Before, it directly wrote to the XMLStream, but it made implementation of new lines tricky. Now, it returns the XML for each sub-paragraph (delimited by new lines) as a string, so that the caller can adopt a more precise behaviour (such as in lists).
As this required to first generate the paragraph before outputting it if necessary, tests like XMLStream::isTagOpen no more worked properly. This also refactors table handling to get rid of that case (and make code easier to read).
Includes a test case useful for some of the previous commits (notes in abstract, PI escaping, counter warnings).
Still missing: marginal and side notes. Shouldn't they be ported to InsetMarginal?
* invert failing lyx2lyx tests for ko/Welcome
* add dedicated test sample
* set language for English text part in ko/Welcome.
Also
* fix a lyx2lyx language test sample
* fix clause in unreliableTests
This happens with "inputenc: auto-legacy" if a language with default
encoding "utf8" (e.g. Turkmen or Mongolian) is used in a Quote
(or another environment).
Simplify user preamble.
Use common test document for Xe- and LuaTeX with polyglossia
and special one for languages only supported by XeTeX.
Update tagging patterns and comments.
Allow use for font MonomakhUnicode. The font is available in texlive
and making a symbolic link in ~/.fonts/fonts to point to the appropriate
directory makes the font available to the system too.
LyX follows LaTeX in dropping support for this combination
(it only worked by tricking "inputenc.sty").
There is no known case where this combination is required or helpfull.
For power users with special needs, XeTeX + TeX fonts is still
available after setting the input encoding to "ascii" or "utf8-plain".
See also #10600.
Following the suggestion in the Babel-Azerbaijani documentation,
we use the glyphs from the Cyrillic fonts for the Latin
text character. This fits better than IPA fonts (assuming there are matching
Latin and Cyrillic fonts specified) and also provides bold etc.
Encoding cp858 supported by only some iconv variants.
Most users will want to change their "encoding" setting instead
of installing/recompiling "iconv" to support this legacy encoding.
ctests are likely will fail with either "vanilla" or "enhanced"
iconv and test a situation that is unlikely to change generally,
so we ignore this test now by default.
Separate xetex-inputenc test sample in working and non-working parts.
Sort HTML-only tests.
Update tagging and ignore-rules.
Change inputencoding to utf8 in dedicated tests (get pdf4_texF working).
Thai works fine with LuaTeX, TeX-fonts and auto-legacy input encoding.
Remove obsolete preamble code,
we now load "fontenc" with Japanese documents by default.
* do not ignore Japanese (platex) with system fonts.
* CJK can be used with XeTeX and TeX-fonts if the input encoding is utf8.
do not ignore.
* TODO: set non-TeX fonts and uninvert where possible.
Fixes wrong and missing characters in text parts in other languages
(platex does not support "inputenc").
Fixes compilation errors due to desynchronized encoding switches.
* some Japanese (platex) documents fail with inputenc "utf8-platex"
(missing characters in non-Japanese text parts), because the
Unicodechar definitions from "inputenc" are not used.
* some Japanes (platex) documents show wrong output with "auto",
because platex ignores the encoding switch for text parts
in other languages.
* Japanese Beamer documents must set default output to "pdf",
because dvipdfm(x) produces wrong output with document class "Beamer".
* update tagging/inverting rules.
* use HE8 font encoding for Hebrew in language test.
While HE8 provides more characters and prevents use of bitmap fonts,
forcing its use may break older installations.
The dedicated test file 012_hebrew_he_HE8.lyx provides an
example for use of HE8 encoded fonts with babel-hebrew.
The "nikud" (vowel) signs, shindot, and shindot are combining Unicode
characters. However, LaTeX-Hebrew expects them as postfix characters, not
accent macros (cf. www.cs.tau.ac.il/~stoledo/Bib/Pubs/vowels.pdf).