Items marked with // - are probably fixed, the reporter is asked to verify this and report success or failure ?? - are not reproducable, the reporter is asked to verify this and report success or failure :: - are questions or comments to the reporter, containing question on how to reproduce the bug exactly or things like that !! - mark "not a bug, a feature" replies, usually with a request for further discussion Unmarked items are known unfixed but probably unverified bugs. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- General hints for bug reports: - keep the items small - do not provide excessive information on how to reproduce the bug if this is obvious - if a bug is partly fixed, report it as "fixed" and a new bug item that contains the unfixed part only - check this list regularly, comment on the marked items. - plain ASCII text please, not much more than 70 chars per column ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Dekel: Array/eqnarray // - Ctrl+enter doesn't work // - When creating a matrix/align/eqnarray all columns are centered. Macros: ?? - When changing the macro definition, all instances are not updated. :: I cannot reproduce this. ?? - If I have macros \newcommand{\foo}[1]{[#1]} and ?? \newcommand{\foox}{\foo{x}} then when an instance of \foox is drawn on ?? screen, there are two black frames. While this is "correct", it is ?? annoying. :: This is partially fixed? - LyX crashes when you define a recursive macro Misc: - If I have x_{1}^{2}, I put the cursor before the 2, and press backspace, the result is 'x2'. The correct result should be 'x_{1}2' - If I mark some text and then press ^, then the marked text is deleted. The correct behavior is to put the marked text in the superscript. - Pressing when cursor is in subscript will move the cursor up (to the base of the subscript) instead of exiting the inset. The same problem happen in fractions !! If you type something there you will see that the corsor has left the !! inset. That's mor or less a "feature". If you don't like it, propose a !! method how a subscript inset can figure out what is "optically" lower !! on screen. // - When you press the mouse just to the left of the middle point of // some char, the cursor will be positioned to the right of the char. - It is possible to put two or more consecutive spaces in math text mode // - Text in superscript is not smaller than normal text. ?? - After insertion of \sum, the cursor is in invalid location ?? There is still a problem when doing c-m \sum S-C-M ?? - The height of the frame is often wrong (e.g. x^2) ?? For example $\sum x$ in an inline formula - InsetFormula::validate is broken // - Changing math space length by pressing the space-bar key doesn't work !! it's M-m space now. - The drawing of decorations on screen is very different than latex. (a low priority bug). - If I change '\alpha' to bold, the result is \mathbf{a} - Just moving the cursor in a math inset causes changing the buffer status to (changed). Eran Tromer: - When exiting the formula during selection, the anchor moves to the left of the formula and there's no way to go back. // - Scripts are too large. $\log_2$ exceeds inset frame (non-displayed). - You need two to get past \vec{v}, and all sort of other insetish behavior. - \vec{several-characters} doesn't work. \overrightarrow does. - When the cursor is in a subscript (and either isn't at the end of the subscript or there's no subsubscript), pressing should try to *really* go down (to the next line, or denumerator, or whatever). Currently it goes *up*. Ditto for superscripts. :: Please see comment to Dekel's report on the same problem. // - When choosing to insert "\left\Vert \right\Vert" parenthesis using // the maths [sic] panel, a "\left( \right." is inserted instead. - Formula inside tabular cell: red frame of cell inset and purple frame of formula can overlap, causing leftovers when leaving formula. To get an example, insert a 1x1 tabular into a new document, enter the cell its cell and press M-m ( M-f 1 (zoom=100, screenDPI=100) - When selecting multiple cells in a array using the keyboard, etc. should can move whole cell at a time -- no need to navigate within cells. - When selecting, maybe give a visual indication of the "original" anchor, when it differs from the "actual" one. // - C-v always pastes into the end of the current math inset, instead of // the cursor location. - Placement of cursor using mouse is seriously broken. Example 1: large fractions. Example 2: type into a new document: "M-d xxxxxxxxx M-x footnote-insert" Can't reach most places in the formula using mouse. Rainer Dorsch: - Entering \mathbf{c} in math mode is displayed as written (without backslash) Marcus (Suran@gmx.net) // - In math-mode I can switch back to text-mode in a formula but then I am // not able to type Umlauts. ?? - Having selected some part of a formula and creating a fraction with that ?? part in the top my selection-buffer is replaced with the part. - If the math-panel has the focus I can type text but not switch into math-mode or use some of the other keyboard-shortcuts. - In the default-configuration there are shortcuts for al greek characters _except_ varphi wich is used extensively as a default-variable-name. From: Álvaro Tejero Cantero - the most annoying bug by far: bold is "inherited" to super and subscripts. - when you get into equation array mode, the previous equation(s) remain(s) unaligned. I would be soo much faster to have LyX pick the last equal sign from the previous line as a reference for the alignment (and a good heuristic for the 80% of cases, with the advantage that we don't lose anything enforcing it). This is another case that slows down a lot when typing because, as the previous one, requires going back and correcting. - the movement is sometimes clumsy inside this arrayed equations: ie. C-a (or "home" are understood as "beginning of the formula" instead of "beginning of the equation". Again, a lot of movement has to be made. I suggest mapping "beginning of doc" with "beginning of formula" and so on (very intuitive), in case you don't deem appropriate the "namespace idea" below. //- movement between macro boxes is also weird, but in this one it's perhaps // just me. - I suggest creating a different "kewybinding namespace" for the formulas, since you could put to good use all those keybindings from the menu (M-?, C-?) thath currently do their job PLUS getting you out of the formula. Seriously, it'd be great to have more keys free, so M-d t would be time derivative and M-d ? derivative with respect to the variable ?. And so on. - I'm no experienced C++ programmer, but if you consider it appropriate, I could write a scritp in python