miktex-users Mailing List for MiKTeX (Page 631)
MiKTeX source code moved to GitHub
Brought to you by:
csc
You can subscribe to this list here.
2002 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
(123) |
Sep
(228) |
Oct
(340) |
Nov
(203) |
Dec
(195) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 |
Jan
(318) |
Feb
(253) |
Mar
(185) |
Apr
(239) |
May
(156) |
Jun
(202) |
Jul
(153) |
Aug
(110) |
Sep
(179) |
Oct
(122) |
Nov
(211) |
Dec
(147) |
2004 |
Jan
(163) |
Feb
(116) |
Mar
(130) |
Apr
(164) |
May
(132) |
Jun
(150) |
Jul
(118) |
Aug
(188) |
Sep
(149) |
Oct
(135) |
Nov
(100) |
Dec
(140) |
2005 |
Jan
(105) |
Feb
(136) |
Mar
(68) |
Apr
(89) |
May
(118) |
Jun
(89) |
Jul
(112) |
Aug
(160) |
Sep
(109) |
Oct
(136) |
Nov
(114) |
Dec
(68) |
2006 |
Jan
(117) |
Feb
(79) |
Mar
(79) |
Apr
(88) |
May
(116) |
Jun
(147) |
Jul
(73) |
Aug
(239) |
Sep
(152) |
Oct
(207) |
Nov
(88) |
Dec
(104) |
2007 |
Jan
(131) |
Feb
(72) |
Mar
(148) |
Apr
(177) |
May
(187) |
Jun
(139) |
Jul
(113) |
Aug
(115) |
Sep
(154) |
Oct
(126) |
Nov
(133) |
Dec
(103) |
2008 |
Jan
(175) |
Feb
(124) |
Mar
(104) |
Apr
(128) |
May
(99) |
Jun
(149) |
Jul
(100) |
Aug
(59) |
Sep
(46) |
Oct
(120) |
Nov
(56) |
Dec
(36) |
2009 |
Jan
(57) |
Feb
(51) |
Mar
(64) |
Apr
(54) |
May
(28) |
Jun
(26) |
Jul
(63) |
Aug
(75) |
Sep
(159) |
Oct
(95) |
Nov
(64) |
Dec
(97) |
2010 |
Jan
(116) |
Feb
(50) |
Mar
(91) |
Apr
(134) |
May
(134) |
Jun
(94) |
Jul
(54) |
Aug
(52) |
Sep
(75) |
Oct
(147) |
Nov
(99) |
Dec
(148) |
2011 |
Jan
(87) |
Feb
(70) |
Mar
(87) |
Apr
(66) |
May
(89) |
Jun
(125) |
Jul
(145) |
Aug
(43) |
Sep
(42) |
Oct
(19) |
Nov
(22) |
Dec
(21) |
2012 |
Jan
(16) |
Feb
(25) |
Mar
(21) |
Apr
(20) |
May
(33) |
Jun
(20) |
Jul
(16) |
Aug
(36) |
Sep
(48) |
Oct
(19) |
Nov
(34) |
Dec
(22) |
2013 |
Jan
(53) |
Feb
(64) |
Mar
(37) |
Apr
(45) |
May
(26) |
Jun
(53) |
Jul
(72) |
Aug
(22) |
Sep
(45) |
Oct
(71) |
Nov
(48) |
Dec
(12) |
2014 |
Jan
(22) |
Feb
(48) |
Mar
(31) |
Apr
(28) |
May
(52) |
Jun
(56) |
Jul
(45) |
Aug
(17) |
Sep
(12) |
Oct
(40) |
Nov
(19) |
Dec
(43) |
2015 |
Jan
(10) |
Feb
(16) |
Mar
(25) |
Apr
(60) |
May
(59) |
Jun
(86) |
Jul
(24) |
Aug
(35) |
Sep
(35) |
Oct
(40) |
Nov
(18) |
Dec
(69) |
2016 |
Jan
(49) |
Feb
(15) |
Mar
(35) |
Apr
(57) |
May
(74) |
Jun
(20) |
Jul
(30) |
Aug
(9) |
Sep
(60) |
Oct
(22) |
Nov
(66) |
Dec
(58) |
2017 |
Jan
(70) |
Feb
(37) |
Mar
(26) |
Apr
(21) |
May
(13) |
Jun
(14) |
Jul
(24) |
Aug
(11) |
Sep
(5) |
Oct
(10) |
Nov
(23) |
Dec
(7) |
2018 |
Jan
(19) |
Feb
(8) |
Mar
(10) |
Apr
(9) |
May
(5) |
Jun
(5) |
Jul
(2) |
Aug
(2) |
Sep
|
Oct
(4) |
Nov
|
Dec
(2) |
2019 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
|
Mar
(1) |
Apr
(3) |
May
(1) |
Jun
(2) |
Jul
(3) |
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
(2) |
Nov
(6) |
Dec
(3) |
2020 |
Jan
(5) |
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
(3) |
May
(1) |
Jun
(4) |
Jul
(1) |
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
(5) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
2021 |
Jan
(2) |
Feb
(3) |
Mar
(5) |
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
(2) |
Jul
|
Aug
(2) |
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2022 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
(3) |
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
(3) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
2023 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
(1) |
Apr
(3) |
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
(6) |
Dec
|
2024 |
Jan
(3) |
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
From: xu m. L. <xum...@ya...> - 2002-09-24 14:10:15
|
