Subject: TeXhax Digest V89 #66 From: TeXhax Digest Errors-To: TeXhax-request@cs.washington.edu Maint-Path: TeXhax-request@cs.washington.edu To: TeXhax-Distribution-List:; Reply-To: TeXhax@cs.washington.edu TeXhax Digest Wednesday, July 5, 1989 Volume 89 : Issue 66 Moderators: Tiina Modisett and Pierre MacKay %%% The TeXhax digest is brought to you as a service of the TeX Users Group %%% %%% in cooperation with the UnixTeX distribution service at the %%% %%% University of Washington %%% Today's Topics: clarkson.edu not known to uunet.uu.net. texhax subscription address in UK WEAVE CMS-CHAN problem in the VM/CMS TeX distribution DECUS TeX Collection being updated Optical character Reader software to generate TeX code? RE: TeXhax #55, \hrule and \ref's RFCs in LaTeX Footnotes in LaTeX tables Looking for an annotation style option About fillin... OzTeX (Version 1.1) Available by Anonymous FTP ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 1 Jul 89 17:50:17 met From: Bo Thide' Subject: clarkson.edu not known to uunet.uu.net. Keywords: Rochester, Clarkson, archives, LaTeX style file Trying to use e-mail to get latex-style files from the new repository at clarkson I found out (the hard way) that clarkson.edu is not a known network node. Asking postmaster@uunet.uu.net about it I go a (quite abrasive) reply confirming this deplorable state of affairs. Is it still possible to use the old Rochester address? Bo ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: 30 Jun 89 00:04:54 bst From: G.Toal%EDINBURGH.AC.UK@UWAVM.ACS.WASHINGTON.EDU Subject: texhax subscription address in UK Keywords: TeXhax, subscriptions, UK Could you add texhax-request@uk.ac.nsf to your list of subscription sites at the bottom of texhaxes; this is best for JANET users in the UK who are not on Bitnet. Other European sites may also feed from here I suspect. Also, uktex - the UK's own texhax (not a rival - its more for 'who has DoSteX on floppy in the UK' sort of questions :) ) can be subscribed to at info-tex-request@uk.ac.aston -- with submissions to info-tex@uk.ac.aston. Uktex has a faster turnaround time for technical questions for readers in the UK. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: 28 Jun 89 20:37:42 EDT From: Robert Bernstein Subject: WEAVE CMS-CHAN problem in the VM/CMS TeX distribution Keywords: VM/CMS, TeX The (current?) WEAVE CMS-CHAN file for VM/CMS has an error in it. The first line of the file (dated 86/06/11) reads: This is WEAVE.CMS-CHANGES in text format, as of May 13, 1986. (A minor point: the file is *not* called ``WEAVE.CMS-CHANGES'' but ``WEAVE CMS-CHAN''.) Lines 142-143 of this file read: {reset(term_in,'INTERACTIVE'); {open |term_in|, don't do a |get|}} @=termin@>(term_in); {don't ask me why the above line didn't work!} First, the problem: After weaving WEAVE, TeX barfs because it thinks that the underscore is introducing a subscript. Solutions: In a comment, term_in should be surrounded by `|' for verbatim as is done later on in the line. Alternatively, if the outer comment is removed, everything is fine because term_in is known to be an identifier, and as such WEB turns _'s into to \_'s. (This code is not normally output in the TANGLEd Pascal source, because it is conditionally included when debugging is turned on.) I am posting this note so other innocent users will not stumble on the problem. From the back level of a number of the programs in the current VM/CMS TeX distribution, (the latest version of WEAVE is 2.9 although 2.8 seems to be in this distribution) it may a while before a fix makes it to the general public. R. Bernstein ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 29 Jun 89 17:05 EST From: Ted Nieland - SRL <@AAMRL.AF.MIL:TNIELAND@FALCON> Subject: DECUS TeX Collection being updated Keywords: TeX, DECUS The DECUS TeX Collection is currently being updated. The DECUS TeX Collection is a TeX and TeXware for computers found in a DEC computing environment. The operating systems covered include VMS, Unix, DOS, and MAC OS. If you have TeXware item you would like to include in the collection, please send it to me, or a notice on how to get a copy of it, ASAP. Some of the new updates already in store for the DECUS TeX Collection include: TeX for the Macintosh Updates for TeX, WEB, TeXSiS, DVI2LN03 Update of the LaTeX style collection XDVI for DEC Windows SPIDER MAKEINDEX for VMS Ted