UKTeX Digest Friday, 24 May 1991 Volume 91 : Issue 21 Today's Topics: {Q&A}: Re: PostScript libraries? Marking changes to a document RE: Marking changes to a document Re: Peter Flynn's request for LaTeX footnotes in a paragraph Bibliography style sorted by citation key Re: Bibliography style sorted by citation key Re: Bibliography style sorted by citation key TeX for MVS systems? Printing selected pages with emTeX's DVIHPLJ Re: Printing selected pages with emTeX's DVIHPLJ TeX for HP-UX Re: TeX for HP-UX {Announcements}: Announcing the babel system of style options {Archive News}: UK TeX Archive now accessible from UUCP sites REVTeX (v2.0) in the archive EGA2MF has been added to the archive Administrivia: Moderators: Peter Abbott (Aston University) and David Osborne (University of Nottingham) Contributions: UKTeX@uk.ac.tex Administration, subscription and unsubscription requests: UKTeX-request@uk.ac.tex ------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 May 91 17:02:52 +0000 From: Dave Love Subject: Re: PostScript libraries? P.G. Collis writes: > We use psfig to include EPS into LaTeX and want to make available a library > for users. > > LaTeX appears to pick-up EPS files from TEXINPUTS, but unfortunately this is > not true for dvips! Is there a way to make a library available without > instructing users to take copies or linking the required files? dvips does use TEXINPUTS to search for included EPS (at least the un*x version v5.* does). However, if TEXINPUTS isn't actually defined TeX's and dvips's different defaults may not be consistent. Also the `S' option in the printer configuration file can override the default. The dvips manual (dvips.tex in the 5.* distribution) explains its path and environment variable interpretation in detail. CA_ROWLEY writes: > I am not familiar with how psfig works but I would be surprised if > LaTeX itself actually does anything at all with the EPS file. > > Does it not just pass the file name through to DVIPS (complete with > directory name or whatever you put in front of it), not even caring > whether such a file exists, let alone what directory it is in. \psfig needs to read the EPS file to find the %%BoundingBox comment in order to tell how big the picture is supposed to be. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 May 91 17:09:01 +0000 From: Michael J Smith Subject: Marking changes to a document I use LaTeX to prepare various documents which have to change over a period of time. Is there any convenient mechanism to, for example, put a line or some other mark in the margin to mark changes. Such a mechanism would have to work equally well for tables, figures etc. as well as ordinary text. Mick Smith ICL, Strategic Systems ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 May 91 21:40:28 +0000 From: Brian {Hamilton Kelly} Subject: RE: Marking changes to a document In message <10684.9105171609@sc1.sss.icl.co.uk> (to UKTeX) of Fri, 17 May 91 17:09:01 BST, Michael J Smith wrote: > I use LaTeX to prepare various documents which have to change over a > period of time. Is there any convenient mechanism to, for example, > put a line or some other mark in the margin to mark changes. > Such a mechanism would have to work equally well for tables, figures > etc. as well as ordinary text. It very much depends upon your output device driver. Various authors have implemented support for changebars; most are based on Flavio Rose's \special commands (because, of course, TeX would have no idea whereabouts to put a bar on a page, since it never knows exactly where it is, in this context at least). My DVItoLN03 V4 driver supports these for the Digital LN03 printer, using CHANGEBAR.STY, available from the UK TeX Archive (uk.ac.tex). Recently, a new version of this has been contributed, which supports changebars on PostScript printers. I believe Eberhard Mattes has also implemented a mechanism for his emTeX drivers, but I don't know any details, or whether his method is compatible with CHANGEBAR.STY. Brian {Hamilton Kelly} +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ + JANET: tex@uk.ac.cranfield.rmcs + + BITNET: tex%uk.ac.cranfield.rmcs@ac.uk + + INTERNET: tex%uk.ac.cranfield.rmcs@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk + + UUCP: {mcsun,ukc,uunet}!rmcs.cranfield.ac.uk!tex + + Smail: School of Electrical Engineering & Science, Royal Military + + College of Science, Shrivenham, SWINDON SN6 8LA, U.K. + + Phone: Swindon (0793) 785252 (UK), +44-793-785252 (International) + +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 May 91 10:08:53 +0000 From: Dominik Wujastyk Subject: Re: Peter Flynn's request for LaTeX footnotes in a paragraph Dear Peter, My email to you never gets through for