UKTeX V89 #05 Friday 3 February 1989 Numbering sets of equations in LaTeX/self TeX for Apollo, pd TeX, Xdvi character mangling coming in from EARN Common TeX MF & PostScript Color printer drivers for TeX. Verbatim macros for LaTeX First report from the TUG DVI driver standards committee Finland calling... BibTeX v0.99 for the IBM PC K-Talk Why do requests get rejected by the mail-server? Multi-lingual mail-server help Editor Peter Abbott Thanks to all those who respond to my request about troff -> TeX/LaTeX. The files I needed are available in the UNIX subgroup of the archive. Latest TeXhax in the Archive is #05 Latest TeXmag in the Archive is V2N6 --------------------------------- Date: Wed, 25 Jan 89 16:40 GMT From: David Handscomb Subject: Numbering sets of equations in LaTeX/self Some writers of mathematics may find this useful. If you want to refer to a group of related equations both collectively and individually, assuming that equations are normally numbered as (section.equation) [the commands below are easily modified to cope with other numberings], you can, by adding the listed commands to the style file, do so by enclosing the group in an "eqngroup" environment, which may itself be labelled and may include other material besides equations. The numbering of surrounding equations will not be disrupted. RESTRICTIONS: an "eqngroup" must be properly nested with other environments; may contain, but may not be contained in an "eqnarray"; must lie wholly within one section. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % Commands to be inserted % assuming we already have: % \def\theequation{\thesection.\arabic{equation}} % \@addtoreset{equation}{section} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \newcounter{equationgroup} \newenvironment{eqngroup}{ \setcounter{equationgroup}{\value{equation}} \setcounter{equation}\z@ \def\theequationgroup{\thesection.\arabic{equationgroup}} \def\theequation{\theequationgroup\alph{equation}} \refstepcounter{equationgroup} }{ \setcounter{equation}{\value{equationgroup}} \def\theequation{\thesection.\arabic{equation}} } %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% Example of use: %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \begin{eqngroup}\label{eq234} \begin{equation} a \frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = \frac{\partial}{\partial x} K \frac{\partial u}{\partial x}, \label{eq2}\end{equation} where $u = u(x,t)$, \begin{eqnarray} u(x,0) &=& \phi(x), \quad 0\leq x\leq \pi,\label{eq3}\\ u(0,t) = u(\pi,t) &=& 0, \quad t>0.\label{eq4} \end{eqnarray} \end{eqngroup} We refer to (\ref{eq2}) as the {\em differential equation}, (\ref{eq3}) as the {\em initial conditions}, (\ref{eq4}) as the {\em boundary conditions}, and (\ref{eq234}) as the {\em problem}. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% David Handscomb dch@uk.ac.oxford.vax --------------------------------- From: Andrew D Nimmo Date: Fri, 27 Jan 89 15:04:51 GMT Message-Id: <12360.8901271504@uk.ac.sussex.syma> Subject: TeX for Apollo, pd TeX, Xdvi I am looking for a version of TeX for Apollo DN3000/DN3500/DN4500 's. Do you know if there is a version specifically for the Apollo's, or alternatively, where I can obtain a public domain version for BSD4.2/BSD4.3. I would also be interested in finding a supplier of an X-Windows previewer for TeX (X11), a dvi2ps program (for the LaserWriter IINTX) or any similar software. 1/4" tape (preferably apollo format, although will accept tar) is out preferred media, although it is possible to use hhcp for network transfer. Thanks in advance for any help anyone can give. Andrew D. Nimmo VLSI & Graphics Research Group EAPS II, PG PH University of Sussex Falmer BRIGHTON E. Sussex U.K. BN1 9QT email:andrewn%uk.ac.sussex.syma andrewn%uk.ac.sussex.unx1 (closing shortly) adnimm%uk.ac.sussex.cvaxa.bilbo --------------------------------- From: Dave Love Date: Fri, 27 Jan 89 18:24 GMT Subject: character mangling coming in from EARN Message-Id: <27 JAN 1989 18:24:37 FX@UK.AC.DARESBURY.NNGA> I recently did an experiment on what happens to characters which go JANET->EARN & EARN->JANET (where the 2 EARN nodes were actually Vaxen -- I didn't have someone to pester on an EARN IBM). What happens is