The JASATeX class is currently unmaintained. Also, this
commit moves the system font tests from inverted to ignored
(otherwise lualatex and xelatex run in infinite loops).
and fix wrong ones. This fixes the safe part of bug #8888. The symbols
provided by mdsymbol.sty have to wait, since mdsymbol.sty provides a huge
number of symbols, I don't have the time right now to process them all, and
a partial file format update does not make sense.
Export with XeTeX and LuaTeX (with either non-tex fonts or 8-bit
compatibility mode) does not work because the loading of inputenc with
utf8x is hardcoded in europecv.cls at this time.
This commit adds a note to es/europeCV.lyx explaining the problem and
inverts the XeTeX and LuaTeX tests.
See
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.editors.lyx.devel/145896
Thanks to Günter Milde for the advice and to Ignacio García
for the translation of the note.
This is a manual lyx2lyx fix. Some of the problematic chunks
are not correctly converted with lyx2lyx so this commit manually
converts them to ERT.
For more details, see:
http://marc.info/?t=137702744100010&r=1&w=2
paper.cls formats the description label without bold, so LyX should do the
same on screen. Note that simply removing the Series line does not help,
because Description is already defined in some include.
This is a workaround. Without this patch, export to .tex (XeTeX)
contains a sequence such as
\begin{english}
\begin{description}
[omitted, but does not contain \end{description}]
\end{english}
Thanks to Jürgen for the workaround.
polyglossia is used by default and \make@lr is only defined
by babel. Modifying the preamble fixes XeTeX export and pdfTeX
continues to work.
See the following thread for more information:
http://www.mail-archive.com/lyx-devel@lists.lyx.org/msg181220.html
Thanks to Enrico for the patch.
If we call tex2lyx on a temporary file created from the clipboard, the
file is always in utf8 encoding, without any temporary changes, even if it
contains encoding changing LaTeX commands. Therefore, we must tell tex2lyx
to use a fixed utf8 encoding for the whole file, and this is done using the
new latexclipboard format. Previously, tex2lyx thought the encoding was
latin1.
As a side effect, the -e option is now also documented in the man page.
dvipdfmx emits a lot of warnings and Koji suggests ps2pdf.
Thanks to Koji for the advice.
Note that on Debian, I installed the following packages
to be able to compile with ps2pdf:
fonts-takao-mincho
fonts-ipafont-nonfree-jisx0208
fonts-ipaexfont-mincho
These workarounds are no longer necessary because of unicodesymbols
and further they break compilation with XeTeX as well as pdfTeX
with TeX input encoding set to ascii or utf8.
Thanks to Günter Milde for the fix.
The autogenerated icons are in most cases ugly, do not conform to the
style of the other icons, and do not respect relative dimensions and
positions. The math icons have a vertical dimension of 19 pixel, defining
a grid that has to be respected for obtaining correct alignment.
The only autogenerated icons that remain are those of the Misc (extra)
toolbar. I plan to also replace them in the near future.
Exporting this outdated document currently hangs on some systems.
Further, there is no natural link between AGU and DocBook
and this could be confusing to a user who is looking for
the AGU template.
This fixes several long "unusual contents found" warnings that
were being written from LyX's math parser and improves the
typesetting.
Thank you to Enrico for the fix. See here for his explanation:
http://www.mail-archive.com/lyx-devel@lists.lyx.org/msg180763.html
There are still two such warnings that might indeed be serious,
one each in fr/xypic.lyx and ja/xypic.lyx. I get an assertion
from cursor movement in those insets with instant preview enabled
(on both current trunk and branch).
Now when the cursor is in e.g. a Section layout, alt-<down>
will dispatch 'outline-down'. Before, it would dispatch a
'paragraph-down', which I think makes less sense.
Now all urls we use in our provided lyx-files
(doc, examples, templates)
use urls which really exist.
(If a url was meant merely as an example,
it was not touched, but added to file 'knownInvalidURLS'.)
The 'Chapter' layout does not exist in standard article class.
I demoted all section-type layouts. Thus, "Chapter" became "Section",
"Section" became "Subsection" and "Subsection" became "Subsubsection".
Without this, the template gives a BibTeX error because
there are two \bibstyle commands in the .aux.
This would have broken backwards compatibility but RJournal.layout
has not yet been in a LyX release. Further, the journal made a
significant change (moving to a single column instead of two)
so any submitter would need to update the .sty anyway.
This fixes an option conflict error when using
RJournal.sty v0.12 (the newest).
Previous versions of the .sty also provided 'url'
so they should still work with the layout.
Manuals, examples and templates that use (traditional) bibtex should have set the bibliography processor to bibtex. Else, these documents do not compile if a user has set the processor to 'biber' in the preferences
The macro is identical to \ldots in texted, but this way, tex2lyx can import both \ldots (as InsetSpecialChar) and \dots (as unicode glyph), while retaining the original distinction (which might get relevant with some special packages or via user redefinition of one of these macros).
This provides a working examples that can be viewed directly
and makes the templates compilable out-of-the box.
When moving the example, I removed what I interpreted to be
an errant apostrophe.
This document does not export to PDF. Further, if one tries
to export to PDF on some systems, the process hangs. This commit
thus changes the default output format to xhtml and explains in a
note at the top that LyX does not currently support exporting this
document to PDF.
Note also that this document seems to be outdated and so is a
candidate for attic.
Further, this document is a candidate for being renamed. Currently
users might be confused if they are looking for the canonical way
(no need for DocBook) to write an article for AGU journals. For
that, they should use AGUTeX.lyx.