some reason, so let me say here publicly that Chris Rowley and I made a LaTeX style to do the kind of footnotes you want some time ago. It is called fnpara.sty, and should be available from the usual sources. Here it is, anyway: % FNPARA.STY 3-OCT-1988 % A LaTeX style to typeset footnotes in run-on paragraphs. % See end of this file (after \endinput) for comments. % %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % From LaTeX.tex : \long\def\@footnotetext#1{\insert\footins{\footnotesize %CCCC ---the next four lines are probably redundant, since: % the paragraphing takes place later; % and this style of footnote never gets split. \interlinepenalty\interfootnotelinepenalty \splittopskip\footnotesep \splitmaxdepth \dp\strutbox %CCCC ---these two lines will need to be reproduced when doing the unboxing. \hsize\columnwidth \@parboxrestore %CCCC \floatingpenalty \@MM \edef\@currentlabel{\csname p@footnote\endcsname\@thefnmark} %CCCC --- need to set each footnote in an hbox and apply % the fudge factor here: \setbox0=\hbox{% \@makefntext %CCCC --- this needs a parameter % --- the rule should be moved to the beginning of the footnote % paragraph: % --- but the \ignorespaces should be left here. % \rule{\z@}{\footnotesep} {\ignorespaces #1\strut %CCCC --- penalty to help line breaking in footnote para goes here: % value from TeXbook. \penalty -10 \hskip\footglue } % end of parameter } % end of \hbox \dp0=0pt \ht0=\fudgefactor\wd0 \box0 } % end of \footins } % end of \def %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %CCCC --- from TeXbook \newskip\footglue \footglue=1em plus.3em minus.3em % %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % Cut down from ARTICLE.TEX : \long\def\@makefntext#1{{$^{\@thefnmark}$}\nobreak\hskip.5em\relax#1} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % From LaTeX.TEX: \def\@makecol{\ifvoid\footins \setbox\@outputbox\box\@cclv \else\setbox\@outputbox \vbox{\boxmaxdepth \maxdepth \unvbox\@cclv\vskip\skip\footins\footnoterule \global\setbox1\vbox{\makefootnoteparagraph}\unvbox1}\fi \xdef\@freelist{\@freelist\@midlist}\gdef\@midlist{}\@combinefloats \setbox\@outputbox\vbox to\@colht{\boxmaxdepth\maxdepth \@texttop\dimen128=\dp\@outputbox\unvbox\@outputbox \vskip-\dimen128\@textbottom} \global\maxdepth\@maxdepth} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % From TeXbook, p.398 ff., AVOIDING the redefinition of \\ in LaTeX!! {\catcode`p=12 \catcode`t=12 \gdef\@ennumber#1pt{#1}} {\footnotesize \newdimen\footnotebaselineskip %CCCC --definitely needed: \global \footnotebaselineskip=\normalbaselineskip} \dimen0=\footnotebaselineskip \multiply\dimen0 by 1024 \divide \dimen0 by \columnwidth \multiply\dimen0 by 64 \xdef\fudgefactor{\expandafter\@ennumber\the\dimen0 } \def\makefootnoteparagraph{\unvbox\footins \makehboxofhboxes \setbox0=\hbox{\unhbox0 \removehboxes} %CCCC ---now we are ready to set the paragraph: \hsize\columnwidth \@parboxrestore \baselineskip=\footnotebaselineskip \noindent %CCCC ---this is where the strut is needed: \rule{\z@}{\footnotesep}% \unhbox0\par} \def\makehboxofhboxes{\setbox0=\hbox{} \loop\setbox2=\lastbox \ifhbox2 \setbox0=\hbox{\box2\unhbox0}\repeat} \def\removehboxes{\setbox0=\lastbox \ifhbox0{\removehboxes}\unhbox0 \fi} %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \endinput FNPARA.STY A LaTeX style to typeset footnotes in run-on paragraphs. History: A vain attempt at this LaTeX modification was tried in late September 1988 by Dominik Wujastyk, and sent to TeXhax and UKTeX for comment. Chris Rowley came up with a working version a few days later, but it still needs thorough testing. The Style: This LaTeX style changes the way LaTeX does footnotes. With this style invoked (\documentstyle[fnpara]{article}), footnotes will be typeset in a running paragraph, instead of one above another. It is suitable for texts such as critical editions, which contain many short footnotes. This is based on the TeX macros described by Knuth in the TeXbook, Dirty Tricks, pages 398--400. It is not tested beyond some simple examples. In particular, it has not been tested properly in connection with even the simplest of environments, nor with other floats. (In fact, ordinary LaTeX footnotes sometimes do not work well if they need splitting (e.g. producing blank pages, or appearing in shuffled form): but these problems should not affect this style. I --CR-- have sent in a Bug Report about some of these problems.) Be aware of Knuth's note on the limitations of this method of doing the job: the TeX stack is used four times per footnote, and the stack is limited (TeXbook pp. 300--301). So if you have very many footnotes on a page (in the hundreds) and encounter "! TeX capacity exceeded, sorry [... save size ...]" errors, you may need to break your text into smaller sections. Fortunately, this is very easy to do with LaTeX. And the footnote counter can be reset to make the joins seamless. Chris Rowley Office tel: (England) 01 794 0575 Janet: CA_ROWLEY@UK.AC.OPEN.ACS.VAX Dominik Wujastyk Office tel: (England) 071 383 4252 x 24 Janet: D.Wujastyk@UK.AC.UCL October 3, 1988 Character code reference: Upper case letters: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ Lower case letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Digits: 0123456789 Square, curly, angle braces, parentheses: [] {} <> () Backslash, slash, vertical bar: \ / | Punctuation: . ? ! , : ; Underscore, hyphen, equals sign: _ - = Quotes--right left double: ' ` " "at", "number" "dollar", "percent", "and": @ # $ % & "hat", "star", "plus", "tilde": ^ * + ~ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 May 91 15:11:05 +0000 From: Adrian F Clark Subject: Bibliography style sorted by citation key Has anyone devised a bibliography style which lists references using their citation key (i.e., the thing which goes in \cite), as in ...\cite{Smith-Jones}... Smith-Jones: Fred Smith and Bert Jones (1991): "A Mechanism for Listing BibTeX Files Sorted by their Citation Key" UKTeX Digest volume 91, number 26. This would be amazingly useful when producing listings of .bib files. Dr Adrian F. Clark JANET: alien@uk.ac.essex INTERNET: alien%uk.ac.essex@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk FAX: (+44) 206-872900 BITNET: alien%uk.ac.essex@ac.uk PHONE: (+44) 206-872432 (direct) Dept ESE, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex, C04 3SQ, UK. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 21 May 91 10:56:31 +0000 From: Sebastian Rahtz Subject: Re: Bibliography style sorted by citation key Adrian F Clark writes: > Has anyone devised a bibliography style which lists references using > their citation key (i.e., the thing which goes in \cite), as in here is a function you will find in most .bst files. `cite$' is the string you used in \cite, and `label' is what BibTeX is going to generate. I presume all you do is replace `label write$' with `cite$ write$', or whatever combination takes your fancy. I stress that I have not tested this theory. FUNCTION {output.bibitem} { newline$ "\bibitem[" write$ label write$ "]{" write$ cite$ write$ "}" write$ newline$ "" before.all 'output.state := } Sebastian ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 21 May 91 13:50:36 +0000 From: Adrian F Clark Subject: Re: Bibliography style sorted by citation key Sebastian writes: > here is a function you will find in most .bst files. `cite$' is the > string you used in \cite, and `label' is what BibTeX is going to > generate. I presume all you do is replace `label write$' with `cite$ > write$', or whatever combination takes your fancy. I stress that I > have not tested this theory. > > FUNCTION {output.bibitem} (and so on). I've just tried Sebastian's suggested modification to alpha.bst, to yield biblist.bst, and it works perfectly. Exactly what I was looking for! Dr Adrian F. Clark ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 20 May 91 16:21:00 +0000 From: Dragan Cvetkovic +38-11-778-451 Subject: TeX for MVS systems? Hi, can please someone tell me where can I find TeX for IBM mainframe systems running MVS operating system? D. Cvetkovic .. ---------------------------m--m---------------------------------------- | Dragan Cvetkovic | ecvetkov@yubgef51.bitnet | | Faculty of Mathematics | xpmfm30@yubgss21.bitnet | | Belgrade |----------------------------------------- | Yugoslavia | You can do more with a kind word and a | | phone +38-11-778 451 | gun than with just a kind word. | ---------------------------w--w---------------------------------------- '' ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 21 May 91 11:59:00 +0000 From: Peter Flynn UCC Subject: Printing selected pages with emTeX's DVIHPLJ The HPLJ driver with emTeX comes with some nice features for positioning multiple pages on a sheet. My requirement is to print a document (which is a multiple of 4 pages long) so that by reprinting with the paper flipped over, you get two copies of a booklet straight out. This means printing landscape (no problem) with two pages to view (no problem) but in the specific order (assume 48pp): +------------------+ | | | | p48 | p1 | | | | +------------------+ +------------------+ | | | | p46 | p3 | | | | +------------------+ etc. (those are two sheets there). so i need to print pages in the order 1 48 3 46 5 44 7 42 ... 