Hi, I have some problem to display the page number for abstract in table of content. I input the abstract before table of content but the page number of the abstract is always the same as the page number of the first page of the table of content. The command I use is as following: \begin{abstract}\end{abstract] \addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{abstract} \addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{Contents} \tableofcontents \newpage how can I control the page number of the abstract in the table of content. Thanks Marc. --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo! |
From: xu m. L. <xum...@ya...> - 2002-09-24 14:09:28
|
Dear all I am a new user to latex. I want to change page layout from portrait to landscape so that I can fit a big matrix in one page. Can anyone tell me how to do that? Thanks Marc. --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo! |
From: Walter S. <Sc...@bi...> - 2002-09-24 13:42:09
|
Hi, I am a new Miktex-user. We have installed it under WinEdt (Windows 2000) on our fileserver. Everything is fine, however, compilation is very slow: Latex collects, for every run, all the packages quoted in the preamble . This is time- consuming, as all the package-information has to be sent again and again via LAN. In the system I used previously,EMTEX under Windows, one could store the configuration on the local disc, which resulted in enhanced efficiency. Ist there such a possibility under Miktex/WinEdt? Thanks Walter |
From: SkyBlueSeeker <sky...@su...> - 2002-09-24 13:25:16
|
Thank you very much, Charley! I appreciate your explanation! Now I can start some researches about fonts installation. I have another question: is It possible to use pfb font files from Acroba= t Reader (and/or GhostScript) into LaTeX environment? SkyBlueSeeker. ************************************ -----Messaggio Originale----- Da: "Charley Hamilton" <cha...@uc...> A: <mik...@li...> Data invio: marted=EC 24 settembre 2002 0.34 Oggetto: Re: [MiKTeX] Lucida Postscript fonts don't appear in dvi file > > SkyBlueSeeker wrote: > > > > Hi Martin, > > excuse me for stupid reply. > > I can't understand the LaTeX loading font system. > > Could you tell me something about it, please? > > In particular: afm & pbf files... Why do I have to buy any fonts? > > I'd like a short explanation only. > > It's very difficult understand this argument... > > > > Bye & Thanks. > > SkyBlueSeeker. > > Not sure what's unclear about Martin's response. > > (La)tex handles fonts as follows: > > - Glyphs take up space on the page, therefore something > must tell TeX howe much and what shape space that is. > These are the tfm (TeX Font Metric) files. This and > the bitmap TeX font (typically a .pk file) are all you > need to write/read a dvi file. Well, more or less. > > - pk files are the bitmapped glyphs, and are typically > only poorly scalable. These glyphs are typically provided > by their owner/developer, and only limited sets are > available for no cost. > > - afm (Adobe Font Metric) files are the equivalent > to the tfm files, but are used only for postscript > fonts. For (La)TeX-only (.pk) fonts, see the previous > explanation. Postscript fonts are good for > producing ps and pdf format documents, typically for > viewing/printing on systems other than the original > generating system. That way, the reader need not have > (La)TeX installed to read a document. > > - pfa and pfb files are the actual font glyphs > themselves described mathematically to make them > ~fully scalable. These are typically copyrighted > and must be purchased from the developer. > Postscript versions of the standard (La)TeX fonts > (CM) have been developed and are available freely with > most if not all TeX distributions. > > It behooves software developers to make it easy for people > who own/want to own such fonts to use them by providing > afm [and tfm (TeX font metric) for TeX and friends] files > so that the user can easily employ the fonts. However, the > fonts aren't included with miktex (nor probably with most > other software packages, either). This