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733 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
733 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
=head1 NAME
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B<reLyX> - translate well-behaved LaTeX into LyX
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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The simplest way to use B<reLyX> is via the File->Import command in LyX. (This
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option is available starting with version 1.0.0.) That runs B<reLyX> on
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the given file and loads the resulting file into LyX. You should try that
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first, and call it from the command line only if you need to use more
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complicated options.
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B<reLyX> [ B<-c> I<textclass> ] [ B<-df> ] [ B<-o> I<outputdir> ] [B<-n>]
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S<[ B<-r> I<renv1>[,I<renv2>...]]> S<[ B<-s> I<sfile1>[,I<sfile2>...]]>
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F<inputfile>
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B<reLyX> B<-p> B<-c> I<textclass> [ B<-df> ] [ B<-o> I<outputdir> ]
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S<[ B<-r> I<renv1>[,I<renv2>...]]> S<[ B<-s> I<sfile1>[,I<sfile2>...]]>
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F<inputfiles>
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B<reLyX> B<-h>
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=head1 OPTIONS
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=over 4
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=item B<-c>
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Class. By default, when B<reLyX> sees a C<\documentclass{foo}> command, it
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creates a file of textclass "foo" and reads the LyX layout file for that class
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(something like /usr/local/share/lyx/layouts/foo.layout OR
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B<HOME>/.lyx/layouts/foo.layout). Use B<-c> to declare a different textclass
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(and read a different layout file).
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=item B<-d>
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Debug. By default, B<reLyX> gives sparse output and deletes the temporary files
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which were created during translation. Using the B<-d> flag will create much
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more output (both to stdout and stderr) and leave the temporary files around.
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=item B<-f>
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Force. B<reLyX> will not run if the .lyx file it would generate already exists
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Use the B<-f> option (carefully) to clobber any existing files.
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=item B<-h>
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Help. Print out usage information and quit.
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=item B<-n>
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Noweb. Translate a noweb (aka literate programming) file. This should be
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(almost?) equivalent to running "noweb2lyx foo.tex foo.lyx". This option
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requires the B<-c> option.
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=item B<-o>
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Output directory. With this option, all temporary files and LyX output files
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(for the given input file, for any included files, or for any file fragments
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given with the B<-p> option) will be put into I<outputdir>. Otherwise, for
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each file F<dir/foo.tex>, the temporary files and the LyX output file will be
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created in F<dir>. This can be useful if a file includes files from other
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directories which you want to consolidate in one directory, or if you don't
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have write permission on the directory the LaTeX files are in.
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=item B<-p>
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Partial file. The input files are LaTeX fragments, with no preamble matter or
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C<\begin{document}> commands. This option requires the B<-c> option, since there
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are no C<\documentclass> commands in the files B<reLyX> is translating. When
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using this option, you can translate more than one file, as long as all files
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are the same class. The LyX file created by B<reLyX> can be included in an
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existing LyX file using the "Include LyX File" command from LyX's Insert menu.
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=item B<-r>
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Regular environments (see L<"Syntax Files">). If you give more than one
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environment, separate them with commas (not spaces). You'll probably need to
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quote the environment list, especially if it has asterisk environments (foo*)
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in it. If you use this command often, considering creating a personal syntax
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file.
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=item B<-s>
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Syntax files. Input (one or more quoted, comma-separated) syntax files to read
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in addition to the default. (see L<"Syntax Files"> for details).
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=back
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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=head2 Introduction
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B<reLyX> will create a LyX file F<dir/foo.lyx> from the LaTeX file
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F<dir/foo.tex> (unless the B<-o> option is used).
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Suffixes .tex, .ltx and .latex are supported. If F<inputfile>
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does not exist and does not have one of these suffixes, B<reLyX> will try to
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translate F<inputfile.tex>. (This is similar to the behavior of LaTeX.)