47 2 using /ci/cf/cx etc but I can't figure out how to make DVIHPLJ jump around the file like that, it seems only to be able to skip forward, not backward. Arbortxt's DVIHP will do it, using a response file, but I have other reasons for wanting to use emTeX's (like .PCX /specials). Any offers? ///Peter ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 21 May 91 12:32:39 +0000 From: Sebastian Rahtz Subject: Re: Printing selected pages with emTeX's DVIHPLJ Peter Flynn UCC writes: > The HPLJ driver with emTeX comes with some nice features for positioning > multiple pages on a sheet. My requirement is to print a document (which is > a multiple of 4 pages long) so that by reprinting with the paper flipped > over, you get two copies of a booklet straight out. This means printing .... > etc. (those are two sheets there). so i need to print pages in the order > 1 48 3 46 5 44 7 42 ... 47 2 using /ci/cf/cx etc but I can't figure out > how to make DVIHPLJ jump around the file like that, it seems only to be Two suggestions: a) use dvidvi, which you will have to compile from C source on your PC; it rearranges the pages of a dvi file b) write a .BAT file with multiple calls to dvihplj..... that means working out the logic yourself, of course. I sympathize. I have been doing this for years, and it makes me tear my hair out every single time, because I forget the formula from last time! My last attempt *was* a success - I wanted an A5 booklet, so I got TeX producing A5 pages, then got dvidvi to put them two up on an A4 page in the right order for immediate xeroxing. Sebastian ------------------------------ Date: 21 May 91 13:23:09 +0000 From: hermes Subject: TeX for HP-UX Hi, I was given your ID by Malcolm Clark of Central London Poly for info on TeX. We have a cluster of HP9000s running HP-UX 7.0, along with X11R4 release of X-windows. We'll soon be taking delivery of a postscript laser printer, and have started thinking about systems for high quality output of text, drawings, images etc. We'd like to play with TeX, so any info you may have regarding Public Domain TeX for HP-UX would be appreciated. Also, the price/availability of proper (arbor?) TeX for be useful. I've used LaTeX before. Does this normally come as standard? What about fonts? Images? I saw reference to a PBMtoPK utility which would be good, since we use the PBMplus stuff here. Thanks for any help. ***************************************************************** * Neil Canham * Tel: 0245 73331 x3083 * * Coherent Optics Group * Fax: 0245 75244 * * GEC-Marconi Research * email: hermes%uk.co.gec-mrc@uk.ac.ukc * * West Hanningfield Rd ***************************************** * Great Baddow * JokeWidget ERROR: Humour resource not * * Essex. CM2 8HN * yet allocated. * ***************************************************************** ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 91 15:55:35 +0000 From: Sebastian Rahtz Subject: Re: TeX for HP-UX > output of text, drawings, images etc. We'd like to play with TeX, > so any info you may have regarding Public Domain TeX for HP-UX > would be appreciated. Also, the price/availability of proper > (arbor?) TeX for be useful. The UK TeX Archive distributes the standard Unix TeX distribution; this compiles on almost all known Unix boxes, and certainly works under HPUX, if you have a C compiler. This distribution is entirely free and includes all of TeX and related software. Arbortext `TeX' is not `proper' in any sense; there is NO difference between versions of TeX by definition - if a program is called TeX it will work the same as any other, or Knuth will sue you. There is no reason to spend money on Unix TeX from any commercial vendor, unless a) you prefer their output drivers, or b) you want support. > I've used LaTeX before. Does this > normally come as standard? What about fonts? LaTeX and all of the Computer Modern Roman fonts, and Metafont, are a normal part of the distribution > Images? I saw > reference to a PBMtoPK utility which would be good, since we use > the PBMplus stuff here. pbmtopk is not yet part of the standard distribution, but it is freely available by email or FTP from Aston. send Aston a tape (1/2 inch or 1/4inch cartridge) and ask for a copy of the Unix TeX distribution. include postage and packing for return or you will never see it again. Sebastian Rahtz ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 91 07:58:00 +0700 From: Johannes L. Braams Subject: Announcing the babel system of style options Hi, Below you find the readme file for the babel system of style options. This system supports multi-lingual documents, switching of hyphenation patterns, dynamically preloading of various hyphenation patterns, language-specific definitions etcetera. An article describing this system of style options will appear in TUGboat soon. Regards, Johannes Braams PTT Research