is why you find a > lucida package (or whatever it's called) which tells (La)TeX > to use the tfm files for lucida bright when laying out the > page. However, the glyphs themselves are copyrighted and > can only be obtained from tthe copyright holder. > > That's (La)TeX fonts in a nutshell. There's a lot more to it > than I included. Read the many past discussions on comp.text.tex > (La)TeX newsgroup and review the FAQs at www.tug.org. > > Charley > > -- > Charles Hamilton, PhD EIT Faculty Fellow > Department of Civil and Phone: 949.824.3752 > Environmental Engineering FAX: 949.824.2117 > University of California, Irvine Email: cha...@uc... > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek > Welcome to geek heaven. > http://thinkgeek.com/sf > _______________________________________________ > MiKTeX-Users mailing list > MiK...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Dimitri P. <dim...@gm...> - 2002-09-24 10:50:56
|
Thanks! On Tue, 24 Sep 2002 00:15:04 +0300, you wrote: >CTAN knows several programmes for that. I am using package >eurosym whicvh is perfect for my purposes. > >Olli J. Marttila > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Dimitri Pissarenko" <dim...@gm...> >To: <mik...@li...> >Sent: Monday, September 23, 2002 11:24 PM >Subject: [MiKTeX] Euro-Sign in LaTeX > > >Hello! > >I would like to know how I can use the Euro (?) sign in my >LaTeX >documents. > >Thanks > >Dimitri Pissarenko > > >------------------------------------------------------- >This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek >Welcome to geek heaven. >http://thinkgeek.com/sf >_______________________________________________ >MiKTeX-Users mailing list >MiK...@li... >https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users > > > > >------------------------------------------------------- >This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek >Welcome to geek heaven. >http://thinkgeek.com/sf >_______________________________________________ >MiKTeX-Users mailing list >MiK...@li... >https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Pattareeya O. <fo...@ya...> - 2002-09-24 06:51:45
|
Hello, I would like to know if there is anyway to put table next to figure on the same page. I want both of them to stick together all the time. Thank you. __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? New DSL Internet Access from SBC & Yahoo! http://sbc.yahoo.com |
From: Matthias S. <mat...@ep...> - 2002-09-24 00:27:03
|
Hello, > Does anyone know how I can reference to a web site using BibTeX? > > What I have are some photos, which I'd like to reference to a web page > (URL). But I don't think @BOOK or @ARTICLE will do the trick. e.g. you might use @MISC{Mathworks, title = {{\em Homepage of} The {MathWorks}}, note = {visited: 14.\,7.\,2002}, howpublished = {\url{http://www.mathworks.com}}, key = {Mathworks} } note that \url needs url.sty or hyperref.sty, but this command can also be omitted. the key field is required for sorting reasons. Matthias -- Matthias Schwaiger <mat...@ep...> PGP Fingerprint: 9B20 13FA D433 6806 BC41 ABF6 62D1 8E90 DE6B 7DB6 <http://www.matzix.de/pgp.html> |
From: Charley H. <cha...@uc...> - 2002-09-23 22:36:01
|
> SkyBlueSeeker wrote: > > Hi Martin, > excuse me for stupid reply. > I can't understand the LaTeX loading font system. > Could you tell me something about it, please? > In particular: afm & pbf files... Why do I have to buy any fonts? > I'd like a short explanation only. > It's very difficult understand this argument... > > Bye & Thanks. > SkyBlueSeeker. Not sure what's unclear about Martin's response. (La)tex handles fonts as follows: - Glyphs take up space on the page, therefore something must tell TeX howe much and what shape space that is. These are the tfm (TeX Font Metric) files. This and the bitmap TeX font (typically a .pk