx2lyx routines are not yet perfect, though.
stmaryrd.sty sets these symbols up as variable size math delimiters (i.e.
they may be used with \left and \right). Now LyX knows about that and offers
them in the delimiter dialog as well as single symbols.
Only the first paragraph in those sequences goes into the TOC, since the environment is merged.
This is needed to handle the forthcoming beamer environments properly in the outliner.
The stmaryrd package adds support for lots of math symbols, using a font
designed to accompany the computer modern fonts. The changes in detail:
- Fix generate_symbols_list.py to work with stmaryrd.sty. It loooks like it
was automatically translated from a perl version and never used.
- Generate the new symbols in lib/symbols using generate_symbols_list.py and
add some manual adjustments
- Generate stmary10.ttf by a simple ttf export from stmary10.sfd with fontforge
- Add license info for stmary10.ttf
- Create a test file with all symbols from stmaryrd.sty. Actually it would be
nice to have this for the other fonts as well.
- The mechanics: lyx2lyx, tex2lyx, font machinery etc.
While exporting from the command-line, theApp() doesn't exist.
The colors foreground and background are only needed when
previewing, so ignore this during buffer export.
This replaces the fix in 4285b0b3 (Tommaso Cucinotta, 10-12-2012).
In this case, we do not need to pull in Qt dependencies.
This patch puts all projects into subfolders (at least for MSVS). In this
way, there is a better overview (especially if the number of test projects
will be increasing).
Fix#4981:
If the first or last column is deleted, the borders are preserved.
Similarly for the last row, but not for the first row. Selections are
supported.
Based on a patch by Zahari Dimitrov.
Fix the following bug:
When in tabular, enter "ab" in a cell. Place the cursor before "b". Hold
shift and press <right>, then (still holding shift) <right> again. On
the second <right> nothing appears to happen.
Related to #1802.
Fix#4981:
In tabular if a vertical selection is made with the keyboard (e.g.
LFUN_UP_SELECT), the selection is drawn if there are two cells selected.
Previously, the selection would be drawn only if there were more than
two selected.
If you have a selection across cells in tabular, moving the cursor
vertically up or down (e.g. LFUN_UP) now removes the drawn selection.
Before, the selection was set to false but it was not repainted.
Now that we have module support for literate programming, it is possible to do a noweb cleanup. This is basically a patch from Kayvan Sylvan:
- get rid of literate-xxx classes
- rename Scrap to Chunk, since this is the name noweb doc uses (Scrap is from nuweb)
- update lyx file format and add lyx2lyx support for gettting rid of literate-xxx classes
- update documentation
On the top of it, update tex2lyx to
- avoid creating files with literate-xxx class
- fix conflict between parsing << as a quote and parsing it as a Chunk
- create Chunk layouts instead of Scrap ones.