The labels for the references are now in the format
"author(year)". Without this, the following error is given:
"Bibliography not compatible with author-year citations"
Thanks to Richard for the fix.
When a user creates a new document from a template, the template
is copied but relative paths are not changed, so the resulting
.lyx file is broken. By moving documents with relative paths to
examples, the files will compile out of the box.
A long-term solution that allows for relative paths in templates
is still desired and will be discussed in #8643 or in a new ticket.
The main part of the fix (unicodesymbols) is from Jürgen. This commit fixes
tree problems:
- \; etc. were also used in text mode, but are math only
- all of those glyphs need to be forced with utf8
- actually, \; etc. are not the correct macros, since the encoded spaces are
breakable, but the math spaces are all protected. The sapce symbols are not
defined in the utf8 encodings.
LyX, lyx2lyx and tex2lyx produce now all the same version indicator consisting
only of the major and minor version. It is not decided yet whether future
development versions will add a -dev suffix, but for 2.1.0 this change fixes
the inconsistencies.
We assume chunks come at us in a certain form. If not, then
we cannot handle the conversion. In that case, we just leave
the chunks as they were and they will appear as unknown layouts.
- added bindings for 'math-delim' as a workaround
for US keyboards with Windows
- added bindings for 'word-left' and 'word-right'
- added two more sets of bindings for 'math-subscript'
and 'math-superscript'
- corrected some greek letter bindings
- insert is bound to 'math-mode'
- changed 'screen-recenter' binding to C-j
- added various other bindings
Thanks to Michael Stepner for many of the fixes and testing.
- remove the tables I once used to order all possible "Requires" features
- update the list with possible "Requires" features
- some style fixes here and there
- Additional.lyx: update description and convert some TeX code to the multicolumn inset
- multicol.module: restore the preamble settings that was accidentally removed bin the previous commit
- both files: remove \CJKindent which prevented the compilation with XeTeX, load the xeCJK package which is necessary to get text lines broken at the page margin
Both files are still compilable with pdfTeX because then xeCJk does simply nothing.
- Intro: replace TeX code by its LyX inset and alsoremove unnecessary document class option "cjk"
With LyX configured in this way, the user would only need to:
File > New from Template > EPS.lyx (or PDF-cropped.lyx):
- insert a math inset and type in an equation, or create whatever
content LaTeX can handle,
- view/export to cropped EPS/PDF.
This would allow for LyX to act as a "generator for includable graphics" (equations, commented graphics, etc).
This fixes bug #7839.
- mention that the aa class loads natbib to avoid compilation errors
- the aa package contains an outdated an customized version of natbib.sty. This file only works with aa, but breaks the compilation of many other files on your system, therefore remove the bibliography and replace it by BibTeX
- add a note about the encoding
(unless it's already there, in which case it should move to the end of the next paragraph).
Change the preference setting name (mac_like_word_movement to mac_like_cursor_movement)
to better reflect its function.
Patch and description from Bennett Helm
* InsetBox and GuiBox: Use proper empty length instead of the broken -9.99col% trick
* some slight changes to the logic of GuiBox to make sure that values are set as needed.
* lengthToWidget(): handle properly the empty length case. All the other related Qt helpers did it already, it was probably an oversight. Also set the default_unit parameter as optional (not needed in this patch actually, but I got carried away :)
* allow generating LaTeX code for an empty length, since some broken code does that.
- make template compilable
- update it according to the latest AEA guidelines
- add 4 missing styles to the layout:
* \keywords
* \JEL
* figurenotes environment
* tablenotes environment
Before, only PDFs were being generated so latex did not compile.
Now, both PDF and EPS files are generated.
This is not efficient but could save the user some pain, which is
the goal of templates.
An alternative would be to set the default output to use pdflatex.
The layout now takes care of \begin{article} and \end{article}
by using \AtBeginDocument and \AtEndDocument.
This cleans up the template a little by removing some ERT. The
user no longer needs to read the two notes explaining why the
ERT boxes were necessary. The user also does not need to think
about why this LaTeX environment exists.
The default citation capability of LaTeX is not a true numerical
citation engine, rather it uses a mixture of labels/numbers. Thus
we now distinguish them: "numerical" always increments the bibitem
counter and uses its value as a numerical citation label, while
"default" only uses the bibitem counter when no label is provided.
LyX file format incremented to 471.
These should be used if any new style needs to be introduced in the stable
2.1 series: If the ForceLocal flag of the style is set, it will always be
written to the document header, so that even older 2.1 versions can read
and correctly output the document.
If you have an unmounted dir, ac_dir, in your PATH, the call to
os.path.isfile( os.path.join(ac_dir, ac_word + ext) )
hangs. This is probably a python bug, but the result of configure.py
hanging and LyX freezing is really bad, hence this workaround.
According to the python docs, MacOS doesn't provide os.access();
the hasattr protection is used for this reason.
I was confused when I checked this. It looks like plainnat.bst
overwrites this default to use [Ref1, Ref2] style instead, but
when using natbib's defaults you get the (Ref1; Ref2) style.
This was suggested by Jean-Marc some time ago, and I simply forgot to apply.
With this change you do not see unusable menu entries like linkback on linux
anymore. I also added an entry for emf, since this will be quite useful on
windows.
ps2pdf by default produces the PDF 1.4 format. The PDF 1.3 format was
released in 2000. PDF 1.4 was released in 2001. LyX specified 1.3 as
the output version in 2002 (c1541c22), perhaps because at the time
PDF 1.4 was only a year old so some viewers did not support it.
When using CMake, the binary files are stored in <build-dir>/bin. LyX can't fin tex2lyx with the current code. So, we have to point configure.py to explicitly look in the binary dir.