UKTeX Digest Friday, 14 Feb 1992 Volume 92 : Issue 06 ``The UKTeX Digest is brought to you as a free, unfunded and voluntary service of the UK TeX Users Group and the UK TeX Archive.'' Today's Topics: {Q&A}: TFM files Training materials for LaTeX The Local Guide ... RE: The Local Guide ... Re: floatfig.sty, anyone? Lecture on Typography Matching left/right pages METAFONT mode_def for HP LaserJet III Si? {Announcements}: CROPMARK TeX macro available TEXTURES_FIGS on FILESERV Future Developments of TeX OzTeX V1.4 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, 07 Feb 92 15:16:16 +0000 From: P.Abbott@uk.ac.aston Subject: TFM files I have been using OzTeX V1.3 since it was first issued with postcript fonts. The TFM's were obtained from the Archive. I have recently experimented with TeXtures to display eps files (the pict resource). I have discovered that the output from the two packages is different. I suspect that the tfm information used by Textures is not the same as the tfm's I have (TImes Roman and Baskerville). I find this disturbing since there should, in my opinion, be only one TFM for any font. It also makes it more difficult to exchange DVI files. How do I find out which is the correct tfm or am I forced to choose one. If so I presume I need to make a pl file for importing into TeXtures since I do not know how to export from TeXtures. Does anyone have pltoTFM for Mac and the know how to create pl from TeXtures if I want to choose that route? Peter Tel 44 (0)21 359 5492 direct FAX 44 (0)21 359 6158 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 07 Feb 92 16:15:52 +0000 From: D.Eckersley@uk.ac.salford.sysc Subject: Training materials for LaTeX Does anyone out there have, or know of the existence of, introductory training materials for LaTeX? I'm thinking of something which gives the initial push which a new user might need, taking her to a point where she was able to produce a basic document. After this point, many users would feel it worth while to experiment, or use one of the fuller documents already around. Something to be used in a supervised `hands on' session would be ideal, though I'd be glad to hear about anything. Dave Eckersley ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 10 Feb 92 14:30:17 +0700 From: Allan Reese Subject: The Local Guide ... Some time ago I suggested it would be useful to have a collection of "Local Guides ..." since Knuth and Lamport both insist that such things exist but don't say who should write them ... or how that person starts. I'm willing to donate the Hull L.G. to start the ball rolling, not because I think it's at all definitive but in the hope of getting feedback to improve it, and especially to encourage others to donate their L.G.s for me to plagiarize. It's even possible that the collective wisdom of the Archive could produce a Guide to writing L.G.s (even a suggested List of Contents would be a start). Maybe some kind person could even write a short Implementor's Guide. (My guide follows as a separate message, hopefully not to be broadcast in the week's news.) {awaited, for installation in the archive --Ed.} ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 10 Feb 92 14:42:24 +0000 From: Brian {Hamilton Kelly} Subject: RE: The Local Guide ... In a message to UKTeX of Mon, 10 Feb 92 14:30:17 WET, ^^^ Not really, surely? Allan Reese wrote: > Some time ago I suggested it would be useful to have a collection > of "Local Guides ..." since Knuth and Lamport both insist that > such things exist but don't say who should write them ... or how > that person starts. I'm willing to donate the Hull L.G. to start > the ball rolling, not because I think it's at all definitive but > in the hope of getting feedback to improve it, and especially to > encourage others to donate their L.G.s for me to plagiarize. What an excellent suggestion! Although I don't recall that you'd previously made it. I could put the RMCS local guides up into the archive, but suspect that they're all dependent upon the local style file and local shield font, neither of which I want to export! But I have five guides altogether, either written from scratch, or adapting others' guides to local environment: Guide to Typesetting Guide to TeX and LaTeX Guide to DVItoVDU Guide to DVItoLN03 Guide to use of Language-sensitive Editor with LaTeX and BibTeX > (My guide follows as a separate message, hopefully not to be broadcast > in the week's news.) The best way to handle this is to transfer the guide's source to user CONTRIBUTIONS (null password) and then announce its arrival by sending a message to Archive-Contributions@uk.ac.TeX --- one (or more :-) of the archivists will then move the file to some appropriate place, if they approve 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, 10 Feb 92 16:19:47 +0100 From: Schoepf%de.zib-berlin.sc@uk.ac.nsfnet-relay Subject: Re: floatfig.sty, anyone? Adrian F Clark wrote: I remember that, at the TUG conference at Cork, someone