for this one (I'm also very optimistic). Tell me what you think: Flattening macros. Sometimes it's annoying the fact that once you have written a macro, you can't touch at it's "constant parts". I call flattening to the process of substituting all macros with LaTeX code. Task: designing a macro substitution system that reads from a file (possibly the same file as the document's) the macros and parses the document doing the appropriate replacements This is very useful, because sometimes you have a big expression in a macro and you want to change an index only. What do you do then?. You retype everything (perhaps several times in the document) or you create extremely generic and parametrizable macros that aren't very fast to fill in the majority of cases. - undo-redo seems too coarse in math-mode. You end up losing substantial fragments of your formula. I hate that when it affects tensors,;). - cut&paste inside math-mode doesn't work the X fashion (middle button doesn't paste anything). - I remember having heard that a search-replace function was planned, so I won't repeat that. Only that the flattening option would be then easier to implement on top of that. - There's something I keep wondering about.. how do new math symbols get into LyX. Do they get ever?. I don't know if it can be done, but if you tell me where to "draw" those symbols or how, I would very glad start doing it. LyX deserves to have support (visual support) for all the AMSTeX constructs. But there must be something structural going on there, because otherwise more math symbols would be ready by now.. just a thought. - Some math symbols aren't very well supported (to my knowledge). I'm thinking of underbraces with extra data in them,or [] options. Herbert Voss: - it's not possible to enter superscript when the ^-char works as a dead key. with the second ^- or the space the cursor jumps outside the mathbox. Jules Bean: - I've been using Lyx for a year or two now, and I have some thoughts on improving the interface. Not the GUI, as such, but the basic Human-Machine interface --- the efficiency with which I can enter information into it. There are a couple of general principles I'm try to uphold here: a) If something's easy & quick in LaTeX then it should be easy & quick in LyX (unless it really isn't very common). b) Actions which are used frequently should be a single key-press, even if that's not very easy to remember. You learn it. c) Actions which are used rarely should be mnemonic -- easy to remember -- even if they are multiple keypresses. Things you do rarely you care less about the time it takes to perform. 2) Math-mode entry Under the xemacs keybindings, which I use, (damn it, I don't want to confuse my poor muscle memory more than necessary by learning too many different bindings for the same actions), the key sequence to enter math-mode is 'M-c m'. I'm not sure exactly what to propose instead, but I really think this needs to be only one keypress. As an aside, you may think that I'm whining over nothing. However, when you enter math mode as often as I do (often more than once a sentence) it gets very annoying, especially as compared to simply typing '$' in plain emacs. Also, you may say 'why don't you just change your bindings file?'. I will ;) but I wanted to start some discussion on this since it can benefit everyone! More serious, though, than the number of characters which need to be typed is the confusing nature of the command. 'M-c m', typed once, puts you into math-mode. However, typing 'M-c m' again doesn't put you out of math-mode --- it puts you into math-text mode. Then hitting it again puts you back into normal math-mode. IMO, 'modal' keys should either be idempotent (so hitting it the second time does nothing) or self-inverting. In fact, the inverse to 'M-c m' is either 'ESC' or simply a space typed at the end of the block --- which is confusing, since they're not of the same 'shape' as the command that got you in there. Now, I'm not saying that 'space' shouldn't be allowed as a short-cut to get you out of math-mode; it's a most useful and natural one, I like it a lot. However, on balance I think M-c m should also have that effect. 3) Math-mode inconsistencies Sometimes 'the same action' has the same keystroke both within and without math-mode. This is very sensible. However, it is very annoying when they don't behave the way you're expecting them to. For example, 'M-c e' puts you into 'emphasise' mode. Ignoring the fact that in text mode this is italics, and in math-mode it stands for the calligraphic character set, I think of these as the same action, so I like the fact that they have the same keys. However, in math-mode, 'M-c e' is idempotent, (and you need 'M-c space' to get back into normal) whereas in text-mode 'M-c e' is self-inverse. These are the two possibilities I listed as acceptable before, but consistency would be nice ;-) IMO, self-inverse would be best for both. 4) ERT in math-mode Math-mode doesn't handle ERT very well at all. It flips back out of TeX-mode as soon as you type any special character. Very annoying if I wish to typeset an \xymatrix inside math-mode (see also my comment above about table-like environments), since I can't type the &. In fact, my xymatrices end up as $$\xymatrix{..}$$ in text-mode ERT. Also rather annoying when you want to use a \macro with more than one argument (but not fatally so). 5) Proposal : a 'ligatures' or 'autocorrect' system One of the very minor, but useful, features of TeX is the way it lets you type the nearest approximation to what you want using a 'typewriter keyboard', and substitutes the typographically neat equivalent. In particular, 'fancy' quotes (") and en and em dashes (---). I propose that this UI element could be taken up a level into LyX, with a system that does the following (for example): -> becomes \rightarrow <- becomes \leftarrow => becomes \Rightarrow (etc..) ==> becomes \Longrightarrow (etc..) This may only be appropriate in math mode, of course. This family bug me in particular because they take ages to type using a \-escape. Undoubtedly sharp minds will think of others, and also we need some way of actually typing those sequences as literals when we want them. 6) Scope macros: The current macro system is clever, but could be neater. One improvement I'd like is to let LyX know about TeX's scoping rules... Yves Bastide: - use AMS's \text instead of \mbox. It supports accented characters, among others... (selected via validate()?) Jean-Marc: > \def\neq{\not=} \let\ne=\neq > \let\le=\leq > \let\ge=\geq > \let\owns=\ni > \let\gets=\leftarrow > \let\to=\rightarrow > % \let\@@sqrt\sqrtsign > \let\|=\Vert Angus: - make math lables editable