file) are all you need to write/read a dvi file. Well, more or less. - pk files are the bitmapped glyphs, and are typically only poorly scalable. These glyphs are typically provided by their owner/developer, and only limited sets are available for no cost. - afm (Adobe Font Metric) files are the equivalent to the tfm files, but are used only for postscript fonts. For (La)TeX-only (.pk) fonts, see the previous explanation. Postscript fonts are good for producing ps and pdf format documents, typically for viewing/printing on systems other than the original generating system. That way, the reader need not have (La)TeX installed to read a document. - pfa and pfb files are the actual font glyphs themselves described mathematically to make them ~fully scalable. These are typically copyrighted and must be purchased from the developer. Postscript versions of the standard (La)TeX fonts (CM) have been developed and are available freely with most if not all TeX distributions. It behooves software developers to make it easy for people who own/want to own such fonts to use them by providing afm [and tfm (TeX font metric) for TeX and friends] files so that the user can easily employ the fonts. However, the fonts aren't included with miktex (nor probably with most other software packages, either). This is why you find a lucida package (or whatever it's called) which tells (La)TeX to use the tfm files for lucida bright when laying out the page. However, the glyphs themselves are copyrighted and can only be obtained from tthe copyright holder. That's (La)TeX fonts in a nutshell. There's a lot more to it than I included. Read the many past discussions on comp.text.tex (La)TeX newsgroup and review the FAQs at www.tug.org. Charley -- Charles Hamilton, PhD EIT Faculty Fellow Department of Civil and Phone: 949.824.3752 Environmental Engineering FAX: 949.824.2117 University of California, Irvine Email: cha...@uc... |
From: SkyBlueSeeker <sky...@su...> - 2002-09-23 21:59:54
|
Hi Martin, excuse me for stupid reply. I can't understand the LaTeX loading font system. Could you tell me something about it, please? In particular: afm & pbf files... Why do I have to buy any fonts? I'd like a short explanation only. It's very difficult understand this argument... Bye & Thanks. SkyBlueSeeker. ************************************ -----Messaggio Originale----- Da: "Martin Schroeder" <ma...@on...> A: <mik...@li...> Data invio: luned=EC 23 settembre 2002 21.23 Oggetto: Re: [MiKTeX] Lucida Postscript fonts don't appear in dvi file > On 2002-09-23 17:44:44 +0200, SkyBlueSeeker wrote: > > >Because you have to buy them. > > > > Are you really sure? > > Yes. BTDT. > > Now go get a name and learn to quote. > > Best regards > Martin > -- > http://www.tm.oneiros.de > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek > Welcome to geek heaven. > http://thinkgeek.com/sf > _______________________________________________ > MiKTeX-Users mailing list > MiK...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Mullen, J. P. (Contractor) <mul...@tr...> - 2002-09-23 21:57:58
|
Hi, More information about using the Greek language is in the file \texmf\doc\generic\Babel\user.dvi, starting on page 17. John Mullen -----Original Message----- From: Mullen, John P. (Contractor) [mailto:mul...@tr...] Sent: Monday, September 23, 2002 3:44 PM To: mik...@li... Subject: RE: [MiKTeX] RE: (no subject) Hi Thodoros, If your intent is to use Greek letters in math, the $\alpha$ method is probably the best. However, if your intent is to write a document in the Greek language, that is something else. This seems to work: --------------------- \documentclass[letterpaper]{article} \usepackage[ansinew]{inputenc} \usepackage[greek]{babel} \begin{document} abcdefg hijklmnop qrstuvwxyz ABCDEFG HIJKLMNOP QRSTUVWXYZ \end{document} -------------------------- I have the full MiKTeX implementation. This may not work without installing additional packages if you used one of the smaller options. Then again, it might. John Mullen -----Original Message----- From: Thodoros Papatheodorou [mailto:pa...