Neher Laboratorium, P.O. box 421, 2260 AK Leidschendam, The Netherlands. Phone : +31 70 3325051 E-mail : JL_Braams@pttrnl.nl - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- - I am pleased to announce the babel system of style options to be used with the standard LaTeX document styles. This system consists of any number of language-specific files and an underlying common file, babel.sty. The common file redefines various parts of the standard document styles, replacing english texts with macros. These macros are defined in the language-specific files that will be published in TUGboat. Currently I have language-specific files for dutch (ofcourse), german, english french, italian and spanish. (For the german and french parts I used Hubert Partl's german.sty) An extra feature of this system is that it offers a possibility to switch between languages. Anyone who likes to test this, please contact me. Please not that this is quite a different approach as the one discussed by Joachim Schrod in TUGboat Volume 11 No1. He describes a system where the actual LaTeX sources files are modified and a new .fmt file has to be built. All of that is not necessary to use my approach. Files you need: BABEL.README This file BABEL.TEX The driver file to print the documentation, it is based on the use of FMi's doc.sty BABEL.DOC The documented core of the system BABEL.STY The docstripped version of babel.doc HYPHEN.DOC The documented source for the next four files. This file contains code for switchin between languages and preloading pattern files. BABEL.HYPHEN This file was produced from hyphen.doc and can be read by iniTeX 3.x to preload one or more hyphenation patterns, as specified in the file language.dat LANGUAGE.DAT A file listing the languages to be used, this should be modified to reflect local needs. BABEL.SWITCH This file was produced from hyphen.doc and can will be called by babel.sty when babel.switch wasn't processed by iniTeX. BABEL22.SWITCH A version of babel.switch to be used with a TeX version 2.x and plain (lplain) 2.x BABEL32.SWITCH A version of babel.switch to be used with a TeX version 3.x and plain (lplain) 2.x LATEXHAX.DOC Some code, needed for compatibility with plain TeX. LATEXHAX.STY docstripped version of the above file. Language specific files come in pairs, documented and stripped. These files contain the real user interface, they are all the user should see from this system (if he doesn't look in TeX's log-file as most don't). DUTCH.DOC/DUTCH.STY ENGLISH.DOC/ENGLISH.STY GERMANB.DOC/GERMANB.STY babel-compatible version of Partl's german.tex FRENCH.DOC/FRENCH.STY derived from german.tex, under development ITALIAN.DOC/ITALIAN.STY under development SPANISH.DOC/SPANISH.STY under development Installation notes To install the babel-system the person responsible for the maintenance of TeX should place all .sty files in the place where he keeps all TeX style files and such. (usually TeXinputs or something similar.) When he doesn't want to create new formats he should put the appropriate version of babel.switch there as well. To build a format, preloading multiple hyphenation patterns, do the following: 1 rename hyphen.tex to something like hyphen.english and include a line to reflect this in language.dat; 2 do the same for other files containing hyphenation patterns; 3 make sure TeX's parameters are sufficiently sized to preload all patterns you want it to (look at trie_size and trie_op_size); 4 run iniTeX and, when it tells you it can't find hyphen.tex (you just renamed it, no wonder) instruct it to read babel.hyphen. Notes on filenames You may have noted I used some filnames with extensions longer than 3 characters. This may pose a problem for some operating systems. The implementation of TeX I use on my MS-DOS PC (emTeX) is more than happy to look for babel.hyp, instead of babel.hyphen. So just shorten the names to use 3 characters as extensions for files, no need to change any of the code. If you run another TeX implementation that behaves differently, well you're out of luck, look for the filenames in the code and modify them or get emTeX (this is a plug). Regards, Johannes Braams PTT Research Neher Laboratorium, P.O. box 421, 2260 AK Leidschendam, The Netherlands. Phone : +31 70 3325051 E-mail : JL_Braams@pttrnl.nl - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- - ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 17 May 91 20:46:30 +0000 From: SYSTEM@UK.AC.TEX Subject: UK TeX Archive now accessible from UUCP sites Many UUCP sites have probably been greatly disappointed not to receive information they had requested from the UK TeX Archive using the mail server . This was due to our not being registered for international