* "platex" fails with "inputencoding default", if there is text in other languages.
"jis-platex" works fine, "jis-utf8" fails with German Umlauts (maybe more).
* The expert setting "inputencoding default" switches the inpute encoding
with language switches without marking this in the LaTeX source.
It is rarely required (if ever) and makes documents easy to break.
It is not required for AMS Books, Simple CV, ... (probabely a tex2lyx issue).
"utf8" and "auto" work fine.
Re-structure and rename files in a transparent way. Most template/example
names now correspond to the (verbose GUI) name of their layouts.
Note that this, most prominently, also changes [LANG/]splash.lyx to
something less insiderish, namely "Welcome.lyx".
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".
On TL17, the original default fonts used to work only with help of fix-cm package.
Only the Japanese bemer files are unchanged, because the output was only a mix
of Latin letters and thus not readable. Probably missing font on my side.
LyX correctly gave a warning about mixing InTitle layouts: There was
a LyX note in a Title environment, then there were standard
environments, and then a Title environment. This setup caused
several missing elements in the PDF.
Simply changing the Title environment of the Note to standard solved
the problems: The PDF output is now correct and LyX no longer gives
a warning.
This change fixes the export of our FeynmanDiagrams.lyx example
files on the latest TeX Live 2016.
The IJMP(C|D).lyx examples compiled before the change but might as
well convert these instances of '\rm' also.
The changes were made with the help of the following command:
find ./ -iregex .*lyx -exec sed -i 's/\\rm /\\textrm /g' {} \;
and the resulting diff was confirmed manually.
This commit is consistent with 3cecd4d3.
The difference has been validated with diffpdf.
The following could not be tested and were left unchanged:
AEA.lyx
IJMPC.lyx
ja_beamer-conference-ornate-20min.lyx
The following is the script that I used (in lib/templates):
LYX=../../build/src/lyx
$LYX -E pdf2 $1.old.pdf $1
sed -i "s/^\\\\begin_inset Separator parbreak$/\\\\begin_inset Separator plain/" $1
sed -i "/^\\\\begin_inset Separator latexpar$/ { N; d; }" $1
$LYX -e lyx $1
$LYX -E pdf2 $1.pdf $1
diffpdf $1.old.pdf $1.pdf
Some templates had the inputenc setting "default" (meaning
use the language default encoding, (not TeX's default which is 7-bit ASCII) but
don't load inputenc, leave handling of non-ASCII characters to the author).
This is no apparent problem as long as no non-ASCII character is used in the
document. It is very unsave, however, as any non-ASCII character used in the
document has the potential to either make compilation fail or be
misrepresented in the output.
Also MacOSX ReadMe files. Note that a few lib/doc files are
also "updated" because trailing spaces are removed, but their file
formats are the same because they were recently updated at 83672113.
I did "git checkout LFUNs.lyx" because this file is generated
automatically and has a special header.
This template was only reported as failing to compile by LyX as of
0a6120cb. I do not know how long this template was actually failing
to compile without error. The problem was that the class requires
\doi to be defined. This might not have been a requirement in
previous versions of the class.
Thanks to Enrico for finding the problem and solution.
Compilation was failing with TeX Live 2013 because of
the format of one of the references. This commit just
changes one of the references to a different one.
- this brings back all our template files (they are no example files, would have been a regression otherwise because LyX 2.0 offers them already in "new from template")
- the thesis files will stay in the examples folder for now until we have a real fiix for bug #8643
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.
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
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.