as follows: Coming from EARN, uparrow -> tilde (i.e your superscripts get replaced by a hard space) and tilde -> percent (i.e. you hard spaces cause some of your TeX to be commented out with possibly disastrous results). Going to EARN, uparrow and both curly brackets -> unprintable characters (values greater than hex FF) and tilde -> uparrow. Thus your superscripts and macro argument lists cause chaos at the other end and your hard spaces probably cause an error trying to do superscripts out of math mode. This matter is being taken up with at least one relevant networking authority. It doesn't seem to be a problem with the JANET gateway specifically. Dave Love, SERC Daresbury Laboratory --------------------------------- Date: 27-JAN-1989 19:47:48 GMT From: CA_ROWLEY@UK.AC.OPEN.ACS.VAX Sender: JANET"CA_ROWLEY@UK.AC.OPEN.ACS.VAX" RE: Adrian Clark would like to know if a LaTeX style option can determine the style file it is being used with and adjust its behavior accordingly. There appears to be no way to do this. The \documentstyle command is very simple - about 3 lines of code or so - and it never saves the name of the style file anywhere: It uses its parameter directly in an \input. So any such information would have to be provided by the base style files themselves, which could of course define an appropriate macro. But the standard ones don't. It would probably be possible to find some parameter or set of parameters which is set in some recognizable way which is different in the different standard files - the secnumdepth counter is a good start - but I wouldn't recommend it. -- Jerry Hence the "simple" solution: redefine \documentstyle to record what it is doing, then there is no need to touch anything else or hunt for significant values. To be more precise: add the following to the definition of \@documentstyle \def\@mainstyle{#2} Problem: \documentstyle is the one and only user-command in LaTeX which you cannot redefine in a .STY file, hence this "simple" solution would involve the production of a nonstandard LateX. Now, if we could bribe Leslie into incorporating it into standard LaTeX... ...but perhaps that will have to await Version 2.1!! chris rowley --------------------------------- Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 0609; Sat, 28 Jan 89 12:47:51 GM Received: from HGRRUG5.BITNET (VENS) by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 0521; Sat, 28 Jan 89 12:47:50 Date: Sat, 28 Jan 89 13:45 B From: Subject: Common TeX X-Original-To: info-tex@aston.ac.uk, VENS Hallo \TeX ers listening in on UKTeX, here at ICCE in Groningen we have a bit of a problem installing Pat Monardo's CommonTeX on our IBM RT under AIX. Allthough the initex we created works fine and dumps a .FMT file, virtex doesn't work if you use other fonts than the ones predefined with initex. The designsize virtex reads is always less then UNITY (UNITY=1pt) and virtex indicates that you are reading a Bad TFM file. Did anyone encounter this problem too? And if so, how did you solve it. We read and reread the sourcecode, but we couldn't find anything wrong. Please help. (Answers can be in German too) Reply to VENS@HGRRUG5 (bitnet) or ...!guvaxin!guicce!erikjan (uucp) Thank you in advance, Erik-Jan Vens --------------------------------- Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 3072; Sat, 28 Jan 89 22:04:00 GM Received: from UICVM by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 2830; Sat, 28 Jan 89 22:04:00 G Received: by UICVM (Mailer R2.02) id 9147; Sat, 28 Jan 89 16:03:19 CST Date: Sat, 28 Jan 89 15:50:23 CST From: Don Hosek Subject: MF & PostScript Considerable efforts have been made to create PostScript fonts from MF; FTL (Canada--they make MacTeX) have had PostScript version of CM for auite some time, I'm not sure how they made them; Blue Sky Research (USA--they make Textures) also have CM in PostScript which is generated fro high-res GF files: this is done by a program they plan to release at some future date; Victor Ostroumkhov (France) demonstrated a program that also generated PostScript fonts from MF--I've heard conflicting reports on how this is done, some people claiming that the fonts are made from high-res GF, others claiming that the fonts are