presented a paper on a LaTeX style file which made it possible to create "side figures", having the text flow around the edges of them in much the same way as one might do with a DTP package. I believe the style file was called (a little misleadingly) `floatfig.sty'. I now find myself in the position of wanting to achieve precisely this effect. I found the paper in the appropriate volume of TUGboat and sent a message off to the Heidelberg server, but alas the file seems to be missing. Does anyone have a copy of this style file, or perhaps point me to someone who has? All files at Heidelberg are packed and encoded. You have to order FLOATFIG UUEZOO Alternatively you can order soft/tex/latex-style-supported/floatfig/example.comment soft/tex/latex-style-supported/floatfig/example.lis soft/tex/latex-style-supported/floatfig/example.tex soft/tex/latex-style-supported/floatfig/floatfig.sty soft/tex/latex-style-supported/floatfig/floatfig.tex from mail-server@rusinfo.rus.uni-stuttgart.de Rainer Sch"opf ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 11 Feb 92 10:35:07 +0000 From: David Shepherd Subject: Lecture on Typography noticed a poster advertising a lecture organised by Bristol City Museum on typography and especially modern typographical developments. The title is "Is it all as bad as it looks?" (or something like that). Stupidly i forgot to note the details but as far as i recall its on Wednesday Feb 19 in one of the university lecture theatres ... i'm sure the museum will be able to give the exact details to anyone interested. - -------------------------------------------------------------------------- david shepherd: des@inmos.co.uk or des@inmos.com tel: 0454-616616 x 625 inmos ltd, 1000 aztec west, almondsbury, bristol, bs12 4sq "five, four, three, two, one, thunderbirds are go !" ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 12 Feb 92 08:33:13 +0100 From: lmdmhi%se.ericsson.ludvig@uk.ac.nsfnet-relay Subject: Matching left/right pages The Danish Classical Association is planning a source collection on ancient slavery, written in LaTeX. It will be bi-lingual: Latin and/or Greek text (Silvio Levy's fonts are used for the Greek) on the left pages, a Danish translation on the right pages. An introduction before the sources/translations and a commentary after them (in Danish) will use both left and right pages. Now, the question is: Is there a macro(package) available that can manage the Latin/Greek text and the Danish translation, so that the text on the left pages correspond with the translation of the same passages on the right pages? Any help and/or comments will be welcome! For The Danish Classical Association: Morten Hindsholm ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 14 Feb 92 15:48:44 +0000 From: David Osborne Subject: METAFONT mode_def for HP LaserJet III Si? Can anyone supply a METAFONT mode_def for our new HP LJ III Si printer, or alternatively say what its print engine is? The documentation is silent on this matter, but we think it might be a Canon engine. My CM fonts built for a LaserWriter II (Canon-CX) look acceptable, but some of the bowls in cmr10/cmr12 letters are rather thin and spidery. - --Dave David Osborne, Cripps Computing Centre, University of Nottingham ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 06 Feb 92 10:14:51 -0600 From: George D. Greenwade"George D. Greenwade" Subject: CROPMARK TeX macro available Peter Ungar kindly passed along to me a TeX macro for producing cropmarks in a document (cropmark.tex). Cropmarks are markings on pages intended to be phototypeset. They mark the corners of the intended book page. Interestingly, while we've had a LaTeX style file for this for some time, I haven't seen a TeX macro for this (and I've had four requests/inquiries over the past week from users about if one of these existed for TeX -- good timing, Peter!). To retrieve the file via e-mail, include the command: SENDME STY.CROPMARK_TEX in the body of a mail message to FILESERV@SHSU.BITNET (FILESERV@SHSU.edu). If you want the LaTeX variant of this, use: SENDME STY.CROPMARK For ftp users, these files are in the [.STY] directory on Niord.SHSU.edu (192.92.115.8). Regards (and thanks again, Peter!), George %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% George D. Greenwade, Ph.D. Bitnet: BED_GDG@SHSU Department of Economics and Business Analysis THEnet: SHSU::BED_GDG College of Business Administration Voice: (409) 294-1266 P. O. Box 2118 FAX: (409) 294-3612 Sam Houston State University Internet: bed_gdg@SHSU.edu Huntsville, TX 77341 bed_gdg%SHSU.decnet@relay.the.net %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 06 Feb 92 15:24:07 -0600 From: George D. Greenwade"George D. Greenwade" Subject: TEXTURES_FIGS on FILESERV Peter Galko has been patiently working with me on this for far too long. Attached is FILESERV's description file for his TEXTURES_FIGS package. The package also includes a version of the macro file EPSF.TEX written