Hello,
I have corrected the blunder in kerTeX preventing the use of argv[0] as
the name of the format to load (hence 'latex' was still loading plain
tex).
Only kertex_T_0.7.0.1 has been changed.
The README/LISEZ.MOI files have been updated too.
The instructions drive you from downloading to a
Hello,
For the moment, I had only one feedback from James Chapman (OK once the
trailing space in $(uname) result was handled.
I would like to have more, specially on two points:
1) Non i386 arch.
2) LaTeX OK.
The time to finish cleaning and adapting dvips(1) in kerTeX, if you have
a working
On Mon, Apr 26, 2010 at 4:29 AM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
Hello,
For the moment, I had only one feedback from James Chapman (OK once the
trailing space in $(uname) result was handled.
I would like to have more, specially on two points:
1) Non i386 arch.
2) LaTeX OK.
The time to
Finally (english page):
http://www.kergis.com/en/kertex.html
and french page:
http://www.kergis.com/kertex.html
If I have correctly written the doc, enough said...
--
Thierry Laronde tlaronde +AT+ polynum +dot+ com
http://www.kergis.com/
Key fingerprint = 0FF7
Hi,
I downloaded the four files and failed almost immediately. What am I
doing wrong?
James
Transcript below:
term% ls
kertex_M
kertex_T
knuth
risk_comp
term% ape/psh
# cd kertex_M
# ../risk_comp/sys/posix/sh/rkconfig
- config pathname /usr/james/tex/kertex_M/conf/KERTEX_M entered in cache
-
On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 04:09:42PM +0300, James Chapman wrote:
Hi,
# cd kertex_M
# ../risk_comp/sys/posix/sh/rkconfig
- config pathname /usr/james/tex/kertex_M/conf/KERTEX_M entered in cache
- config pathname /usr/james/tex/risk_comp//sys/posix/lib/rkcomp
entered in cache
- Sourcing
On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 4:23 PM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
It takes M_default when it should take M_plan9.
What gives you (under ape): uname -s?
# uname -s
Plan9
On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 04:28:32PM +0300, James Chapman wrote:
On Fri, Apr 23, 2010 at 4:23 PM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
It takes M_default when it should take M_plan9.
What gives you (under ape): uname -s?
# uname -s
Plan9
Can you send me---offlist---the result of stderr with:
In the case of James, uname gave Plan9 , with a trailing space.
I have not that on my Plan9, but for what is worth I have published a
patched risk_comp that removes leading and trailing blanks (since I
replace blanks with '_', the name became plan9_, and there is no
parameters file for this...;)
Hi
I'm aware of XeTeX (I had mentioned XeLaTeX in an earlier thread), and
yes, I understand one wouldn't be looking for identity with what other
platforms support. I agree that one shouldn't be looking to ape, but
rather to provide the same or more functionality in a better way.
Perhaps I'll be
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 6:10 PM, Karljurgen Feuerherm kfeuerh...@wlu.ca wrote:
It occurred to me that a profitable thing to do here would be to mention some
things that would be nice to see in a new improved TeX... I believe
bidirectional was mentioned already.
The other thing that is
So it compiles without ado under Plan9! And it's pure C89 (POSIX is just
for the framework, not for the code: I have removed unneeded
dependencies). And it's all the latest versions of the programs.
So some numbers:
- You will need to download a bundle of 4 chunks (I will put all on
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 01:57:56PM +0200, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
...
Nice work. Can't wait to try it.
--
I am a man who does not exist for others.
pgp5W3AtIaNFY.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Nice work!
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 4:57 AM, tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
So it compiles without ado under Plan9! And it's pure C89 (POSIX is just
for the framework, not for the code: I have removed unneeded
dependencies). And it's all the latest versions of the programs.
So some numbers:
Hello!
Congratulations!
Have you any plans to adapt the TeX for UTF-8 input?
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 15:57:56 +0400, tlaro...@polynum.com
tlaro...@polynum.com wrote:
So it compiles without ado under Plan9! And it's pure C89 (POSIX is just
for the framework, not for the code: I have removed
LaTeX does too. I have used it with a recent version of TeX Live to
get greek and mathematical symbols in verbatim code listings.
James
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 5:07 PM, Karljurgen Feuerherm kfeuerh...@wlu.ca wrote:
XeTeX/XeLaTeX do this, I believe... Perhaps they can be ported at some
point?
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 18:07:14 +0400, Karljurgen Feuerherm
kfeuerh...@wlu.ca wrote:
XeTeX/XeLaTeX do this, I believe... Perhaps they can be ported at some
point?
IFAIK, XeTeX/XeLaTeX based on C++ code.
K
Karljürgen G. Feuerherm, PhD
Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies
1. IFAIK? Can't find that anywhere...
2. Is C++ a problem? Not supported by Plan9?
K
Alexander Sychev santu...@gmail.com 16/04/2010 10:27:36 am
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 18:07:14 +0400, Karljurgen Feuerherm
kfeuerh...@wlu.ca wrote:
XeTeX/XeLaTeX do this, I believe... Perhaps they can be
2. Is C++ a problem? Not supported by Plan9?
not supported by the plan 9 compilers.