generated directly by MF. Personnally, I feel that the rasterization algorithms used by PostScript are a bit more primitive than those used by MF. Think about all the fine tuning done with mode_def's and the like; none of this is done by PostScript. Furthermore, if you take a close look at the available PS fonts, you will discover that none of them contain the hairlines that are present in CM! I suspect that at resolutions under 1000dpi, PS versions of CM will look pretty bad. The fact of the matter is, despite the loss of versatility, the best digital fonts will be those that are in raster format rather than generated from outlines on the fly as is done in PostScript. None of this is meant to imply that I don't support the idea of generating PostScript from MF--I think that it's a rather exciting idea--just that I don't think that current implementations of PostScript will be able to produce as good of results as those given by rasterized fonts. I would be interested to hear from somebody using a PS version of CM to hear how the output compares to output using rasterized CM. On a related note, it was asked whether there was a printer that used GF format fonts directly. As far as I know, there isn't; however, Talaris either has or plans a printer that uses PK format fonts directly. They also are planning a printer that can interpret DVI. -dh --------------------------------- Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 2646; Sun, 29 Jan 89 23:29:36 GM Received: from UICVM by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 2401; Sun, 29 Jan 89 23:29:36 G Received: by UICVM (Mailer R2.02) id 0168; Sun, 29 Jan 89 17:28:36 CST Date: Sun, 29 Jan 89 17:26:25 CST From: Don Hosek Subject: Color printer drivers for TeX. Does anybody know of any drivers for TeX that support multi-color printer drivers? If so, I would appreciate some information on how these drivers specify colors. Thank you, -dh --------------------------------- Via: vulcan. (vulcan.ARPA); Mon, 30 Jan 89 12:08:59 GMT Received: by vulcan. (4.0/SMI-4.0) id AA10536; Mon, 30 Jan 89 12:07:53 GMT Date: Mon, 30 Jan 89 12:07:53 GMT From: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese.vulcan (Adrian F. Clark) Message-Id: <8901301207.AA10536@vulcan.> Subject: Verbatim macros for LaTeX A few weeks ago, someone asked about macros for the verbatim inclusion of files in LaTeX documents. In response to this, I suggested the person try a file, MISC.STY, in the Aston archive. Well, someone has just pointed out that there is no such file in the Clarkson collection (and he's right); thinking back, I got it from elsewhere in the archive. But since including a file verbatim is such a common requirement, here's the macros, package together to give a `verbatim.sty'. Adrian F. Clark JANET: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese ARPA: alien%uk.ac.essex.ese@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk BITNET: alien%uk.ac.essex.ese@ac.uk Smail: Dept. of Electronic Systems Engineering, Essex University, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex C04 3SQ, U. K. Phone: (+44) 206-872432 (direct) % --- V E R B A T I M . S T Y % % --- This LaTeX style-file defines two user-callable macros: % --- \verbfile for verbatim inclusion of a file % --- \listing for verbatim inclusion with line numbers % --- The macros are based on those distributed with Sunil Podar's % --- `EPIC.STY' macro package, and are attributed to Tim Morgan. % --- Note that the precise layout of line breaks in this file is important! % --- Modified to keep internal macros internal by Adrian F. Clark, % --- alien@uk.ac.essex.ese. \def\@uncatcodespecials{\def\do##1{\catcode`##1=12 } \dospecials} \def\@setupverbatim{% \par \tt \spaceskip=0pt % Make sure we get fixed tt spacing \obeylines\@uncatcodespecials\obeyspaces\verbatimdefs } {\catcode`\^^M=13{\catcode`\ =13\gdef\verbatimdefs{\def^^M{\ \par}\let =\ }} \gdef\verbatimgobble#1^^M{}} \def\verbfile#1{\begingroup\@setupverbatim \parskip=0pt plus .05\baselineskip \parindent=0pt \input#1 \endgroup } \newcount\lineno \def\listing#1{\lineno=0\begingroup\@setupverbatim \parskip=0pt plus .05\baselineskip \parindent=20pt \everypar{\advance\lineno by 1 \llap{\the\lineno\ \ }}\input#1 \endgroup } --------------------------------- Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 0243; Wed, 01 Feb 89 01:43:14 GM Received: from UICVM by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 7030; Wed, 01 Feb 89 01:43:13 G Received: by UICVM (Mailer R2.02) id 3834; Tue, 31 Jan 89 18:44:30 CST Date: Tue, 31 Jan 89 18:43:47 CST From: Don Hosek Subject: First report from the TUG DVI driver standards committee ********************************************************************** * First report from the DVI driver standards committee * ********************************************************************** The TUG DVI driver standards committee has been working on the development of standards for device drivers since the fall of 1988. This article is a first report on our status to the membership of TUG. At the time of this writing, we are in the midst of discussion of \special standards for device drivers. By the TUG meeting this August, we should have a preliminary report on this topic available for distribution to all interested parties. We welcome all input from members of the TeX community; if you have any suggestions, comments, etc. regarding the issue of \special handling, we would appreciate it if you could send these to Robert McGaffey (Internet: McGaffey%Orn.Mfenet@Nmfecc.Arpa) for distribution to the members of the committee. The members of the committee are: Robert McGaffey, chair, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; David P. Babcock, Hewlett-Packard; Elizabeth Barnhart, TV Guide; Stephan v. Bechtolsheim, Integrated Computer Software Inc.; Nelson Beebe, University of Utah; Jackie Damrau, University of New Mexico; Donald Goldhammer, University of Chicago; Don Hosek, University of Illinois at Chicago; David Ness, TV Guide; Thomas J. Reid, Texas A&M University; David Rodgers, Arbortext, Inc.; Brian Skidmore, Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.; Glenn Vanderburg, Texas A&M University; and Ralph Youngen, American Mathematical Society. --------------------------------- Via: vulcan. (vulcan.ARPA); Wed, 1 Feb 89 09:00:06 GMT Received: by vulcan. (4.0/SMI-4.0) id AA11341; Wed, 1 Feb 89 08:58:56 GMT Date: Wed, 1 Feb 89 08:58:56 GMT From: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese.vulcan (Adrian F. Clark) Message-Id: <8902010858.AA11341@vulcan.> Subject: Finland calling... Just has a call from a gentleman (whose name I didn't catch) from Finland who was at Exeter. He's trying to produce some output on a Linotronic 300 using CM-series fonts. His Linotronic has a RIP 2. He's having trouble fitting the character bit-maps into memory. This is way beyond my experience, so I suggested he contact you. Come to that, I'm interested in that problem, too: do I have to use PostScript fonts if I generate any Linotronic output? **Adrian. +++Editor - I have also had a similar call from Peter Laursen in Copenhagen. We shall be attempting to load the cm fonts onto the hard disc in the near future so will keep everyone informed. At present only the postsrcipt fonts can be used at Aston. +++ --------------------------------- Date: 1-FEB-1989 11:47:04 From: TEX@UK.AC.CRANFIELD.RMCS Subject: BibTeX v0.99 for the IBM PC Sender: JANET"TEX@UK.AC.CRANFIELD.RMCS" Message-Id: <0000092F_0006391C.0091FB9FFF926080$57_1@UK.AC.CRANFIELD.RMCS> Originally-to: JANET%"info-tex@uk.ac.aston",TEX Originally-from:TEX "RMCS TeX Account" Mailer: Janet_Mailshr V3.2 (27-Oct-1988) Does anybody have a public domain implementation of BibTeX v0.99 that they would be willing to donate to the archive ? C. Niel KEMPSON P.S. Please note the NEW E-mail address !! The DTE address for UK.AC.CRANFIELD.RMCS is 0000 5050 0105 .