originally by Tom Rokicki to include EPSF Graphics in TeX output utilizing the DVIPS utility. This version is modified to work on the Macintosh with TeXtures rather than dvips. It is intended to allow direct usage of files written for dvips to be TeX'ed and printed using TeXtures. For ftp retrieval, the macros are in [.TEXTURES_FIGS] on Niord.SHSU.edu (192.92.115.8) as FIGURE.MACROS - --George =========================================================================== TEXTURES_FIGS ------------- The TEXTURES_FIGS package includes Peter Galko's figure macros for TeXtures. It is distributed in six parts to accommodate size-sensitive mailers. The five files, TEXTURES_FIGS.MACROS_%OF5, should be concatenated upon receipt and unBinHex'ed. The files represents a collection of macros which make it easy to place a graphic drawn using virtually any Macintosh graphic application and stored in a standard form in a TeXtures document. The macros can deal with graphics stored in the 'pictures part' of a TeXtures document, or as an external PICT file, or as an EPSF file. The graphic will be imported into the document and centred on the page according to dimensions given for the drawing, or in the case of an EPSF document, according to the drawing size specified in the EPSF document itself if you so desire. The drawings may be scaled by a fixed scale factor you may specify, be scaled to provide a given height or width as you choose, or may be nonuniformly scaled in width or height (this latter effect will not manifest itself in the preview, but rather will only appear in printing the result on a PostScript printer). An outline box surrounding the graphic can be automatically generated if so desired, as can a caption for the figure utilizing a standard format for captions. In addition to simply incorporating a document as a complete graphic in a TeXtures document, the macros provide an easy way to overlay text on a figure so that consistent precisely positioned labelling of a figure can be easily achieved. The macros simply required that the distance from the lower left hand corner of the bounding box of the figure (or any reference point relative to the corner) to a reference point for the text to be added be given, and it be indicated how the text is to be positioned relative to the specified reference point. The text can be horizontally centred, left justified or right justified relative to the reference point, and vertically positioned so that the baseline of the text is at the reference point, or the 'text axis' or math axis is at the reference point, or the top, middle, or bottom of the box which the text comprises is at the reference point. The text may also be rotated about the reference point (although this effect will not appear in the screen preview). Scaling and stretching effects do not modify the text being overlayed other than to move the position of the reference point on the printed page. Although the macros are written for TeXtures specifically, they should be readily ported to almost any system that prints on a PostScript printer. You may retrieve the entire package of 6 files by including the command: SENDME TEXTURES_FIGS in the body of a mail message to FILESERV@SHSU.BITNET (FILESERV@SHSU.edu). A complete distribution of this version of TEXTURES_FIGS requires all 6 files in this package, so this command is suggested. If, for some reason, you should only need one of these files, say TEXTURES_FIGS.INFO, use the command: SENDME TEXTURES_FIGS.INFO in the body of your mail message to FILESERV. Files in this package: (1 Block = 512 bytes) File Blocks - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- TEXTURES_FIGS.INFO 5 TEXTURES_FIGS.MACROS_1OF5 80 TEXTURES_FIGS.MACROS_2OF5 80 TEXTURES_FIGS.MACROS_3OF5 80 TEXTURES_FIGS.MACROS_4OF5 80 TEXTURES_FIGS.MACROS_5OF5 13 Approximate total blocks in full TEXTURES_FIGS package = 338 ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 10 Feb 92 17:26:19 +0700 From: Joachim Lammarsch Subject: Future Developments of TeX Future developments of TeX At every TeX meeting since 1989 I keep hearing questions about the future development of TeX. At Texas A&M Frank Mittelbach presented a paper about "The Future of TeX". Further papers have been following, the discussion never stopped. `Future of TeX' was the standard BoF session at the last meetings. To bring a new development of TeX on the way, DANTE e.V. decided to set up a working group. It's not intended as an internal affair of DANTE e.V., but as a cooperation of all those who are interested in such a project. Every one is invited to contribute ideas and demands and to work in this direction. It is planned, but not fixed, to have three stages: 1. stage: What should be changed? 2. stage: How can this be realised? 