- erik
From: 9fans-boun...@9fans.net [mailto:9fans-boun...@9fans.net] On Behalf Of
Karljurgen Feuerherm
Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 12:20 PM
To: Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs
Subject: Re: [9fans] TeX: hurrah!
1. IFAIK? Can't find that anywhere...
2. Is C++ a problem? Not supported by Plan9
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 8:47 AM, Patrick Kelly kameo76...@gmail.com wrote:
Object-Orientation reduces static provability.
True (or true enough)?
Not to engender a flame war, but my gut says there must be some
Eiffel, Smalltalk, and LISP folk out there who are big on provability,
but I can
This doesn't make much sense to me. Object-orientation in itself is simply
another level of data abstraction. And for the rest, I think provability is
more theoretical than practical, other than the most trivial programmes.
I'm beginning to get the impression (or perhaps more accurately am
I'm beginning to get the impression (or perhaps
more accurately am increasingly getting the
impression) that the plan9 community is reactionary
rather than progressive... not a good characteristic
if one is trying to make advances in comparison with
one's predecessors...
i think the plan 9
One question. Anyone tried get LaTeX on this TeX port?
What are the missing pieces to make it run on it?
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 7:17 PM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
I'm beginning to get the impression (or perhaps
more accurately am increasingly getting the
impression) that the
: Friday, April 16, 2010 1:05 PM
To: Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs
Subject: Re: [9fans] TeX: hurrah!
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 8:47 AM, Patrick Kelly kameo76...@gmail.com wrote:
Object-Orientation reduces static provability.
True (or true enough)?
Not to engender a flame war, but my gut
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 10:27 AM, Alexander Sychev santu...@gmail.com wrote:
IFAIK, XeTeX/XeLaTeX based on C++ code.
XeTeX itself is based on patches to Knuth's WEB source code for TeX.
It's the PDF-producing section (xdvipdf or some such) that's written
using a C++ library for handling PDF.
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 07:46:08PM +0200, Francisco J Ballesteros wrote:
One question. Anyone tried get LaTeX on this TeX port?
What are the missing pieces to make it run on it?
I will release/publish the things on Monday I think.
In theory, if LaTeX is still a set of macros, it should work
From: 9fans-boun...@9fans.net [mailto:9fans-boun...@9fans.net] On Behalf Of
Karljurgen Feuerherm
Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 1:11 PM
To: 'Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs'
Subject: Re: [9fans] TeX: hurrah!
This doesn't make much sense to me. Object-orientation in itself is simply
another
Ok--so it's agreed that it's not OO that's the problem, it's the users, then,
who don't know which tool to use when. Not at all the same thing.
And to be pedantic, since you give this example, the sun does revolve around
the earth, so long as you choose the earth as your point of reference...
Sorry to be a grouch, but can we change this thread to OO instead of the
advertised TeX:hurrah! thread?
I'm interested in the TeX news, but not so interested in the OO/language
debate that no doubt will go on for a while...
Thanks!
-joe
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 2:14 PM, Karljurgen Feuerherm
From: 9fans-boun...@9fans.net [mailto:9fans-boun...@9fans.net] On Behalf Of
Karljurgen Feuerherm
Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 2:15 PM
To: 'Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs'
Subject: Re: [9fans] TeX: hurrah!
Ok--so it's agreed that it's not OO that's the problem, it's the users, then,
who
This page and its links maybe be interesting for understanding the
relationship between latex and tex:
http://www.tug.org/levels.html
In my area of computer science all publications are written in latex
and for a particular conference/journal a latex class or style file (I
must admit to not
Thanks for this.
And yes, indeed, a step in the right direction!
Best
K
James Chapman ja...@cs.ioc.ee 16/04/2010 2:37:20 pm
This page and its links maybe be interesting for understanding the
relationship between latex and tex:
http://www.tug.org/levels.html
In my area of computer
It occurred to me that a profitable thing to do here would be to mention some
things that would be nice to see in a new improved TeX... I believe
bidirectional was mentioned already.
The other thing that is essential for folk like me is complete Unicode
compatibility [Yes, I know. UTC has
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 6:10 PM, Karljurgen Feuerherm kfeuerh...@wlu.ca wrote:
It occurred to me that a profitable thing to do here would be to mention some
things that would be nice to see in a new improved TeX... I believe
bidirectional was mentioned already.
The other thing that is
Hello,
Just for the ones wondering what the status of the work on TeX is:
METAFONT and TeX pass the (resp.) TRAP, TRIP test---this means not only
mf and tex in diverse incarnations, but also a bunch of auxiliary tools.
I have 4 more auxiliary to add and I will publish the first
release---without
Hello,
Just a note since I'm late vs my initial time frame schedule (I'm still
busy doint something else [aka work that makes me eat]).
But it is not dropped, neither dead (the matrix---the compilation
framework---is already here, and I have done in december enough to know
what to do and to be
Hello,
Note (inessential at the moment): the result will be called KerTeX and
not CorTeX since there is a package (one file...) called CorTeX on CTAN.
