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X E TEX Live
X TE EX Live Jonathan Kew SIL International Horsleys Green High Wycombe Bucks HP14 3XL, England jonathan_kew (at) sil dot org 1 X TE EX in TEX Live in the preamble are sufficient to set the typefaces through- out the document. ese fonts were installed by simply e release of TEX Live 2007 marked a milestone for the dropping the .otf or .ttf files in the computer’s Fonts X TE EX project, as the first major TEX distribution to in- folder; no .tfm, .fd, .sty, .map, or other TEX-related files clude X TE EX (version 0.996) as an integral part. Prior to had to be created or installed. this, X TE EX was a tool that could be added to a TEX setup, Release 0.996 of X T X also provides some enhance- but version and configuration differences meant that it was E E ments over earlier, pre-T X Live versions. In particular, difficult to ensure smooth integration in all cases, and it was E there are new primitives for low-level access to glyph infor- only available for users who specifically chose to seek it out mation (useful during font development and testing); some and install it. (One exception to this is the MacTEX pack- preliminary support for the use of OpenType math fonts age, which has included X TE EX for the past year or so, but (such as the Cambria Math font shipped with MS Office this was just one distribution on one platform.) Integration 2007); and a variety of bug fixes. -
The File Cmfonts.Fdd for Use with Latex2ε
The file cmfonts.fdd for use with LATEX 2".∗ Frank Mittelbach Rainer Sch¨opf 2019/12/16 This file is maintained byA theLTEX Project team. Bug reports can be opened (category latex) at https://latex-project.org/bugs.html. 1 Introduction This file contains the external font information needed to load the Computer Modern fonts designed by Don Knuth and distributed with TEX. From this file all .fd files (font definition files) for the Computer Modern fonts, both with old encoding (OT1) and Cork encoding (T1) are generated. The Cork encoded fonts are known under the name ec fonts. 2 Customization If you plan to install the AMS font package or if you have it already installed, please note that within this package there are additional sizes of the Computer Modern symbol and math italic fonts. With the release of LATEX 2", these AMS `extracm' fonts have been included in the LATEX font set. Therefore, the math .fd files produced here assume the presence of these AMS extensions. For text fonts in T1 encoding, the directive new selects the new (version 1.2) DC fonts. For the text fonts in OT1 and U encoding, the optional docstrip directive ori selects a conservatively generated set of font definition files, which means that only the basic font sizes coming with an old LATEX 2.09 installation are included into the \DeclareFontShape commands. However, on many installations, people have added missing sizes by scaling up or down available Metafont sources. For example, the Computer Modern Roman italic font cmti is only available in the sizes 7, 8, 9, and 10pt. -
DE-Tex-FAQ (Vers. 72
Fragen und Antworten (FAQ) über das Textsatzsystem TEX und DANTE, Deutschsprachige Anwendervereinigung TEX e.V. Bernd Raichle, Rolf Niepraschk und Thomas Hafner Version 72 vom September 2003 Dieser Text enthält häufig gestellte Fragen und passende Antworten zum Textsatzsy- stem TEX und zu DANTE e.V. Er kann über beliebige Medien frei verteilt werden, solange er unverändert bleibt (in- klusive dieses Hinweises). Die Autoren bitten bei Verteilung über gedruckte Medien, über Datenträger wie CD-ROM u. ä. um Zusendung von mindestens drei Belegexem- plaren. Anregungen, Ergänzungen, Kommentare und Bemerkungen zur FAQ senden Sie bit- te per E-Mail an [email protected] 1 Inhalt Inhalt 1 Allgemeines 5 1.1 Über diese FAQ . 5 1.2 CTAN, das ‚Comprehensive TEX Archive Network‘ . 8 1.3 Newsgroups und Diskussionslisten . 10 2 Anwendervereinigungen, Tagungen, Literatur 17 2.1 DANTE e.V. 17 2.2 Anwendervereinigungen . 19 2.3 Tagungen »geändert« .................................... 21 2.4 Literatur »geändert« .................................... 22 3 Textsatzsystem TEX – Übersicht 32 3.1 Grundlegendes . 32 3.2 Welche TEX-Formate gibt es? Was ist LATEX? . 38 3.3 Welche TEX-Weiterentwicklungen gibt es? . 41 4 Textsatzsystem TEX – Bezugsquellen 45 4.1 Wie bekomme ich ein TEX-System? . 45 4.2 TEX-Implementierungen »geändert« ........................... 48 4.3 Editoren, Frontend-/GUI-Programme »geändert« .................... 54 5 TEX, LATEX, Makros etc. (I) 62 5.1 LATEX – Grundlegendes . 62 5.2 LATEX – Probleme beim Umstieg von LATEX 2.09 . 67 5.3 (Silben-)Trennung, Absatz-, Seitenumbruch . 68 5.4 Seitenlayout, Layout allgemein, Kopf- und Fußzeilen »geändert« . 72 6 TEX, LATEX, Makros etc. (II) 79 6.1 Abbildungen und Tafeln . -
AMS-LATEX Version 1.0 User's Guide
