Consider biblatex's new field names: location (address),
journaltitle (journal), institution (school).
Biblatex provides alias for the legacy bibtex field names. Hence check
for the new names only if the legacy names are not used.
The compilation did not succeed before because of an é in an ERT
inset. This is changed to \'{e}.
Also correct spelling of "decouvert" to "découvert".
Alternatives would be to use a LyX note or a comment inset. Since
the original version uses ERT, I do not change that.
This commit fixes the following ctest:
export/examples/fr/beamer-article_pdf4_texF
It likely also fixes the corresponding test for fr/beamer.lyx, but
since the default output format is set to pdf2 we do not run the
test.
For more information, see:
https://www.mail-archive.com/search?l=mid&q=20160919192413.ftnz4gk6dl5w3k5c%40Opti1604
(cherry picked from commit 9f3518bcd2)
When resolving biblatex's xdata references, consider that xdata fields
can contain a comma-separated list of keys, not just a single key like
crossref.
In addition to the classic crossref, biblatex introduces xdata
references in order to source-out common data of entries. Entries
that have "xdata = {somekey}" just inherit all fields from the
respective @xdata entry, if the field is not already defined in
the entry itself (just like crossref, with the exception that @xdata
entries themselves are _never_ output on their own). @xdata entries can
themselves inherit to other @xdata entries (ad infinitum). So you can,
for instance, setup an xdata entry for a book series with series name
that inherits an xdata entry with information of the publisher
(publisher, address). Any book of that series would just need to refer
to the series xdata and add the number.
BiblioInfo now checks, in addition to crossrefs, for such xdata
references and inherits missing fields.
Nte that biblatex also introduces an "xref" field as an alternative to
crossref. We must not care about that, since the point of xref is that
it does not inherit fields from the target (just cites that one if a
given number of refs to it exist)
Do not assume that the /systemlyxdir path prefix in \origin refers
to the system directory of the running instance, but check through
some heuristics what the real system dir is. In this way, a document
in the system dir of any other LyX installation is correctly spotted
and the \origin tag properly updated. For example, one can use an
installed version of lyx to edit a document in the lib/doc dir of a
git repo and obtain the same result as when running lyx in place.
Move them to a subdir, ignore this subdir for other tests.
Dedicated test samples for LaTeX-specific problems don't give additional value if tested for loading, conversion, or other exports.
Revert to the strategy used at 8f86ee74 but not using mathedWordList
because it may be still uninitialized at load time. Instead, use the
globalMacros method for getting the same info.
There was a thinko at 8ec91e80, because globalMacros always returns
null for user defined macros.