But KerTeX: take care of the TeX kernel! will do...
Unless one really really wants to port the current TeX distribution
state, just wait: I'm
I understand wanting to update TeX, but this
seems like a step backward. The current
texmf iso, though old, provides LaTeX and most
of the common formatting packages. It seems
like this bare-bones version would be less
functional than what's already available.
In particular, I expect that most
On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 11:44:14AM -0500, Jorden Mauro wrote:
I know you don't plan on supporting LaTeX, but would any of these
tools help in porting that? Or is the latex program too GNUified?
As far as I know, LaTeX is not supposed to be a TeX version, but a set
of macros. So, as long as
On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 12:14:56PM -0500, erik quanstrom wrote:
Since the conversion: dvi - ps will be provided, ps - pdf can be done
via gs(1). (That's what I already do, including EPS figures, for example
generated by MetaPost.)
you'll have to fix gs to get that. gs has been crashing
Although it is no TeX I would like to suggest ``lout'', a lightweight
(2 MB) document formatting system written in ANSI C by Jeffrey H.
Kingston. [0]
Hello.
I have had a look at lout and have printed its user guide.
I think it doesn't understand utf.
Otherwise it seems to be highly inspired by
somone was working on a modern port of TeX to plan9.
did this work out? I would like to update my installation
as I think I may be using LaTeX before long.
-Steve
I would like to update my installation
as I think I may be using LaTeX before long.
This doesn't address your issue /per se/, but if you'll indulge me,
I'll ramble a bit about LaTeX and text files.
For the past three years I used LaTeX for everything, including papers
suitable for publishing.
On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 12:55 PM, Steve Simon st...@quintile.net wrote:
somone was working on a modern port of TeX to plan9.
did this work out? I would like to update my installation
as I think I may be using LaTeX before long.
I gave it a go but it wore me out. The pdflatex guys just destroyed
Hello 9fans@
Although it is no TeX I would like to suggest ``lout'', a lightweight
(2 MB) document formatting system written in ANSI C by Jeffrey H.
Kingston. [0]
Quotation from Wikipedia:
``It reads a high-level description of a document similar in style to
LaTeX and produces a PostScript file
But the documentation makes no sense!
Its main disadvantages are that it can only produce PostScript and
there is no easy way to get XML or any other
output format (apart from plain text).
...disadvantage ... no ... XML ...
I mean, what's the disadvantage here :-)
ron
I'm just now looking at tex on plan 9 and finding that a 14-year old
release is not that useful with the newer packages.
Has anyone tried newer stuff at all?
thanks
ron
On Mon Oct 5 20:18:06 EDT 2009, rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm just now looking at tex on plan 9 and finding that a 14-year old
release is not that useful with the newer packages.
Has anyone tried newer stuff at all?
i just hate how the rush to use every last new feature
leads to things like
On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 19:40, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
On Mon Oct 5 20:18:06 EDT 2009, rminn...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm just now looking at tex on plan 9 and finding that a 14-year old
release is not that useful with the newer packages.
Has anyone tried newer stuff at all?
I last built the C version of TeX quite some time ago. At the time, it
was quite portable.
Imagine my surprise to go to the new stuff and find ... Makefile.in
... configure.
I had no idea. So much for a new port :-)
modern tex reminds me of vger from star trek. so much
encrusting junk,
On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 5:40 PM, erik quanstrom quans...@quanstro.net wrote:
i just hate how the rush to use every last new feature
leads to things like gnu configure and autotools, and
ancient warhorses like tex no longer running.
I last built the C version of TeX quite some time ago. At the
OK, found this: http://www.math.uni.wroc.pl/~hebisch/tex/
7 years old but 7 years newer than the plan 9 version. I have mailed
the author to see how it is going.
compiles (quickly!) and runs under ape.
ron
The .texi file is not actually TeX.
[ ... ]
Sorry for not being helpful,
You were, pity about the delay. It's nice to have one's suspicions
confirmed.
++L
I'd highly recommend going the pdftex route instead http://www.tug.org/applications/pdftex/)
. Pdftex generates much more compatible PDF files that the dvips
route--aka, dvips output prints to paper fine, looks horrid on most
PDF viewers.
Now if I could only get more time in the day--as
I'd highly recommend going the pdftex route instead
http://www.tug.org/applications/pdftex/)
. Pdftex generates much more compatible PDF files that the dvips
route--aka, dvips output prints to paper fine, looks horrid on most
PDF viewers.
Whether the files generated by dvips look okay
Now I need to figure out how to produce PS from the bdf/doc directory.
There is nothing obvious about TeX, so I'm begging for the few
commands that ought to do the job, looking at /rc/bin/tex and friends
give me no hint.
Sorry to be so dense.
++L
dvips doesn't work?
- erik
eofminooka; tex hello.tex
This is TeX, Version 3.14159 (Web2C 7.2)
Works as documented. But the same with, say, core.texi, gives me an
error, presumably because the texinfo.tex macros are not preloaded.
So I need some advice on how to combine the two (or more) documents.
The texi2dvi script
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