mail with the UK's Janet-UUCP gateway (uk.ac.ukc). We are now registered properly (an earlier announcement of mine was wishful thinking, apparently), so please retry all those requests that have failed over the past five months. You may be interested to know that some 8MB were bounced last month for sites to which TeXserver had blindly tried to send international UUCP mail! Brian {Hamilton Kelly} pp The Archivists ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 21 May 91 16:49:29 +0000 From: David Osborne Subject: REVTeX (v2.0) in the archive REVTeX, a set of style-files and examples to allow authors of papers for American Physical Reviews to produce files for contribution to the journal in LaTeX mark-up, is now in the UK TeX archive: [TEX-ARCHIVE.LATEX.CONTRIB.REVTEX] APGUIDE.TEX;1 APS.STY;1 APS10.STY;1 EQSECNUM.STY;1 PREPRINT.STY;1 README.;1 REVTEX.STY;1 SMPLEA.TEX;1 SMPLEB.TEX;1 SMPLEC.TEX;1 Total of 10 files. - --dave David Osborne (pp Aston TeX Archive group) ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 24 May 91 11:51:39 +0000 From: Brian {Hamilton Kelly} Subject: EGA2MF has been added to the archive Thomas Ridgeway's EGA2MF package has been placed in the UK TeX Archive on uk.ac.tex in the directory [tex-archive.tools.fontware.ega2mf]; contents are as follows: > Files matching DISK$TEX:[TEX-ARCHIVE.TOOLS.FONTWARE.EGA2MF]*.* > listed in reverse time order (listing updated: 24-May-91 10:37). > > Last change Size Type File specification > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > 24-May-91 10:40 4086 TXT [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]00readme.txt > 24-May-91 10:30 6544 TXT [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]vga2mf.c > 24-May-91 10:30 6234 TXT [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]ega2mf.c > 24-May-91 10:21 - DIR [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]tmp.dir > 24-May-91 10:03 4112 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp880dv.vga > 24-May-91 10:03 4112 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp865.vga > 24-May-91 10:02 4112 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp863.vga > 24-May-91 10:01 4112 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp860.vga > 24-May-91 10:01 4112 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp850.vga > 24-May-91 10:00 4112 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp437.vga > 24-May-91 10:00 3598 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp880dv.ega > 24-May-91 09:59 3598 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp865.ega > 24-May-91 09:59 3598 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp863.ega > 24-May-91 09:58 3598 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp860.ega > 24-May-91 09:58 3598 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp850.ega > 24-May-91 09:57 3598 BIN [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]cp437.ega > 24-May-91 09:57 1226 TXT [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]wnpc10.tex > 24-May-91 09:53 112348 TXT [.tools.fontware.ega2mf]wnpc10.mf > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The package includes programs for converting EGA and VGA bitmaps to MF code, several fonts, and the MF code for a PC font based on the EGA bitmaps. The file 00readme.txt in that directory has more information. Note that all *.ega and *.vga files are binary and will require the use of the /ENCODE qualifier on any FILES command sent to TeXserver. Brian {Hamilton Kelly} ------------------------------ UK TeX ARCHIVE at ASTON UNIVERSITY *** JANET Interactive and NIFTP access *** Host: uk.ac.tex (JANET DTE 000020120091) Username: public Password: public *** FILES OF INTEREST *** [tex-archive]00readme.txt [tex-archive]00directory.list [tex-archive]00directory.size [tex-archive]00directory_dates.list [tex-archive]00last30days.files This year's UKTeX back issues are stored in the archive in directory [tex-archive.digests.uktex.91] This year's TeXhax back issues are stored in the archive in directory [tex-archive.digests.texhax.91] Latest TeXhax: #23 TeXMaG back issues are stored in the archive in directory [tex-archive.digests.tex-mag] Latest TeXMaG: V5 N2 *** MEDIA DISTRIBUTIONS *** Washington Unix TeX distribution tape (latest copy dated 28 March 1990) Contains: TeX 2.993(==3.0), LaTeX 2.09, Metafont 1.9 (2.0), plus many utilities suitable for Unix 4.2/4.3BSD & System V tar format, 1600bpi, blockfactor 20, 1 file (36Mb) Copies available on: One 2400ft tape sent with return labels AND return postage to Aston OR One quarter-inch cartridge (DC600A or DC6150) sent with envelope AND return postage to Nottingham (addresses below). 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