----------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Slow (but reliable) Mail: | Telephone: Swindon (0793) 785687 | | School of Elec Eng & Science, | International: +44-793-785687 | | Royal Military College of Science,| | | Shrivenham, SWINDON, | E-mail | | SN6 8LA, | JANET: tex@uk.ac.cranfield.rmcs | | United Kingdom | | `----------------------------------------------------------------------------' --------------------------------- Received: from UKACRL by UK.AC.RL.IB (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 4065; Thu, 02 Feb 89 14:55:23 GM Received: from DMSWWU1A.BITNET by UKACRL.BITNET (Mailer X1.25) with BSMTP id 6595; Thu, 02 Feb 89 14:55:22 G Received: by DMSWWU1A (Mailer X1.25) id 5666; Thu, 02 Feb 89 15:45:57 MEZ Date: Thu, 02 Feb 89 15:44:34 MEZ From: Tim Doherty Subject: K-Talk This is more of a comment on rather than a response to Sebastian Tahtz's words on the K-Talk WordPerfect --> TeX converter (UKTeX V89 #04). To be perfectly honest, I am not familiar with this package and can't imagine why anyone would pay money (or is it PD ?) for something that can easily be done within WordPerfect (WP) itself. Who uses WP? I don't (anymore)| Experience here at the University of Muenster has shown me that most students who use only WP know next to nothing about computers. Trying to explain the difference(s) between a stictly ASCII editor and WP to a WP user can be very enervating. But that's beside the point. For the things WP's intended to do, it's good. But what is it intended to do? Well, just about what you would expect of a WYSIWYG system. I don't expect that any conversion of a WYSIWYG orientated document to TeX can offer much more than the features which the control codes of the original system offer. That means, in order to take full advantage of TeX, the commands for most of the formatting goodies that make TeX what it is and we TeX (or in my case LaTeX) people take for granted have to be put in the source document after conversion anyway. Conversion takes care of things like italics, boldface, raised or lowered characters, primitive sectioning, and the like. This is especially important for the footnotes: if you generate an ASCII file using the WP command (C-F5), all footnotes are wiped out along with the control codes. But why pay extra for conversion or bother with printer drivers if the 1:1 converted document is going to be below TeX formatting standards? All (almost all?) features (control codes) of WP can be converted to TeX or LaTeX format using macros *in* WP: i.e. the "invisible" control codes are located by the WP-macro and replaced by visible \csnames or whatever is needed. After running the macros, just save the document as an ASCII file and use your favorite ASCII-editor to do the touching up. This is not just theory: I do this all the time. E.g. for our student magazine, my fellow students type the articles using WP (they all belong to the catagory I mentioned above --- that may sound arrogant, but it's not meant that way, it's just a fact). I then run the WP-macros, generate an ASCII file, use the ASCII-editor to add formatting commands as needed and use selective changing to get the en- and em-dashes right as well as other small stuff (using a versatile editor with powerful macro capabilities can save a lot of work --- I personnaly use KEDIT 4.0), run TeX, finished. Here is an example of a WP-macro. This macro will convert all footnotes (usually not seen in the normal WP-text) to the following form: main text main text main text main% \footnote{footnote text footnote text} text main text main text ... The form % \footnote{... avoids overlong lines. The macro is written here KEY for KEY; I have added a ; (semicolon) here between keynames (don't type it in the macro definition|): C-F7;2;;;j;;j;\footnote{;;;;}; ;;A-F4;;;;C-F4;1;F7;%;; C-F4;5 If my comments concerning conversion software just aren't true, please inform me of how much of a jerk I really am| I'm always willing to learn. Tim Doherty Bitnet/EARN: NAO02@DMSWWU1A.BITNET Altorientalisches Seminar der WWU Rosenstrasse 9 D-4400 Muenster BRD (West-Germany) --------------------------------- Via: vulcan. (vulcan.ARPA); Fri, 3 Feb 89 09:09:05 GMT Received: by vulcan. (4.0/SMI-4.0) id AA12064; Fri, 3 Feb 89 09:07:54 GMT Date: Fri, 3 Feb 89 09:07:54 GMT From: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese.vulcan (Adrian F. Clark) Message-Id: <8902030907.AA12064@vulcan.