e w -LATEX Version 1.0 User’s Guide American Mathematical Society August 1990 0 Contents I General 1 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Notes XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 1 e e 2 The w -LTEX project 2 e e 3 Major components of the w -LTEX package 3 II Font considerations 4 4 The font selection scheme of Mittelbach and Schopf¨ 4 5 Basic concepts 4 5.1 Shape XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 5 5.2 Series XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 6 5.3 Size XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 6 5.4 Family XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 7 5.5 Using other font families XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 8 5.6 The oldlfont option XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 10 5.7 Warnings XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 10 6 Names of math font commands 11 7 The command \newsymbol 16 8 The amssymb option 16 III Features of the amstex option 17 9 Math spacing commands 17 10 Multiple integral signs 17 i 11 Over and under arrows 17 12 Dots 18 13 Accents in math 19 14 Roots 19 15 Boxed formulas 20 16 Extensible arrows 20 17 \overset, \underset and \sideset 20 18 The \text command 21 19 Operator names 21 20 \mod and its relatives 22 21 Fractions and related constructions 22 22 Continued fractions 23 23 Smash options 24 e 24 New LTEX environments 24 24.1 The “cases” environment XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 24 24.2 Matrix XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 25 24.3 The Sb and Sp environments XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 26 24.4 Commutative diagrams XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 26 25 Alignment structures for equations 27 25.1 The align environment XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 28 25.2 The gather environment XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 28 25.3 The -
The Arabi System — TEX Writes in Arabic and Farsi
The Arabi system | ] ¨r` [ A\ TEX writes in Arabic and Farsi Youssef Jabri Ecole´ Nationale des Sciences Appliqu´ees, Oujda, Morocco yjabri (at) ensa dot univ-oujda dot ac dot ma Abstract In this paper, we will present a newly arrived package on CTAN that provides Arabic script support for TEX without the need for an external pre-processor. The Arabi package adds one of the last major multilingual typesetting capabilities to Babel by adding support for the Arabic ¨r and Farsi ¨FCA languages. Other languages using the Arabic script should also be more or less easily imple- mentable. Arabi comes with many good quality free fonts, Arabic and Farsi, and may also use commercial fonts. It supports many 8-bit input encodings (namely, CP-1256, ISO-8859-6 and Unicode UTF-8) and can typeset classical Arabic poetry. The package is distributed under the LATEX Project Public License (LPPL), and has the LPPL maintenance status \author-maintained". It can be used freely (including commercially) to produce beautiful texts that mix Arabic, Farsi and Latin (or other) characters. Pl Y ¾Abn Tn ®¤ Tr` ¤r Am`tF TAk t§ A\ ¨r` TEC .¤r fOt TEX > < A\ Am`tFA d¤ dnts ¨ n A\ (¨FCA ¤ ¨r)tl Am`tF TAk S ¨r` TEC , T¤rm rb Cdq tmt§¤ ¯m ¢k zymt§ A\n @h , T§db @n¤ Y At§ ¯ ¢ Y TAR . AARn £EA A \` Am`tF® A ¢± ¾AO ¾AA ¨r` dq§ . Tmlk ¨ ¤r AkJ d§dt ¨CA A` © ¨ ¨t ªW d Am`tF ¢nkm§ Am Am`tF¯ r ªW Tmm ¯¤ ¨A ¨r` , A\n TbsnA A w¡ Am . -
P Font-Change Q UV 3
p font•change q UV Version 2015.2 Macros to Change Text & Math fonts in TEX 45 Beautiful Variants 3 Amit Raj Dhawan [email protected] September 2, 2015 This work had been released under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License on July 19, 2010. You are free to Share (to copy, distribute and transmit the work) and to Remix (to adapt the work) provided you follow the Attribution and Share Alike guidelines of the licence. For the full licence text, please visit: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode. 4 When I reach the destination, more than I realize that I have realized the goal, I am occupied with the reminiscences of the journey. It strikes to me again and again, ‘‘Isn’t the journey to the goal the real attainment of the goal?’’ In this way even if I miss goal, I still have attained goal. Contents Introduction .................................................................................. 1 Usage .................................................................................. 1 Example ............................................................................... 3 AMS Symbols .......................................................................... 3 Available Weights ...................................................................... 5 Warning ............................................................................... 5 Charter ....................................................................................... 6 Utopia ....................................................................................... -
Why We're All Romans
