Add a new checkbox "Save transient properties" to the "Output" panel in the
document properties dialog (now renamed as "Format").
This provides the front-end for the change at 5c2d04999.
(cherry picked from commit 5d292fce2d)
XeTeX with TeX fonts is only safe with ASCII input encoding (see #9740)
and we therefore force "ascii" when exporting with XeTeX and 8-bit TeX-fonts.
However, "utf8-plain" is a "power-user" option, which allows to switch off LyX's
encoding of the LaTeX file:
keep this also for "XeTeX with TeX fonts".
The user is responsible to ensure all characters can be processed and are
correctly shown in the output. The provided test sample shows the problems
with this encoding without special measures (like loading fontspec in the
user-preamble or a document class).
(cherry picked from commit b170b6e40f
I just converted the test to format 508. Thanks Scott for running the
tests. -Guillaume)
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.
A window manager could be configured such that to maintain a certain
stack order for the windows. It would be annoying that opening a new
file through menu brings up the window, so do this only if we are
loading a file through the lyx-server.
This commit amends f5f8c6fd, so no status line is needed.
This is the well known file locking problem: The TempFile class keeps the
created file locked for the own process, and this prevents the CAS to read it.