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The purpose of B<reLyX> is to translate I<well-behaved> LaTeX2e into LyX. If
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your LaTeX file doesn't compile---or if you do weird things, like redefining
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standard LaTex commands---it may choke. LaTeX209 will often be translated
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correctly, but it's not guaranteed.
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B<reLyX> has some bugs and lacks a few features. However, its main goals are:
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=over 4
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=item *
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Get through a well-behaved LaTeX2e file without crashing
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=item *
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Translate a lot of that file.
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=item *
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Localize the parts that can't be translated and copy them in TeX mode
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=back 4
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It achieves these main goals pretty well on most files.
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There are many improvements that can and will be made to B<reLyX> in the
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future. However, we wanted to get B<reLyX> out there early on, to make
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it easier for new LyX users to read in their existing LaTeX files.
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=head2 Usage
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Here's a more lengthy description of what you should do to translate a LaTeX
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document into LyX.
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=over 4
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=item *
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Run B<reLyX>.
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B<reLyX> will inform you of its progress and give any warnings to stderr, so if
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you don't want any output at all, try (in csh) 'reLyX foo.tex >& /dev/null'.
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You should NOT redirect standard output to F<foo.lyx>.
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=item *
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Run LyX (version 0.12 or 1.0 or later) on the resulting .lyx file.
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In theory, most of the file will have been translated, and anything that's
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untranslatable will be highlighted in red (TeX mode). In theory, LyX will be
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able to read in the file, and to create printed documents from it, because all
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that untranslated red stuff will be passed directly back to LaTeX, which LyX
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uses as a backend. Unfortunately, reality doesn't always reflect theory. If
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B<reLyX> crashes, or LyX cannot read the generated LyX file, see L</BUGS>,
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or the F<BUGS> file.
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=item *
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Change things that are highlighted in red (TeX mode) by hand in LyX.
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As mentioned above, you should be able to print out the LyX file even without
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doing this. However, changing a command in TeX mode to the corresponding LyX
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object will allow you to take advantage of LyX's WYSIWYM editing.
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B<reLyX> is not guaranteed to create a LyX file which generates exactly the same
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output as the LaTeX file, but it should come close. B<relyX> will generally err
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on the side of translating less to ensure that dvi or ps files are accurate,
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even though this leads to more "evil red text" and less WYSIWYM.
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=item *
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PROOFREAD THE DOCUMENT!!
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I'm sure you were planning on doing this anyway, but it's particularly
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important after translating a LaTeX document. B<reLyX> is, at least now, better
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at "macro-translating" (translating the whole document) than
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"micro-translating" (translating every little detail). For example, you may see
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extra spaces or deleted spaces. Space handling has improved, but it's
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not perfect.
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=back
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=head2 What reLyX Can Handle
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B<reLyX> understands many LaTeX commands. It will translate:
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=over 4
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=item *
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regular text, including mini-commands like ~, '', C<\@>, C<\TeX>, as well as
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accented characters like C<\'{a}>, and the special cases ?` and !`
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=item *
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title commands like C<\author>, C<\date>, C<\title>, C<\thanks> and the
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abstract environment
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=item *
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heading commands like C<\section> including starred commands (C<\section*>)
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=item *
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Environments: quote, quotation, and verse; center, flushright, and flushleft
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=item *
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itemize, enumerate, and description environments, and their C<\item> commands.
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Also, well-behaved nested lists
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=item *
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cross-referencing commands: C<\ref>, C<\pageref>, C<\label>, and C<\cite>
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=item *
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C<\footnote> and C<\margin>
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=item *
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font-changing commands including C<\em>, C<\emph>, C<\textit>, and
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corresponding commands to change family, size, series, and shape
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=item *
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C<\input{foo}> (or C<\input{foo.blah}>) and C<\include{foo}>. Plain TeX
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C<\input> command "C<\input foo.tex>" is also supported.