Nieland DECUS TeX Collection Editor TNIELAND@AAMRL.AF.MIL ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 29 Jun 89 15:17:34 PDT From: Bruce_L._White@mtsg.ubc.ca Subject: Optical character Reader software to generate TeX code? Keywords: TeX, OCR I have used OCR's to input text into the standard format of eg Wordperfect. Question: Is there software which will generate TeX code from OCR input? Bruce White Physics, University of British Columbia BITNET USERASBW@UBCMTSG ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 30 Jun 89 09:01 MET From: "Johannes L. Braams" Subject: RE: TeXhax #55, \hrule and \ref's Keywords: LaTeX, \hrule, \ref Andrew Arensburger writes about having problems with getting a rule to extend beyond the margins. He doesn't describe what he does get, but I suppose he get's overfull box messages. In that case, have a look at LaTeX.tex (or the TeX-book for that matter) in the definition for the figure environment. There you'll find and example of the fact that you can alter the dimensions of a box, def'd by a \newbox command, after you've put something in it. Jerry Keiper as a probem with referencing figures in an appendix. The same problem has been discussed here before, you have to put the \label command right after the \caption command in order to get the figure's number as a reference, in stead of the section number (in this case an appendix) Johannes Braams ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 30 Jun 89 09:55:33 +0100 From: Steve Kille Subject: RFCs in LaTeX Keywords: LaTeX, DARPA RFC Does anyone have a reasonable approach to mapping LaTeX documents onto the DARPA Request for Comments (RFC formats). The requirements on this text format are (brief summary) - Pages max 60 lines - Pages max width 80 chars - ^L between pages, but otherwise only ASCII printable chars - Fixed format headers and footers (2 line header) - Endnotes in <1> style Ideally, I would also like to be able to produce a decently typeset versions, with the same pagebreaks as the "official" version. Steve Phone: +44-1-380-7294 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Thu, 29 Jun 89 11:15:50 MST From: cashdan@ARSUN.UTAH.EDU Subject: Footnotes in LaTeX tables Keywords: LaTeX, footnotes What is the best way to put notes in tables? Currently, I'm using the footnote command like this: \begin{minipage}{\textwidth} \begin{tabular}{cccccccc} Group& Hunt& Gather& Fish& Garden& Food prep.& Other& Total \\ \hline 1.\footnote{Lizot 1978:89--90} & 38& 40& 45& 38& 54& 136& 357 \\ 2.\footnote{Hames 1989: Table 1-a} & 61& 56& 55& 43& 41& 104& 359 \\ \hline \end{tabular} \end{minipage} The problem is that the footnote command generates an unwanted horizontal rule at the bottom of the minipage, so the table looks something like: Group Hunt ... Total ---------- ... ----- a 1. 38 ... 357 b 2. 61 ... 359 ---------- ... ----- -------- a Lizot ... b Hames ... My husband avoids this problem by defining a "superscript" macro to do all this by brute force. Surely there is a better way. Any suggestions? Elizabeth Cashdan (cashdan@arsun.utah.edu) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 29 Jun 89 17:10:11 EDT From: lacey@tcgould.TN.CORNELL.EDU (John Lacey) Subject: Looking for an annotation style option Keywords: TeX, LaTeX I have two (related) TeX problems. LaTeX solutions are preferred (for reasons that will become clear---I want to use the twocolumn style option). I am writing a paper, and it needs to be written in an annotated style. 1. How can I annotate text, so that, for example, the annotations appear on the left of every even-numbered page, and on the right side of every odd-numbered pages, in smaller type (that is, different type), in a different column width, and with rendezvous points, where, if possible (by inserting glue in the annotations column) the main text and the annotations are started together again? 