@ma...] Sent: Monday, September 23, 2002 3:16 PM To: mik...@li... Subject: [MiKTeX] RE: (no subject) Hi John, Thanks for the interest. The problem that DVI viewer doesn't show greek letters correctly (shows diffrerent greek letters) happens when I type in the .tex file the actual symbols of Windows screen font. I tried a .tex file with $\alpha, \beta$ in a line and DVI viewer showed the greek letters correctly. I tried a solution that was proposed in some info pages, i.e. I put at the beginning of the .tex file the line %& -translate-file=win2tex.tcx where win2tex.tcx was a file prepared by me with the mappings of Windows' character codes to TeX's character codes. It worked correctly for the first few letters when I was testing it, but then it crashed because it was affecting TeX (TeX showed a message that it was unable to find a file - the name of the file had a greek letter because of my mappings). A possible reason for TeX's crashing is that TeX used the command \inputenc somewhere which doesn't work together with a .tcx file, according to the same info pages. ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ MiKTeX-Users mailing list MiK...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ MiKTeX-Users mailing list MiK...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Mullen, J. P. (Contractor) <mul...@tr...> - 2002-09-23 21:44:02
|
Hi Thodoros, If your intent is to use Greek letters in math, the $\alpha$ method is probably the best. However, if your intent is to write a document in the Greek language, that is something else. This seems to work: --------------------- \documentclass[letterpaper]{article} \usepackage[ansinew]{inputenc} \usepackage[greek]{babel} \begin{document} abcdefg hijklmnop qrstuvwxyz ABCDEFG HIJKLMNOP QRSTUVWXYZ \end{document} -------------------------- I have the full MiKTeX implementation. This may not work without installing additional packages if you used one of the smaller options. Then again, it might. John Mullen -----Original Message----- From: Thodoros Papatheodorou [mailto:pa...@ma...] Sent: Monday, September 23, 2002 3:16 PM To: mik...@li... Subject: [MiKTeX] RE: (no subject) Hi John, Thanks for the interest. The problem that DVI viewer doesn't show greek letters correctly (shows diffrerent greek letters) happens when I type in the .tex file the actual symbols of Windows screen font. I tried a .tex file with $\alpha, \beta$ in a line and DVI viewer showed the greek letters correctly. I tried a solution that was proposed in some info pages, i.e. I put at the beginning of the .tex file the line %& -translate-file=win2tex.tcx where win2tex.tcx was a file prepared by me with the mappings of Windows' character codes to TeX's character codes. It worked correctly for the first few letters when I was testing it, but then it crashed because it was affecting TeX (TeX showed a message that it was unable to find a file - the name of the file had a greek letter because of my mappings). A possible reason for TeX's crashing is that TeX used the command \inputenc somewhere which doesn't work together with a .tcx file, according to the same info pages. ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ MiKTeX-Users mailing list MiK...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Olli J. M. <oll...@ko...> - 2002-09-23 21:15:25
|
