lyx_mirror/src/tex2lyx/test/test.ltx
Jean-Marc Lasgouttes 552da336ac Now tex2lyx is able to parse stuff that is in unicodesymbols file, as well
as accents. Time will tell how robust this is.

All support for InsetLatexAccent has been removed.

I did not do the support for \inputencoding yet, because it is more difficult 
to get right...



git-svn-id: svn://svn.lyx.org/lyx/lyx-devel/trunk@27596 a592a061-630c-0410-9148-cb99ea01b6c8
2008-11-16 23:24:56 +00:00

89 lines
2.1 KiB
TeX

% This is a test document for tex2lyx
\documentclass[11pt]{article} %some comments
%comments
\def\blah{\blahblah}
% And more comments
%more comments
\begin{document}
\title{Test Document}
\maketitle
\tableofcontents
\section{First Section}
This {\large a {\small b \tiny c} \huge d} is some text. %Midline comment
\framebox[3in][s]{What are you doing \ldots Dave}. This is more text.
\section*{MySection}
\label{sec:mysection}This is some ``quoted'' text in a new section.
I {\em am\footnote{This is a great footnote because:
\begin{itemize}
\item The footnote is not \emph{emphasized}.
\item The text is
\end{itemize}
How cool is that!?} emphasizing ``text.
I keep'' emphasizing}. This ~ is text in a new par\-agraph.\\ It has \ldots
an $ \alpha $ in it, which is OK\@. I can type special
characters\footnote{i.e., characters which must be escaped}
like \& and \#.
\_ is a neat token.
% This line won't print!
Now I \textsf{want \texttt{to} write} some math in a displayed equation.
\begin{eqnarray*}
q^{(i)}_O & = & q^{water}_{O}+dq_{O}\times (P_{deg}^{(i-1)}-P_{deg}^{(i)})\\
q_{H}^{(i)} & = & q^{water}_{H}+dq_{H}\times (P_{deg}^{(i-1)}-P_{deg}^{(i)})\\
q_{p}^{(i)} & = & q^{water}_{H}+dq_{H}\times (P_{deg}^{(i-1)}-P^{(i+1)}_{deg})
\end{eqnarray*}
Here's an itemized list
\begin{itemize}
\item this is an item
\begin{enumerate}
\item this is a numbered item
But now I want to write some text.
\item this is another numbered item
More text
\end{enumerate}
Yet more text
\item this is another unnumbered item
Final text
\end{itemize}
\section[hi]{New Section}
Here's a {\em quotation:
\begin{quotation}
Hello there how are you?
I am fine. Thanks
\end{quotation}
This} is a reference to section \ref{sec:mysection} on page
\pageref{sec:mysection}.
\begin{tabular}{ll}
foo & bar \\
bar & foo
\end{tabular}
Let's try a few unicode characters: the (R) symbol \textregistered
(and the same one with braces \textregistered{} and a space after) or
maybe an accented a \'{a} or this one \'a or this \^\i.
Watch out: \textregistered should be glued to its successor here.
Final Text.
\end{document}