Why We’re All Romans Why We’re All Romans The Roman Contribution to the Western World Carl J. Richard ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS, INC. Lanham • Boulder • New York • Toronto • Plymouth, UK Published by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 http://www.rowmanlittlefield.com Estover Road, Plymouth PL6 7PY, United Kingdom Distributed by National Book Network Copyright © 2010 by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote passages in a review. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Richard, Carl J. Why we’re all Romans : the Roman contribution to the Western world / Carl J. Richard. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-7425-6778-8 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-7425-6780-1 (electronic) 1. Rome—Civilization—Influence. 2. Civilization, Modern—Roman influences. 3. Rome—History. I. Title. DG77.R53 2010 937—dc22 2009043889 ™ ϱ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992. Printed in the United States of America In memory -
Bibliography and Index
TLC2, ch-end.tex,v: 1.39, 2004/03/19 p.963 Bibliography [1] Adobe Systems Incorporated. Adobe Type 1 Font Format. Addison-Wes- ley, Reading, MA, USA, 1990. ISBN 0-201-57044-0. The “black book” contains the specifications for Adobe’s Type 1 font format and describes how to create a Type 1 font program. The book explains the specifics of the Type 1 syntax (a subset of PostScript), including information on the structure of font programs, ways to specify computer outlines, and the contents of the various font dictionaries. It also covers encryption, subroutines, and hints. http://partners.adobe.com/asn/developer/pdfs/tn/T1Format.pdf [2] Adobe Systems Incorporated. “PostScript document structuring conven- tions specification (version 3.0)”. Technical Note 5001, 1992. This technical note defines a standard set of document structuring conventions (DSC), which will help ensure that a PostScript document is device independent. DSC allows PostScript language programs to communicate their document structure and printing requirements to document managers in a way that does not affect the PostScript language page description. http://partners.adobe.com/asn/developer/pdfs/tn/5001.DSC_Spec.pdf [3] Adobe Systems Incorporated. “Encapsulated PostScript file format specifi- cation (version 3.0)”. Technical Note 5002, 1992. This technical note details the Encapsulated PostScript file (epsf) format, a standard format for importing and exporting PostScript language files among applications in a variety of heteroge- neous environments. The epsf format is based on and conforms to the document structuring conventions (DSC) [2]. http://partners.adobe.com/asn/developer/pdfs/tn/5002.EPSF_Spec.pdf [4] Adobe Systems Incorporated. -
Macros to Change Text Fonts & Math Fonts In
Macros to Change Text & Math fonts in TEX 19 Beautiful Variants Amit Raj Dhawan [email protected] August 19, 2009 This work has been released under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License on August 19, 2009. You are free to Share (to copy, distribute and transmit the work) and to Remix (to adapt the work) provided you follow the Attribution and Share Alike guidelines of the licence. For the full licence text, please visit: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode. Contents Introduction ................................................................................... 1 Usage ..................................................................................... 1 Example ................................................................................... 3 Warning ................................................................................... 4 Charter ......................................................................................... 5 Utopia .......................................................................................... 6 New Century Schoolbook ..................................................................... 7 Palatino ........................................................................................ 8 Times ........................................................................................... 9 Bookman Font ................................................................................ 10 Antykwa Torunska .......................................................................... -
The Treasure Chest for Compatibility with Texpower and Seminar