CTAN knows several programmes for that. I am using package eurosym whicvh is perfect for my purposes. Olli J. Marttila ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dimitri Pissarenko" <dim...@gm...> To: <mik...@li...> Sent: Monday, September 23, 2002 11:24 PM Subject: [MiKTeX] Euro-Sign in LaTeX Hello! I would like to know how I can use the Euro (?) sign in my LaTeX documents. Thanks Dimitri Pissarenko ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ MiKTeX-Users mailing list MiK...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Thodoros P. <pa...@ma...> - 2002-09-23 21:14:46
|
Hi John, Thanks for the interest. The problem that DVI viewer doesn't show greek letters correctly (shows diffrerent greek letters) happens when I type in the .tex file the actual symbols of Windows screen font. I tried a .tex file with $\alpha, \beta$ in a line and DVI viewer showed the greek letters correctly. I tried a solution that was proposed in some info pages, i.e. I put at the beginning of the .tex file the line %& -translate-file=win2tex.tcx where win2tex.tcx was a file prepared by me with the mappings of Windows' character codes to TeX's character codes. It worked correctly for the first few letters when I was testing it, but then it crashed because it was affecting TeX (TeX showed a message that it was unable to find a file - the name of the file had a greek letter because of my mappings). A possible reason for TeX's crashing is that TeX used the command \inputenc somewhere which doesn't work together with a .tcx file, according to the same info pages. |
From: Dimitri P. <dim...@gm...> - 2002-09-23 20:18:23
|
Hello! I would like to know how I can use the Euro (=80) sign in my LaTeX documents. Thanks Dimitri Pissarenko |
From: Martin S. <ma...@on...> - 2002-09-23 20:01:18
|
On 2002-09-23 17:44:44 +0200, SkyBlueSeeker wrote: > >Because you have to buy them. > > Are you really sure? Yes. BTDT. Now go get a name and learn to quote. Best regards Martin -- http://www.tm.oneiros.de |
From: Charley H. <cha...@uc...> - 2002-09-23 15:58:02
|
MikTeX comes with support for these fonts, but not the font outlines themselves. Lucida-bright-knockoff fonts may be made by someone else, but the original fonts are made by Y&Y TeX, and can be found for purchase at: http://yandy.com/products.htm#fonts I don't use them, but that's largely because I'm a poor academic who finds mroe value in scrounging funds for research than fonts. Besides, more than half the people I've encountered can barely *tell* a good font from a bad one. Furthermore, as long as the font you use is the designated one (usually Times Roman for civil engineering), almost nobody cares whether the font is "good" or bad. 'Sides, the default times package generates perfectly good ps output. ;-) Charley -- Charles Hamilton, PhD EIT Faculty Fellow Department of Civil and Phone: 949.824.3752 Environmental Engineering FAX: 949.824.2117 University of California, Irvine Email: cha...@uc... |
From: SkyBlueSeeker <sky...@su...> - 2002-09-23 15:38:39
|
>Because you have to buy them. Are you really sure? SkyBlueSeeker. ************************************ -----Messaggio Originale----- Da: "Martin Schroeder" <ma...@on...> A: <mik...@li...> Data invio: luned=EC 23 settembre 2002 2.15 Oggetto: Re: [MiKTeX] Lucida Postscript fonts don't appear in dvi file > On 2002-09-23 00:15:20 +0200, SkyBlueSeeker wrote: > > Why theese fonts don't appear? > > Because you have to buy them. http://www.yandy.com > > Best regards > Martin > -- > http://www.tm.oneiros.de > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek > Welcome to geek heaven. > http://thinkgeek.com/sf > _______________________________________________ > MiKTeX-Users mailing list > MiK...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Mullen, J. P. (Contractor) <mul...@tr...> - 2002-09-23 13:39:22
|
