This patch implements 'move row' and 'move column' features for tabular.
The purpose is to provide a useful behavior in tabular that is
consistent with PARAGRAPH_MOVE_UP and PARAGRAPH_MOVE_DOWN so that the
user can, for example, do alt-<up> to move a row up. Alternatively,
icons for these features are also added to the table toolbar and
context menu.
If there is any selection, the feature is disabled. This is consistent
with how PARAGRAPH_MOVE_UP works in other contexts. Additionally, 'move
row' is disabled if there is a multi-row in the current or target row;
and 'move column' is disabled if there is a multi-column in the current
or target column.
'move row' moves only the left and right borders of a cell along with
the row. Similarly, 'move column' moves only the the top and bottom
borders.
Implementing similar functionality for other insets, such as arrays and
array environments, is on my TODO list.
- shapepar.module: new module to get non-rectangular paragraph shapes
- SpecialParagraphShape.tex: an example shape definition file
- Additional.lyx:
- accept all changes and updated all language versions accordingly
- describe how to get custom paragraph shapes (last section of the document)
- preamble cleanup
Most images are generated by development/tools/generate_symbols_images.py, but
some were drawn manually. Now there is no image missing from the ones the
script can generate.
Some macros defined by wasysym.sty work only in text mode: They either
produce an error in math mode, or wrong output. These symbols are now marked
as text symbols, so that no \ensuremath is created for LaTeX export if they
appear inside \text{}, and the correct images are created.
What was previously accomplished by wrapCitation is now customizable in the
layout files. What we provide by default here corresponds roughly to the
LyX 2.0 behavior.
- achicago
- apacite
- apalike
- astron
- authordate
- chicago
- harvard
- mslapa
- named
This allows these citation packages can be Required by the document layout.
LyX handles the package ordering, loading any of these packages before natbib
when both are required by the document layout. For example, apacite can be
used with or without natbib.
The package achicago isn't compatible with natbib out-of-the-box,
but the following compatibility code makes it work:
\usepackage{achicago}
\let\achicagobib\thebibliography
\usepackage[authoryear]{natbib}
\let\thebibliography\achicagobib
\let\UnexpandableProtect\protect
\let\SCcite\astroncite
- the packages which are independent of document classes are checked first - for the case that the Internet connection breaks during the checking/installation of missing packages