3. stage: Realisation. The time and place to start will be the meeting of DANTE e.V. in Hamburg at the end of March. It is planned to form there a working group which directs further stages. I think that a further development of TeX is very important, because other products for typesetting become better and better, and it is necessary to take care that TeX or its successor stays what it has been during the last years --- the very best one. Kind regards Joachim Lammarsch (President DANTE e.V.) ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 12 Feb 92 16:46:05 +0000 From: P.Abbott@uk.ac.aston Subject: OzTeX V1.4 OzTeX V1.4 is available and needs 6 (800k) formatted disks. It will be in the archive shortly. Here are details of the changes Peter ===== Changes to OzTeX 1.3 ==================== All changes are listed here, roughly in order of decreasing importance. TeX has been updated from version 3.0 to 3.14. Plain.tex in the TeX-inputs folder has been updated to the "official" 3.0 version and used to build a new Plain.fmt in the TeX-formats folder. When TeX is waiting for terminal input you can now drag/resize/scroll/zoom the OzTeX window or switch to another application. The mouse cursor no longer disappears, instead it changes from a watch to the standard arrow. The recommended amount of memory required to run OzTeX is now 870K. \special support has been extended to allow the printing and previewing of included EPSF/PICT/PNTG files. You can now use \special{epsf: filename} to include an EPSF file (encapsulated PostScript), \special{pict: filename} to include a PICT file (eg. MacDraw output), \special{pntg: filename} to include a PNTG file (eg. MacPaint output). The old syntax of \special{filename [optional PS code]} is still supported in case you want to include a file of raw PostScript. The new \special commands allow you to preview graphics in your DVI file and should become the preferred way of including Mac-generated pictures in OzTeX. Keywords and file names are case-insensitive; "=" can be used instead of ":" to terminate the keyword, and spaces before the file name are ignored. For example, \special{EPSF=FOO} is the same as \special{epsf: foo}. The new \special commands also allow optional "keyword=value" pairs after the file name. (The keyword can also be terminated by ":" or a space.) Here are the currently supported keywords: - scale=n scales a picture by a factor n (n must be > 0.0 and <= 100.0). - hscale=n sets the horizontal scale factor (and alters the aspect ratio). - vscale=n sets the vertical scale factor (and alters the aspect ratio). - width=bp sets the horizontal scale to get a picture at the desired width (bp is a number > 0.0 and <= 7200.0 in bp units, where 72bp = 1in). If no previous height keyword has been used then the vertical scale is set to the new horizontal scale to preserve the aspect ratio. - height=bp sets the vertical scale to get a picture at the desired height. If no previous width keyword has been used then the horizontal scale is set to the new vertical scale to preserve the aspect ratio. If a particular keyword is used more than once in a single \special command then the last value is used. An illegal keyword or value will produce a warning message when previewing but cause the entire \special to be ignored when printing. (The moral is: preview before you print.) See the new OzTeX User Guide for a full discussion of \special commands. Also, nasty.tex in the TeX-docs folder has been updated to test the inclusion of various graphic files; see page 3 in particular. The "Page Info" item shows \special commands in a slightly different format and if a bitmap exists for a PICT/PNTG/EPSF \special then its width and height are displayed (using the current units). This information can be used to accurately position the corresponding \special in a later TeX run. Changing the DVI magnification in a print/view dialog will change the size of \special graphics accordingly (except for raw PostScript files that use operators like "initgraphics"). Larry Siebenmann's BoxedEPSF.* files have been added to the TeX-inputs folder. BoxedEPSF.tex is a macro package that allows automatic positioning and scaling of EPSF files; see BoxedEPSF.doc. The "Include Laser Prep" option has been removed from the print dialog. The two corresponding parameters in configuration files are now ignored (reserved for future use). All LaserPrep*.ps files have been deleted from the PS-files folder. People with documents that rely on the inclusion of such files can still print them: 1. Create a new version of DVItoPS.ps and append an appropriate LaserPrep file. 2. Create a new config file that refers to this modified prolog file. 3. Switch to the new config file before printing your document. OzTeX's printing code knows about System 7. You no longer need to keep a duplicate copy of the LaserWriter driver in the System folder (OzTeX will look for it in the Extensions folder). Printing a file from another disk also works properly. The horizontal and vertical offset parameters in a configuration file are now handled a bit differently to avoid a couple of problems. The parameters get passed to the