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=item *
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tabular environment, and commands that go inside it like C<\hline>, C<\cline>,
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and C<\multicolumn> (but see below)
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=item *
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float environments table and table*, as well as C<\caption> commands within
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them
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=item *
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float environments figure and figure*, as well as graphics inclusion commands
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\epsf, \epsffile, \epsfbox, \epsfxsize, \epsfig, \psfig, and \includegraphics.
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Both the graphics and graphicx forms of \includegraphics are supported.
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Note, however, that many figures will not be translatable into LyX. See
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the section on "What LyX Can't Handle" below.
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=item *
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thebibliography environment and C<\bibitem> command, as well as BibTeX's
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C<\bibliography> and C<\bibliographystyle> commands
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=item *
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miscellaneous commands: C<\hfill>, C<\>C<\>, C<\noindent>, C<\ldots>...
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=item *
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documentclass-specific environments (and some commands) which can be
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translated to LyX layouts
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=item *
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arguments to certain untranslatable commands (e.g. C<\mbox>)
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=back
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Some of this support may not be 100% yet. See below for details
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B<reLyX> copies math (almost) verbatim from your LaTeX file. Luckily, LyX reads
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in LaTeX math, so (almost) any math which is supported by LyX should work just
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fine. A few math commands which are not supported by LyX will be replaced with
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their equivalents, e.g., C<\to> is converted to C<\rightarrow>. See
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L<"Syntax Files"> for more details.
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B<reLyX> will also copy any preamble commands (i.e., anything before
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C<\begin{document}>) verbatim, so fancy stuff you've got in your preamble
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should be conserved in dvi and printed documents, although it will not of
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course show up in the LyX window. Check Layout->LaTeX Preamble to make sure.
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=head2 What reLyX Can't Handle --- But it's OK
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=over 4
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=item *
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tabular* tables
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=item *
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minipages
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=item *
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spacing commands (C<\vspace>, C<\pagebreak>, C<\par>, ...)
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=item *
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C<\centering>, C<\raggedleft>, C<\raggedright>
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=item *
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C<\verb> and verbatim environment. B<reLyX> is careful to copy I<exactly> in
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this case, including comments and whitespace.
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=item *
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some unknown (e.g., user-defined) environments and commands
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=back
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B<reLyX> copies unknown commands, along with their arguments, verbatim into the
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LyX file. Also, if it sees a C<\begin{foo}> where it doesn't recognize the
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"foo" environment, it will copy verbatim until it sees C<\end{foo}> (unless
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you use the B<-r> option). Hopefully, then, most of these unknown commands
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won't cause B<reLyX> to break; they'll merely require you to do some editing
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once you've loaded the file up in LyX. That should be less painful than
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editing either the .tex or the .lyx file using a text editor.
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=head2 What reLyX Handles Badly --- aka BUGS
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Since B<reLyX> is relatively new, it's got a number of problems. As it
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matures, these bugs will be squished.
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If B<reLyX> is choking on something, or LyX can't read it after B<reLyX>
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translates it, the best thing to do is to put C<\begin{reLyXskip}> before the
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offending text, and C<\end{reLyXskip}> after it. I call this a "skip" block.
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B<reLyX> will copy this block exactly, in TeX mode. Then edit the resulting
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LyX file, and translate the unknown stuff by hand. The reLyXskip environment
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is magical; the C<\begin> and C<\end> commands will not be put into the LyX
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file.
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=over 4
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=item *
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"Exact" copying of unknown environments and commands isn't quite exact.
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Specifically, newlines and comments may be lost. This will yield ugly LyX, but
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in almost all cases the output will be the same. However, certain parts of the
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file will be copied perfectly, including whitespace and comments. This
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includes: the LaTeX preamble, verbatim environments and C<\verb> commands, and
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skip blocks.
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=item *
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B<reLyX> translates only a few options to the C<\documentclass> command.
