Dear Duncan, many thanks for helping. It works fine.
Cheers, Marius Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> writes: > On 12-08-19 3:47 PM, Marius Hofert wrote: >> Dear Duncan, >> >> I recently asked a question concerning patchDVI on r-help, see >> >> ,---- >> | https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/2012-August/321780.html >> `---- >> >> Unfortunately, no one could help. I was wondering if you know a solution to >> the >> above problem. Any hint is highly appreciated. > > Sorry, I'm writing this while offline, so I can't quote your message. > The issue was that if the main .tex file uses \input to include another file, > and that file needs to be processed by Sweave, then the usual encoding > detection method (looking for \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} or similar) won't > work, because you can't put that line in the secondary file. > > The solution is the same as when using Sweave: put a default encoding into > the call to SweavePDF (or the similar functions). For example, my editor > always executes this command when asked to process a .Rnw file: > > patchDVI::SweavePDF('%2', stylepath=FALSE, > preview="f:/SumatraPDF/SumatraPDF \x25s", > encoding="utf8") > > The %2 is a place holder for the filename to process. The preview argument > invokes the PDF previewer that knows Synctex; the stylepath and encoding > arguments are passed to Sweave. Because I chose encoding="utf8", Sweave > will assume that encoding as the default for files. Another encoding can be > explicitly declared. > > When I have multi-file projects, I make use of .TexRoot and .SweaveFiles > in each of the files so I can make the whole project each time; > see the patchDVI vignette (section 6) for details of how they work. > > I think you also asked how to do this in Emacs; I've got no idea about that. > > Duncan Murdoch ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.