> Subject: Why do requests get rejected by the mail-server? There have been a few reports recently of people experiencing problems with the mail-server. I have (finally!) pinned these down to a disc quota problem and have taken steps to make sure it won't happen again. I hope. The mail-server now also collects statistics on the causes of rejected outgoing messages. Here is a summary of the causes so far this year: wrong formatting type: 10 file not found: 6 file changed: 4 miscellaneous: 6 The `wrong formatting type' error arises from trying to transfer a binary file, usually a TFM or GF file. The `file not found' errors arose because of the abovementioned disc quota problem. The `file changed' error is presumably because of on-going maintenance in the archive (could someone tell me if this isn't so!). And the miscellaneous category seems to contain only *large* directory listings sent through earn-relay; at least one of these was dir/size/date [public...] i.e., a listing of the entire archive, one file per line---there was well over 4000 files in the archive at that time. I'm afraid the mail-server isn't yet sufficiently clever to split up large files into smaller pieces. If you have submitted requests to the archive and failed to receive an answer, the most likely reasons are: o you got the return address wrong o you missed out the `---' delimiter o you typed an incorrect or ambiguous command If the return address is correct but the command is incorrect, the mail-server will attempt to send an encouraging message; but if a command is correct and it has ambiguous or incorrect qualifiers, this may not be the case (blame the DCL parser, not me!). And, please remember, over 90% of requests are successful. Adrian F. Clark JANET: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese ARPA: alien%uk.ac.essex.ese@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk BITNET: alien%uk.ac.essex.ese@ac.uk Smail: Dept. of Electronic Systems Engineering, Essex University, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex C04 3SQ, U. K. Phone: (+44) 206-872432 (direct) --------------------------------- Via: vulcan. (vulcan.ARPA); Fri, 3 Feb 89 09:17:06 GMT Received: by vulcan. (4.0/SMI-4.0) id AA12067; Fri, 3 Feb 89 09:15:55 GMT Date: Fri, 3 Feb 89 09:15:55 GMT From: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese.vulcan (Adrian F. Clark) Message-Id: <8902030915.AA12067@vulcan.> Subject: Multi-lingual mail-server help It gives me some pleasure to announce that the mail-server can now send out HELP messages in languages other than English. The first non-English translation is in Italian: thanks to Max Calvani for performing this tiresome task. To obtain the Italian help message, send the command `HELP/ITALIANO' to the mail-server. People have volunteered or been pressed to translate the help text into other languages. I would like to encourage them to get the translation to me as quickly as possible, since the file merely needs to be entered into the archive to make the command available. But please make sure you have the most up-to-date version of the help text; I had to change it mid-January. If anyone has mailed a translation to me, it got lost on the way: please try again! And I'm always looking for volunteers to translate into other languages! Greek, anyone, or Japanese? Adrian F. Clark JANET: alien@uk.ac.essex.ese ARPA: alien%uk.ac.essex.ese@nss.cs.ucl.ac.uk BITNET: alien%uk.ac.essex.ese@ac.uk Smail: Dept. of Electronic Systems Engineering, Essex University, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex C04 3SQ, U. K. Phone: (+44) 206-872432 (direct) --------------------------------- !! !! Files of interest [public]000aston.readme !! [public]000directory.list !! [public]000directory_dates.list !! [public]000directory.size !! [public]000last30days.files !! !! Editor - I have a tape labelled TeX 2.9 LaTeX 2.09 Metafont 1.3 !! Unix 4.2/3BSD VAX SUN 2/3 Pyramid Sequent SYS V: 3B2 Tar 1600 bpi blocked !! 20 1 file dated 30 November 1988 (from washington.edu). !! !! I have the facility to copy this tape for anyone who sends the following !! 1 2400 tape with return labels AND RETURN postage. !! !! Send to !! !! P Abbott !! Computing Service !! Aston University !! Aston Triangle !! Birmingham B4 7ET !! !! A VMS backup of the archive requires 2 (two ) 2400' tapes at 6250bpi. !! Remaining details as above. !! Other tape options in the pipeline. !! !! Replies/submissions to info-tex@uk.ac.aston please !! distribution changes to info-tex-request@uk.ac.aston please !! !! end of issue