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(Specifically 1[012]pt, [letter|legal|executive|a4|a5|b5]paper,
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[one|two]side, landscape, and [one|two]column.) Other options are placed in
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the "options" field in the Layout->Document popup.
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More importantly, B<reLyX> doesn't translate C<\usepackage> commands, margin
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commands, C<\newcommands>, or, in fact, anything else from the preamble. It
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simply copies them into the LaTeX preamble. If you have margin commands in
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your preamble, then the LyX file will generate the right margins. However,
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these margins will override any margins you set in the LyX Layout->Paper
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popup. So you should remove the options from the preamble
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(Layout->Latex Preamble) to be safe. The same goes for setting your language
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with babel, C<\inputencoding>, C<\pagestyle>, etc.
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=item *
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The foil class has a couple bugs. B<reLyX> may do weird things with optional
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arguments to C<\foilhead> commands. Also, it may handle C<\begin{dinglist}>
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incorrectly (although the stuff in the environment should translate normally).
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=back
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Less significant bugs can be found in the F<BUGS> file.
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B<reLyX> is hopefully rather robust. As mentioned above, it may not translate
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your file perfectly, but it shouldn't crash. If it does crash---and the
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problem is not one of those mentioned above or in the F<BUGS> file---see
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L<"Bug Reports">.
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=head2 What LyX Can't Handle
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LyX itself is missing a couple features, such that even if B<reLyX> translates
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things perfectly, LyX may still have trouble reading it. If you really need
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these features, you can export your final document as LaTeX, and put them
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back in. See F<BUGS> for more details on these bugs.
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=over 4
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=item *
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For a number of commands, LyX does not support the optional argument. Examples
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include C<\chapter> (and other sectioning commands), and C<\\>.
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B<reLyX> will automatically discard the optional arguments with a warning to
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stdout. LyX also ignores the width argument for the thebibliography
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environment.
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=item *
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Centering (or right or left justifying) works on full paragraphs.
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=item *
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LyX support for tables isn't perfect. For complicated tables, use a "skip"
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block, so that they will be copied in TeX mode.
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=item *
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The LyX math editor can't handle the AMS-LaTeX math environments align, split,
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etc. So those environments will be copied in TeX mode. You can change
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equation* environments to the exactly equivalent displaymath, and then they
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will be translated correctly.
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=item *
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Lyx does not support clipping or bounding boxes for included graphics files.
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Therefore, many graphics inclusion commands will be untranslatable, and
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copied in TeX mode. In certain cases, you might be able to translate the
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command by hand within LyX---for example, if you included a bounding box but
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the bounding box is already in the .eps file.
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LyX only allows figures to have sizes in in,cm, or percentages of \textwidth
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or \textheight (or \columnwidth). B<reLyX> will translate from other units, like
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pt or mm, but it cannot translate other lengths (e.g. if you wanted to scale a
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figure to size \topmargin for some reason). B<reLyX> will copy figures with
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untranslatable sizes in TeX mode. Again, you might be able to fix that within
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LyX.
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=back
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=head2 The Future of reLyX
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In the future, more commands and environments will be supported by B<reLyX>.
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Bugs will be eradicated.
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See the TODO file for details.
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=head1 EXAMPLES
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reLyX B<-df> B<-o> "my/dir" B<-r> "myenv" foo.tex > foo.debug
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The above will create a file my/dir/foo.lyx from foo.tex, overwriting if
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necessary. When it finds a C<\begin{myenv} ... \end{myenv}> block, it will
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translate the stuff within the block, but copy the C<\begin> and C<\end>
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commands in TeX mode. Finally, I'm going to keep the temporary files around
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(they will also be in my/dir/) and output lots of debugging information into
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the file foo.debug.
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reLyX B<-n> B<-c> "literate-article" foo.tex
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The above will change a noweb document into a LyX literate-article
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document. A user would do this if the noweb document had documentclass
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article.
