For some reason theorems titles has \beginR without a \endR, and since
this is basically inside restricted horizontal mode, TeX complains about
a missing \endR.
I could not figure out why were they there in the first place so I
removed them and the output did not change, and the warnings are gone.
Beside that the numbering of the theorems is wrong (e.g. 1.0 instead of
0.1), the \@makelr thing should happen after babel is loaded.
The theorems layouts did not have a counter (in LyX) so I added one.
Change "TextFont" to "Font". This fixes the following terminal
errors when opening the file:
LyX: Unknown InsetLayout tag [around line 247 of file
[layouts/jlreq-common.inc] current token: 'TextFont' context: '']
LyX: Unknown InsetLayout tag [around line 247 of file
[layouts/jlreq-common.inc] current token: 'Family' context: '']
LyX: Unknown InsetLayout tag [around line 248 of file
[layouts/jlreq-common.inc] current token: 'Typewriter' context: '']
LyX: Unknown InsetLayout tag [around line 249 of file
[layouts/jlreq-common.inc] current token: 'EndFont' context: '']
Remove acknowledgment theorem types
As we have learned, these shouldn't have been added from the get go.
Documents having it get a local layout definition.
With the current settings, a theorem with several paragraphs will have several wrapper tags (i.e. two `<db:figure>`, with one paragraph each, one next to the other when it's the same theorem), while there should be only one (one `<db:figure>` with two paragraphs).
It makes me wonder whether DocBookWrapperMergeWithPrevious should be the default value. I don't see a case where it would be set to `false` with a wrapper tag, but the test suite isn't developed enough to make the change with peace of mind (i.e. remove the parameter `DocBookWrapperMergeWithPrevious` and consider it is always `true` in the code).
For the record, the current code also works with two subsequent theorems with two paragraphs each (see new test case).
I've modified all the non-AMS theorem modules so they would be independent of packages. currently
the code support \theoremstyle, but only with definition, plain and remark.
I'v added a new theorem module that support the thmtools \listoftheorems.
I've modified the syntax of all theorem modules, such that it would be easier to
create a new one, or maintaining the ones that exists. Instead of using \newtheorem
in the preamble of a lyaout, I wrote \lyx@newtheorem, and in each module I've defiened
\lyx@newtheorem as fitted. This way, there is only need in the files thorems-base, and theorems-extended,
instead of an .inc file for each module.
I've added theorems-labels.inc, a file that suppose to be included in a "Numbered by type" module,
to change the Label and the LabelCounter of the layouts in theorems-base.inc.
Note that in this configuration, all non-AMS modules will clash with the AMS ones, and so as the
proof versions. theorems-proof-std.inc suppose to be in the non-AMS while theorems-proof.inc
should be included only in AMS variants.
The new parameter allows more flexibility when encoding some elements that have a poor mapping in DocBook, like theorems. The major use is to wrap the environment in a generic container, figure, which requires a title (but none is available).
This adds native macros for subindexes (!level), |see and |seealso
as well as native support for ranges |( |) and pagination format
-- e.g., |textbf -- via the index dialog
Resolves#12478, #7232 and #5014
The feature is complete (incl. tex2lyx) except for
* file format change and lyx2lyx
* docbook/xhtml
* documentation
These are just annoying. Note that the language mark cannot currently
be specified in a layout file, but it is not clear that there is a
need for that. Therefore I used the simple and hackish way.
An inset that resets its font (like Footnote) does not care at all
about enclosing font. Therefore the real starting point is the class
default font. This avoid cases where the footnote contents is forced
to \normalsize.
It turns out that the Greyedout note inset, did inherit font but was
declared as not doing it. This commmit changes the definition by
adding \normalfont\normalsize so that no inheritance happens.
Note that actually \normalfont resets everything but the font size.
This does not matter for footnote (which has its own font size) and
greyedout (which is fixed now), but may matter elsewhere. Also, I do
not know what the situation with HTML is.
There is nothing in the diff besides the format number changing from
93 to 95. From what I understand, this is as expected since 93 -> 94
and 94 -> 95 just add new layout tags.
Updating the layouts makes it easier to test master. Otherwise, in
some use cases layout2layout can be run hundreds of times which can
make some things slow (e.g., opening documents or even opening the
advanced find pane).
The "Default Text" argument is usually non-blank. If the user
desired to leave it blank, it seems that "Invisible" would be a
better choice.
Similarly, an action is usually specified for this layout to be
useful.
When a paragraph is empty, it was not possible to query what the left
margin would be for an hypothetical second row.
Modify TextMetrics::leftMargin so that it does not test
whether position is after the last position of the paragraph.
Cosmetics: set the size of label to "small" for Abstract layout in
standard classes and reduce the spacing between label and text.
Fixes remainder of #11939.
Since the first row may be indented, it is necessary to find out what
the left margin would be on the next row (even if this next row does
not exst.
To this end, modify TextMetrics::leftMargin so that it does not test
whether position is after the last position of the paragraph.
Cosmetics: set the size of label to "small" for Abstract layout in
standard classes and reduce the spacing between label and text.
Fixes remainder of #11939.
I'm sure I've missed some here. I tried to check the CLS files for
some of these, but since I don't use a lot of these layouts, it is
hard to catch them all.
Includes a fix when wrappers are used with empty paragraphs. The logic is probably wrong if two legit wrapped paragraphs have one empty paragraph in the middle. This is only for slightly convoluted cases... Wrapping decisions should rather be taken for a series of paragraphs at once, but it would be more complex to implement and would only solve very peculiar cases like these ones.