TUGboat, Volume 22 (2001), No. 1/2 67 the concept of pdfslide, but completely rewritten The Treasure Chest for compatibility with texpower and seminar. ifsym: in fonts Fonts with symbols for alpinistic, electronic, mete- orological, geometric, etc., usage. A LATEX2ε pack- age simplifies usage. Packages posted to CTAN jas99_m.bst: in biblio/bibtex/contrib “What’s in a name?” I did not realize that Jan Update of jas99.bst,modifiedforbetterconfor- Tschichold’s typographic standards lived on in the mity to the American Meteorological Society. koma-script package often mentioned on usenet (in LaTeX WIDE: in nonfree/systems/win32/LaTeX_WIDE comp.text.tex) until I happened upon the listing A demonstration version of an integrated editor for it in a previous edition of “The Treasure Chest”. and shell for TEX— free for noncommercial use, but without registration, customization is disabled. This column is an attempt to give TEX users an on- : LAT X2ε macro package of simple, “little helpers” going glimpse of the trove which is CTAN. lhelp E converted into dtx format. Includes common units This is a chronological list of packages posted with preceding thinspaces, framed boxes, start new to CTAN between June and December 2000 with odd or even pages, draft markers, notes, condi- descriptive text pulled from the announcement and tional includes (including EPS files), and versions edited for brevity — however, all errors are mine. of enumerate and itemize which allow spacing to Packages are in alphabetic order and are listed only be changed. in the last month they were updated. Individual files makecmds Provides commands to make commands, envi- / partial uploads are listed under their own name if ronments, counters and lengths. -
The Amsart, Amsproc, and Amsbook Document Classes
The amsart, amsproc,andamsbook document classes American Mathematical Society Michael Downes updated by Barbara Beeton Version 2.20.6, 2020/05/29 1 Introduction This file (amsclass.dtx) is the master file for three LATEX document classes, amsart, amsproc,andamsbook, which are intended for articles and books con- taining mathematical research. They produce output that follows the style con- ventions of American Mathematical Society publications. The theorem setup features of these document classes are also available in a separate package, amsthm. 2 Implementation Three document class files and one package file (amsthm.sty) are produced from this source. Most of the code of the amsthm package is used in all four derived files. Most of the remaining code is used in all three document class files. Fine tuning is done with additional docstrip guards. The usual name, date, and version information. (Note: the reason each \ProvidesClass command is placed on a line by itself, with separate begin and end guards for docstripping, is to make automatic update of file date and version slightly easier and more robust.) 1 \NeedsTeXFormat{LaTeX2e}% LaTeX 2.09 can’t be used (nor non-LaTeX) 2 [1995/06/01]% LaTeX date must be June 1995 or later 3 ∗amsart 4 \ProvidesClass{amsart}[2020/05/29 v2.20.6] 5 /amsart 6 ∗amsproc 7 \ProvidesClass{amsproc}[2020/05/29 v2.20.6] 8 /amsproc 9 ∗amsbook 10 \ProvidesClass{amsbook}[2020/05/29 v2.20.6] 11 /amsbook For amsthm we need to guard against redundant loading via 1 2 THE AMSART, AMSPROC, AND AMSBOOK DOCUMENT CLASSES \documentclass{amsart} \usepackage{amsthm} because in that case the usual \RequirePackage mechanism for avoiding re- dundant loading will not apply. -
The UK Tex FAQ Your 469 Questions Answered Version 3.28, Date 2014-06-10
The UK TeX FAQ Your 469 Questions Answered version 3.28, date 2014-06-10 June 10, 2014 NOTE This document is an updated and extended version of the FAQ article that was published as the December 1994 and 1995, and March 1999 editions of the UK TUG magazine Baskerville (which weren’t formatted like this). The article is also available via the World Wide Web. Contents Introduction 10 Licence of the FAQ 10 Finding the Files 10 A The Background 11 1 Getting started.............................. 11 2 What is TeX?.............................. 11 3 What’s “writing in TeX”?....................... 12 4 How should I pronounce “TeX”?................... 12 5 What is Metafont?........................... 12 6 What is Metapost?........................... 12 7 Things with “TeX” in the name.................... 13 8 What is CTAN?............................ 14 9 The (CTAN) catalogue......................... 15 10 How can I be sure it’s really TeX?................... 15 11 What is e-TeX?............................ 15 12 What is PDFTeX?........................... 16 13 What is LaTeX?............................ 16 14 What is LaTeX2e?........................... 16 15 How should I pronounce “LaTeX(2e)”?................. 17 16 Should I use Plain TeX or LaTeX?................... 17 17 How does LaTeX relate to Plain TeX?................. 17 18 What is ConTeXt?............................ 17 19 What are the AMS packages (AMSTeX, etc.)?............ 18 20 What is Eplain?............................ 18 21 What is Texinfo?............................ 19 22 Lollipop................................ 19 23 If TeX is so good, how come it’s free?................ 19 24 What is the future of TeX?....................... 19 25 Reading (La)TeX files......................... 19 26 Why is TeX not a WYSIWYG system?................. 20 27 TeX User Groups............................ 21 B Documentation and Help 21 28 Books relevant to TeX and friends...................