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=head1 NOTES
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=head2 Bug Reports
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If B<reLyX> is crashing or otherwise acting strangely---in ways
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other than those described in L<"BUGS"> or the F<BUGS> file---then please run
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B<reLyX -d>. That will allow you to figure out where in the reLyXing process
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it crashed. That, in turn, will allow you to write a better bug report, which
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will allow the developers to fix it more quickly and easily.
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Bug reports should be sent to the LyX developers' mailing list. Its address
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is currently lyx-devel@lists.lyx.org, but you can check the LyX home page,
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http://www.lyx.org if that bounces. If you are running B<reLyX> on a huge file,
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please do not send all of the output in your bug report. Just include the last
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ten or twenty lines of output, along with the piece of the LaTeX file it
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crashed on. Or, even better, attach a small but complete file which causes
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the same problem as your original file.
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=head2 Implementation Details:
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B<reLyX> makes several "passes" in order to translate a TeX file. On each pass,
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it creates one or two files.
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=over 4
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=item Pass 0
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Before doing anything, read the syntax file (or files).
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=item Pass 1a
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Split preamble (anything before a C<\begin{document}> command) off the rest
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of the file. It saves the two pieces in separate files. This is necessary
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because there may be very strange stuff in a preamble. It also ignores
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anything after the C<\end{document}>, on the assumption that it isn't LaTeX.
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=item Pass 1b
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Translate the preamble. Currently, that just means translating the
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C<\documentclass> command and copying the rest exactly into the LyX preamble.
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Once you know what class the document is, read the LyX layout file for that
|
|
class.
|
|
|
|
=item Pass 2
|
|
|
|
"Clean" the TeX file, generating slightly stricter LaTeX. This includes:
|
|
|
|
=over 8
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Change, e.g., x^2 to the equivalent but clearer x^{2}
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Removing optional arguments that LyX can't handle (e.g., from C<\chapter>)
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Changing C<{\em foo}> to C<\emph{foo}>, etc. This is necessary because LyX
|
|
always writes out the non-local forms anyway. This should very rarely make a
|
|
difference.
|
|
|
|
=back
|
|
|
|
=item Pass 3
|
|
|
|
Translate LaTeX text, commands, and environments to LyX.
|
|
|
|
=item Pass 4
|
|
|
|
Put the two pieces back together, and do some final tweaking, to generate the
|
|
LyX file
|
|
|
|
=back
|
|
|
|
If there are any C<\input> or C<\include> commands, B<reLyX> will loop back to
|
|
the beginning and translate those. It assumes that the included files are the
|
|
same class as the main file, and that they have no preamble matter. (If you
|
|
have an C<\input> command in the preamble of a file, the command will be
|
|
copied exactly into the LaTeX preamble portion of the LyX file, so the
|
|
included file won't be translated.) So when translating included files, it
|
|
skips passes 0 and 1.
|
|
|
|
If B<reLyX> doesn't find a file you wanted to include, it will give a warning,
|
|
but will continue to translate any files it does find.
|
|
|
|
=head2 Layout Files
|
|
|
|
B<reLyX> reads a LyX layout file to know how to handle LaTeX environments and
|
|
commands which get translated to LyX layouts. This file will include all
|
|
"normal" non-math environments (i.e., including quote and itemize, but not
|
|
tabular, minipage, and some other fancy environments), and commands like
|
|
C<\section> and C<\title>. If you want to reLyX a class that doesn't have an
|
|
existing layout file, then you'll have to create a layout file. But you have
|
|
to do this anyway, in order to LyX the file, since LyX depends on layout files
|
|
to know how to display and process its files. Check the LyX documentation for
|
|
help with this task (which can be hard or easy, depending on the class you
|
|
want to create a layout file for.) If your class is quite similar to a class
|
|
that has a layout file, then consider using the B<-c> option.
|
|
|
|
=head2 Syntax Files
|
|
|
|
B<reLyX> always reads at least one syntax file, called the default syntax file.