DVItoPS.ps prolog file and are used to adjust the location of the TeX origin for both portrait AND landscape printing (previously you had to use different offsets to correct landscape output). The new scheme also avoids spurious page-off-paper errors if relatively large offsets have to be used to get printed output in the correct position. The "Send to file" button in the print dialog now brings up the standard file dialog so you can save PostScript code in a file somewhere other than the current folder (on a floppy for instance). Characters from a PostScript font are lowered by 1 pixel when printing to make sure their baselines match the baselines of characters from a bitmap font. (The change was made to the definition of S in DVItoPS.ps.) Fixed a bug in the print and view dialogs that resulted in the landscape option check box not necessarily agreeing with the actual paper dimensions. Default buttons in various dialog buttons now remain outlined (they used to disappear after returning from a screen saver). More than one page per line is displayed in the OzTeX window when printing a DVI file. There is no longer a Restart button in the fatal error dialog box. This option seemed pointless since virtually all fatal errors require quitting OzTeX to fix the problem. The Transfer item has been removed from the File menu (most people should now be using MultiFinder or System 7). "US Letter", "TRIP test" and "My Printer" have been added to the Configs folder (and to the list of config files in the Default config file). If the empty string ("") appeared in a config file's config/format/help list then the the corresponding menu item would show as NUL. Now you'll see a disabled separating line (see the new Config menu). The way dimensions are displayed has been changed: in/cm/pc dimensions are still shown to an accuracy of 1 decimal place, but all the rest (mm,pt,bp,px) are rounded up to the nearest integer. Maximum value of print/view resolution parameter is now 3000 (was 5000). Added gentle.tex to the TeX-Docs folder. This is the source file for "A Gentle Introduction to TeX" by Michael Doob. Newcomers to TeX might find this book a useful companion to "The TeXbook". Source code is no longer distributed with OzTeX 1.4, nor is the OzTeX System Guide. If you want this stuff then send $40 to Andrew Trevorrow Research School of Earth Sciences Australian National University GPO BOX 4, Canberra 2601, Australia and enclose a 1.4Mb diskette (or two 800K diskettes) with a self-addressed, padded envelope. If you do want to modify OzTeX's source code then please note that I've switched to the Metrowerks Modula-2 compiler for MPW. This compiler (which I can recommend) is available from: Metrowerks, Inc. The Trimex Building, Route 11 Mooers, NY 12958, USA phone: (514) 458-2018 email: modula2@mips1.uqam.ca Tel 44 (0)21 359 5492 direct FAX 44 (0)21 359 6158 ------------------------------ UK TeX ARCHIVE at ASTON UNIVERSITY >>> UK.AC.TEX <<< *** Interactive and file transfer access *** Host: uk.ac.tex or tex.ac.uk, Username: public, Password: public JANET DTE 000020120091, Internet IP 134.151.40.18 *** Mail server *** Send mail to TeXserver@uk.ac.tex (JANET) or TeXserver@tex.ac.uk (rest of the world) with message body containing the word HELP \section FILES OF INTEREST [tex-archive]00readme.txt [tex-archive]00directory.list [tex-archive]00directory.size [tex-archive]00directory_dates.list [tex-archive]00last30days.files \section DIGESTS This year's UKTeX back issues are stored in the archive in directory [tex-archive.digests.uktex.92] This year's TeXhax back issues are stored in the archive in directory [tex-archive.digests.texhax.92] Latest TeXhax: V92 #01 TeXMaG back issues are stored in the archive in directory [tex-archive.digests.tex-mag] Latest TeXMaG: V5N3 \section MEDIA DISTRIBUTIONS \subsection Washington Unix TeX distribution tape Latest copy of May/June 1991 contains: TeX 3.14, LaTeX 2.09, Metafont 2.7, 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 0.5" tape sent with return labels AND return postage to Aston OR One Quarter-Inch Cartridge, QIC-120 or QIC-150 format (DC600A or DC6150) sent with envelope AND stamps for return postage to Nottingham (addresses below). \subsection VMS tapes VMS backup of the archive requires two 2400ft tapes at 6250bpi. 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Peter Abbott Information Systems, Aston University, Aston Triangle, Birmingham B4 7ET David Osborne Cripps Computing Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK (for Quarter-inch cartridges ONLY -- include stamps for return postage) \section UK TeX USERS GROUP For details, contact: Geeti Granger, Text Processing Dept, John Wiley & Sons, Baffins Lane, Chichester, W Sussex PO19 1UD (tel: 0243 770329) or David Penfold, Edgerton Publishing Services, 30 Edgerton Road, Edgerton, Huddersfield HD3 3AD (tel: 0484 519462) \bye End of UKTeX Digest [Volume 92 Issue 6] ***************************************