Hi Thodoros, When you say "typed in," do you mean you used the notation $\alpha, \beta$ or that you typed in the actual symbols from your screen font? John Mullen -----Original Message----- From: Thodoros Papatheodorou [mailto:pa...@ma...] Sent: Sunday, September 22, 2002 9:16 AM To: mik...@li... Subject: [MiKTeX] (no subject) Hello, I have just installed MiKTEX in a system with Windows 200 and I am trying to make it show greek letters in DVI viwer. It shows greek letters but not the letters I have typed in .tex file. I suppose that this happens because the greek characters are in different positions in greek font of tex comparing to that of Windows. Can someone help? Possibly there is some way to map characters of these two fonts somehow? Thanks in advance for the help ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ MiKTeX-Users mailing list MiK...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/miktex-users |
From: Martin S. <ma...@on...> - 2002-09-23 05:50:45
|
On 2002-09-23 00:15:20 +0200, SkyBlueSeeker wrote: > Why theese fonts don't appear? Because you have to buy them. http://www.yandy.com Best regards Martin -- http://www.tm.oneiros.de |
From: Ko-Kang K. W. <Ko...@xt...> - 2002-09-23 05:49:34
|
Does anyone know how I can reference to a web site using BibTeX? What I have are some photos, which I'd like to reference to a web page (URL). But I don't think @BOOK or @ARTICLE will do the trick. Cheers, Kevin ------------------------------------------------ Ko-Kang Kevin Wang Post Graduate PGDipSci Student Department of Statistics University of Auckland New Zealand www.stat.auckand.ac.nz/~kwan022 |
From: Alan G I. <ai...@am...> - 2002-09-23 02:29:18
|
On Sun, 22 Sep 2002 18:16:22 +0300 Thodoros Papatheodorou <pa...@ma...> wrote: > I have just installed MiKTEX in a system with Windows 200 and I am trying > to make it show greek letters in DVI viwer. It shows greek letters but not > the letters I have typed in .tex file. I suppose that this happens because > the greek characters are in different positions in greek font of tex > comparing to that of Windows. > Can someone help? Possibly there is some way to map characters of these two > fonts somehow? Are you playing with the fonts somehow? I have no problems under Win2000. Cheers, Alan Isaac |
From: Matthias S. <mat...@ep...> - 2002-09-22 22:09:36
|
Hello, Define a driver, e.g. \usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} \hypersetup{colorlinks=true} or \usepackage[pdftex]{hyperref} \hypersetup{colorlinks=true} Matthias -- Matthias Schwaiger <mat...@ep...> PGP Fingerprint: 9B20 13FA D433 6806 BC41 ABF6 62D1 8E90 DE6B 7DB6 <http://www.matzix.de/pgp.html> |
From: SkyBlueSeeker <sky...@su...> - 2002-09-22 22:09:33
|
Hello, I have a trouble with postscript font in LaTeX. In the MikTeX distribution there is a file named 'lucfont.tex' = (\tex\latex\lucidabr\) that show some examples about Adobe Lucida = Postscript fonts; then I have tried to compile it, but the dvi file = don't show any type of Lucida fonts. Why theese fonts don't appear? Could someone help me? Thanks & Bye. SkyBlueSeeker. |
From: Thodoros P. <pa...@ma...> - 2002-09-22 15:38:33
|
Hello, I have just installed MiKTEX in a system with Windows 200 and I am trying to make it show greek letters in DVI viwer. It shows greek letters but not the letters I have typed in .tex file. I suppose that this happens because the greek characters are in different positions in greek font of tex comparing to that of Windows. Can someone help? Possibly there is some way to map characters of these two fonts somehow? Thanks in advance for the help |
From: Thodoros P. <pa...@ma...> - 2002-09-22 15:14:42
|
Hello, I have just installed MiKTEX in a system with Windows 200 and I am trying to make it show greek letters in DVI viwer. It shows greek letters but not the letters I have typed in .tex file. I suppose that this happens because the greek characters are in different positions in greek font of tex comparing to that of Windows. Can someone help? Possibly there is some way to map characters of these two fonts somehow? Thanks in advance for the help |