|
|
B<reLyX> will read your personal syntax file if it exists; otherwise it will
|
|
read the system-wide file. B<reLyX> will read additional syntax files if you
|
|
specify them with the B<-s> option. (These extra files should have the same
|
|
format as the default file, but will tend to be shorter, since they only have
|
|
to specify extra commands not found in the default file.) A syntax file tells
|
|
B<reLyX> a few things.
|
|
|
|
First, it describes the syntax of each command, that is, how many required
|
|
arguments and how many optional arguments the command takes. Knowing this
|
|
makes it easier for B<reLyX> to copy (in TeX mode) commands that it doesn't
|
|
know how to translate. The syntax file simply has a command, followed by
|
|
braces or brackets describing its arguments in the correct order. For example,
|
|
a syntax file entry C<\bibitem[]{}> means that the C<\bibitem> command takes
|
|
an optional argument followed by a required one, while the entry C<\bf>
|
|
means that the C<\bf> command takes no arguments at all. When B<reLyX>
|
|
encounters a token that it doesn't know how to translate into LyX, it will
|
|
copy the token---along with the correct number of arguments---exactly. If the
|
|
token is not in the syntax file, then B<reLyX> just copies as many arguments
|
|
as it finds. This means that it may copy too much. But since the user can
|
|
specify additional syntax files, that shouldn't happen often.
|
|
|
|
Some commands that cannot be translated to LyX, like C<\mbox>, have as one of
|
|
their arguments regular LaTeX text. If the string "translate" is put into an
|
|
argument of an (untranslatable) command in the syntax file, then B<reLyX> will
|
|
translate that argument instead of copying it verbatim. So, for example, the
|
|
default syntax file has C<\raisebox{}[][]{translate}>. This means that the
|
|
C<\raisebox> command and the first argument (and optional arguments if they
|
|
exist) are copied in TeX mode, but the last argument (which may contain math,
|
|
complicated LaTeX, other untranslatable commands, etc.) will be translated
|
|
into LyX. You can't use "translate" on optional arguments.
|
|
|
|
User-defined syntax files are allowed to define new commands and
|
|
their syntax, or override the number of arguments for a command given in the
|
|
default syntax file. (E.g., if you're using a style that gives an extra
|
|
argument to some command...) However, this will only be useful for commands
|
|
copied in TeX mode. Commands which are actually translated by B<reLyX> (like
|
|
C<\item>) have their argument syntax hard-coded. The hard-coded commands are
|
|
identified in the default syntax file.
|
|
|
|
Second, the syntax file describes any "regular environments". Usually, an
|
|
entire unknown environment will be copied in TeX mode. If you define a regular
|
|
environment "foo", though, then only the C<\begin{foo}> and C<\end{foo}>
|
|
commands will be copied in TeX mode; the text within the environment will be
|
|
treated (i.e., translated) by B<reLyX> as regular LaTeX, rather than being
|
|
copied into TeX mode. Don't try to declare "tabbing" and "picture" as regular
|
|
environments, as the text within those environments will confuse B<reLyX>; use
|
|
this capability for new environments you create that have plain text or math
|
|
or simple commands in them. You also can't declare unknown math environments
|
|
(like equation*) as regular environments, either, since the LyX math editor
|
|
won't understand them. The names of regular environments appear,
|
|
whitespace-separated, between C<\begin{reLyXre}> and C<\end{reLyXre}>
|
|
statements in the syntax file. (If you have a regular environment which you
|
|
won't use very often, you can use the B<-r> option rather than writing a
|
|
syntax file.)
|
|
|
|
Third, the syntax file describes a math translation table. The LyX math editor
|
|
doesn't support a few commands. For example, C<_> is supported, but the
|
|
equivalent C<\sb> is not. Put any commands you'd like translate between
|
|
C<\begin{reLyXmt}> and C<\end{reLyXmt}> statements. The statement
|
|
"C<\| {\Vert}>" means that any C<\|> in math mode will be converted to
|
|
"C<\Vert >" (in cases where a token made up of a backslash and a non-letter is
|
|
translated to something with letters at the end, a space is added by B<reLyX>.