2. Same basic idea, except now I want the main text to appear only on every other page, say the odd-numbered ones, and the annotations to appear on the others. The way in which the texts are specified should be the same as in the first problem. Rendezvous' should be supported here as well. Also, this format should work with the twocolumn style option (if LaTeX is used), so that we might place both of the sequences on every page---one in each column. Before I invest a lot of time in working out how to do this, has anybody tried to do this before, or something like it? I would of course appreciate any ideas (solutions?) that anyone has. Also, if anyone can think of a better way to organize the file, I would appreciate hearing from you. I have in mind writing something like the example that follows. \begin{document} This is the main text. There is nothing unusual about it. It may contain the usual LaTeX commands. : : : This is the end of this section of text. \begin{annotation} This is the first annotation. It will be lined up with the line beginning ``This is the main text.'' In general, an annotation will be lined up with the start of the first text falling after the last annotation environment, or with the first text of the file. \end{annotation} This is more text. : \annote Here I want the notation to match this line. : \begin{annotation} This annotation will, because of the \annote `rendezvous' command, be lined up with the text following the last \annote command. Note that the \annote command behaves just like an empty annotation environment, in that it resets the placement of the following annotation. \end{annotation} \end{document} John Lacey | Internet: lacey@tcgould.tn.cornell.edu running unattached | BITnet: lacey@crnlthry | UUCP: cornell!batcomputer!lacey "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must remain silent." ---Wittgenstein --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 30 Jun 89 13:02:24 CDT From: Don Hosek Subject: About fillin... Keywords: fillin. mode def I'm putting together an article on how to develop mode_def's and I'm trying to illustrate the effects of fillin using a simple MF file along the lines of: smode="specmode"; mode_setup; beginchar(0,0,0,0); penpos1(5,45); penpos2(5,45); z1=(0,50); z2=(20,0); penstroke z1e--z2e; endchar; with the file specmode.mf reading: blacker:=0; pixels_per_inch:=300; proofing:=2; fontmaking:=0; tracingtitles:=0; fillin:=-3.0; "fillin -3.0"; o_correction:=1; xerox_pixel; (xerox_pixel sets the grey font so that it is a font with each pixel represented by a bitmap resembling: ..... .XXX. .XXX. .XXX. ..... in this way, each pixel can be clearly distinguished on the proof sheet). I've tried changing the value of fillin to values in the set {-3, -1.1, -.7, -.4, -.2, -.1, 0, .1, .2, .4, .7, 1.1, 3) and printed proofsheets of the whole thing and cannot find any difference in the bitmaps produced. I presume I am correct that the effect of fillin is to cause pixels near something like XXXYY XXXYY XXXXX XXXXX to change from X to Y. So why do I not see any differences in the proof sheets? How can I get some printed sheets to demonstrate the effect of fillin? Thanks in advance, dh Don Hosek | Internet: U33297@UICVM.UIC.EDU 3916 Elmwood | Bitnet: U33297@UICVM.BITNET Stickney, IL 60402 | DHOSEK@YMIR.BITNET Work: 312-996-2981 | UUNet: dhosek@jarthur.claremont.edu ERASE * SCRIPT * | JANET: U33297%UICVM.UIC.EDU@UK.AC.EARN-RELAY Never give a gun to ducks ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 01 Jul 89 16:49:56 -0500 From: c3ar%zaphod@gargoyle.uchicago.edu Subject: OzTeX (Version 1.1) Available by Anonymous FTP Keywords: OzTeX, Mac Thanks to the generosity and hard work of Andrew Trevorrow, a free, public domain (in as much as TeX is ever public domain) version of TeX for the Macintosh is now available by anonymous ftp. The program is called OzTeX (Version 1.1) and includes Modula-2 source and all necessary fonts and input files. The ftp address is Name: tank.uchicago.edu Address: 128.135.4.27 In the near future (thanks to Craig Ruff), OzTeX might also be available from Name: handies.ucar.edu Address: 128.117.64.4 As usual, use the login name "anonymous" and use your own login id for a password. Once logged in, you will find the parts of OzTeX in subdirectories of pub/sources/OzTeX. Everything has been preprocessed with Stuffit-1.5.1 and binhex. You will need at least version 1.5.1 of Stuffit, since the archives contain folders. The subdirectory /pub/sources/OzTeX/binaries contain copies of the stuffit archives before stuffing. Other subdirectories contain the OzTeX program, OzTeX sources, OzTeX inputs (e.g., AMSTeX, LaTeX, etc.), and Font binaries of various sizes in binhex'd stuffit archives. Of course, Stuffit-1.5.1 and binhex4 are available by anonymous ftp from the info-mac archive, at sumex-aim.stanford .edu (36.44.0.6). Here is some more detailed information about the program and implementation: OzTeX is a public domain version of TeX for the Macintosh written by Andrew Trevorrow. TEX is the typesetting system developed by Donald Knuth at Stanford University. OzTeX was written by translating Knuth's original code to Modula-2 and then porting to the Macintosh. The OzTeX delivery includes the OzTeX program; a complete set of TFM files for the computer modern font set and TFM files for selected Adobe fonts; input files of LaTeX and AmSTeX; full Modula-2 source code for OzTeX; and a complete set of font files (in PK format). OzTeX includes a screen previewer and the capabilities of initex to create new format files. OzTeX should work on any Macintosh Plus, SE, II or newer model. It will not work on a 128K or 512K Mac. OzTEX was developed on a Mac Plus with 1 Meg of RAM and a 20 Meg hard disk. This is just about the minimum hardware configuration, given the large amount of memory required to run OzTEX and the large amount of disk space needed to store all the font information. OzTeX can only print on a PostScript-compatible printer.There is currently no support for other types of printers. If you plan to use an Apple LaserWriter (any model) the installation should be straightforward. - Source code will be supplied. Everything is written in TML Modula-2 (which requires MPW). There is about 35,000 lines of code. - The application includes a DVI previewer, a PostScript driver, and of course TeX (actually IniTeX so users can create their own formats, although Plain and LaTeX will be supplied). The TeX module passes Knuth's trip test (for version 2.0 at least). OzTeX is designed to be an open and expandable TeX system. It reads font information from standard TFM and PK files, and creates standard DVI files. If you have access to a Unix or VMS mainframe then you'll be able to Kermit such files to and fro without any extra processing. A basic set of TFM files and 300dpi PK files will be supplied. PostScript printer fonts are also supported. The author says that OzTeX is somewhat below TeXtures 1.0 and MacTeX 1.1 in features, somewhere between in seed of typesetting/previewing/printing and, of course, way ahead in cost. There is currently NO integrated text editor (and I'm not sure that one is really necessary, what with MultiFinder and good DA editors available). Support for inclusion of graphics is currently minimal. The previewer ignores \special commands and the PostScript driver only allows inclusion of a file, along with optional PostScript code. OzTeX can be used with AMSTeX and LaTeX and the appropriate input files are part of the OzTeX delivery. Now some more details about the delivery: The OzTeX delivery is stored here packed as Stuffit-1.5.1 archives (Version-1.5.1 is necessary, as the stuffit files contain folders), which have been run through binhex and broken into pieces. The index below indicates what parts of OzTeX reside in what directories here. pub/sources/OzTeX /oztex: OzTeX binaries (stuffit/binhex) /ozsrc: OzTeX sources " " /ozinp: OzTeX inputs " " /pk300: OzTeX fonts " " /pk329: " " " " /pk360: " " " " /pk432: " " " " /pk518: " " " " /pk622: " " " " /pk746: " " " " /binaries OzTeX stuffit files pre-binhex Any inquiries about OzTeX can be sent to oztex@tank.uchicago.edu. I am still looking for a bitnet-server site that is willing to accept this, for those of you on bitnet who are unable to ftp. Walter Walter C3arlip c3ar@zaphod.uchicago.edu (the "3" is silent) c3ar%zaphod@UCHIMVS1.bitnet ----------------------------------------------------------------------- %%% Further information about the TeXhax Digest, the TeX %%% Users Group, and the latest software versions is available %%% in every tenth issue of the TeXhax Digest. %%% %%% Concerning subscriptions, address changes, unsubscribing: %%% %%% BITNET: send a one-line mail message to LISTSERV@xxx %%% SUBSCRIBE TEX-L % to subscribe %%% or UNSUBSCRIBE TEX-L %%% %%% Internet: send a similar one line mail message to %%% TeXhax-request@cs.washington.edu %%% %%% All submissions to: TeXhax@cs.washington.edu %%% %%% Back issues available for FTPing as: %%% machine: directory: filename: %%% JUNE.CS.WASHINGTON.EDU TeXhax/TeXhaxyy.nn %%% yy = last two digits of current year %%% nn = issue number %%% %%%\bye %%% End of TeXhax Digest ************************** -------