|
|
That way, "C<\|a>" is correctly translated to "C<\Vert a>").
|
|
|
|
=head2 Miscellaneous
|
|
|
|
You need Perl version 5.002 or later to run B<reLyX>. <plug> If you don't have
|
|
Perl, you should get it anyway (at http://www.perl.com), because it's a really
|
|
useful tool for pretty much anything. </plug>
|
|
|
|
=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
|
|
|
|
B<reLyX> should always explain why it crashes, if it crashes. Some diagnostics
|
|
may be very technical, though, if they come from the guts of the code.
|
|
B<reLyX> gives much more information while running if you use the B<-d> option,
|
|
but you shouldn't need that unless something goes wrong.
|
|
|
|
When it's finished, B<reLyX> will tell you if it finished successfully or
|
|
died due to some error.
|
|
|
|
=head1 WARNINGS
|
|
|
|
Always keep a copy of your original LaTeX files either under a different
|
|
name or in a different directory. There are a couple ways in which using LyX
|
|
could lead to overwriting the original LaTeX file.
|
|
|
|
If you import foo.tex to create foo.lyx, then edit foo.lyx and want to
|
|
re-export it, note that it will overwrite the original foo.tex. (LyX will ask
|
|
you if you want to overwrite it.)
|
|
|
|
If you have the \use_tempdir variable set to false in your lyxrc, then LyX
|
|
will create its temporary files in your current directory, which means your
|
|
LaTeX original may be overwritten (without a warning from LyX) when you "view
|
|
dvi" or print the LyX document.
|
|
|
|
=head1 FILES
|
|
|
|
=over 4
|
|
|
|
=item F<MY_LYXDIR>/layouts/*.layout
|
|
|
|
User's personal layout files for document classes
|
|
|
|
=item F<MY_LYXDIR>/reLyX/syntax.default
|
|
|
|
User's personal syntax file
|
|
|
|
=item F<LIBDIR>/layouts/*.layout
|
|
|
|
System-wide layout files for document classes
|
|
|
|
=item F<LIBDIR>/reLyX/syntax.default
|
|
|
|
System-wide LaTeX syntax file
|
|
|
|
=back
|
|
|
|
|
|
F<LIBDIR> is the system-wide LyX directory, usually something like
|
|
/usr/local/share/lyx/. F<MY_LYXDIR> is your personal LyX directory, something
|
|
like .lyx/ in your home directory.
|
|
|
|
=head1 SEE ALSO
|
|
|
|
lyx(1), latex(1)
|
|
|
|
=head1 AUTHORS
|
|
|
|
Copyright (c) 1998-9 Amir Karger (karger@post.harvard.edu)
|
|
|
|
Code contributors:
|
|
|
|
=over 4
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
John Weiss wrote the original CleanTeX pass.
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Etienne Grossmann
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
JosE<eacute> AbE<iacute>lio Oliveira Matos
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
David Suarez de Lis
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Kayvan Aghaiepour Sylvan added noweb stuff and wrote noweb2lyx
|
|
|
|
=back
|
|
|
|
Other contributors:
|
|
|
|
=over 4
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Jean-Marc Lasgouttes worked on the wrapper script and offered lots of bug
|
|
reports, advice, and feature suggestions.
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Asger K. Alstrup Nielsen and Marc Pavese provided advice.
|
|
|
|
=item *
|
|
|
|
Various members of the LyX developers' and users' lists provided bug reports
|
|
and feature suggestions.
|
|
|
|
=back
|
|
|
|
B<reLyX> uses a modified version the Perl TeX parser Text::TeX package written
|
|
by Ilya Zakharevich (ilya@math.ohio-state.edu), available on CPAN.
|
|
|