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00:00
@Speravir I thought you don't get badges for CW answers
@tohecz Yes. ;-)
@Christoph You thought wrong. ;-)
Unclear:
0
Q: TeXnicCenter won't work with letters in math mode

KW_LostNubeSo this seems to be something with my editor. In the first example below I get pages printed to PDF and in the second example zero pages print for me. The only difference is the letters This code will work for me in TeXnicCenter \begin{frame} \frametitle{Hey} \alpha \frac{1}{2} \end{frame} BUT...

Unclear, because all suggestions which worked for others didn't work for the OP, but its unclear why:
0
Q: Equation number using many slides

phdstudentHow can make equation number in this code. \documentclass[compress,red]{beamer} \usepackage{etex} \mode<presentation> \usetheme{Warsaw} \usepackage[applemac]{inputenc}%les accents pour mac \usepackage{subfigure} \usepackage{multicol} \usepackage{animate} %\usepackage{movie15} \usepackage{am...

00:32
@tohecz Sure, buddy. :) Just poke me. :)
@PauloCereda ouk :) I'll put together an example file and explain what I do need :)
00:55
@PauloCereda you still here?
01:11
I'm out of close votes, good night :)
@Christoph night!
01:24
@tohecz now I am! :)
so, my example partial file would be as follows:
@HEADER:

	title = "Buď Pánu čest"
	bookref = "EZ 171"
	mydate = "12.7.2011"

@DEFINITIONS:

myMusic = \relative c' { c d e }

anotherMusic = \relative c' { e d c }

@SCORES:

\score {
    \myMusic
	\header {
		piece = "Prelude"
@HEADERS-GO-HERE
	}

	\layout {}
}

\score {
    \anotherMusic
	\header {
		piece = "Arrangement"
	}

	\layout {}
}
and the main file then contains something like this:
@INCLUDE file1
@INCLUDE file2
@BEGIN{KEEPPAGES}
@INCLUDE file3
@INCLUDE file4
@END{KEEPPAGES}
@INCLUDE file5
@PauloCereda and the whole point is that the order in which I put HEADER, DEFINITIONS and SCORES together is highly dependent on whether I KEEPPAGES or not. But somehow that's it
@tohecz Oh.
because if I don't keep two pieces on the same page, the headers are at the beginning of the included file. But if I do have two pieces on the same page, it's more complicated, and they have to be moved inside the first score of the files
01:36
@tohecz I'm thinking of a template engine.
@PauloCereda yep, the task is quite simple. I might actually at one place need to do some more manipulation, but it shouldn't concern the whole thing.
@Speravir That's neat...
@Werner I love this, too. Unfortunately the original source is unknown to me.
@PauloCereda Our motto here ;-)
Hmm, I was tricked. Do not know waht happened.
 
2 hours later…
03:43
Just wanted to check with the experts: I found that mathptmx does not support bold math. My current document has lots of \mathbf{} commands (generated by SW automatically). I found solution to use bm package, and I want to change all \mathbf{} to \boldsymbol{} so I can use {mathptmx}. It seems to work well. Is this an ok solution? Here is a MWE
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{mathptmx}
\usepackage{bm}
%\usepackage{newtxtext,newtxmath}  %has some problems
\begin{document}
This ia a test $\mathbf{\Phi}_{1},\mathbf{\Phi}_{2}$

This ia a test $\boldsymbol{\Phi}_{1},\boldsymbol{\Phi}_{2}$
\end{document}
A book on Latex I was reading suggested to use {mathptmx} that is why I wanted to change.
03:58
@Nasser what are "some problems" with newtxtext/newtxmath?
@PaulGessler I was looking at this tex.stackexchange.com/questions/160786/…
04:36
Interesting.
 
2 hours later…
06:12
Does anybody know of a good way to list all fonts installed on a system that provide a particular glyph set? For example, the font I'm currently using doesn't define /m/sc and gets subbed for /m/n—I'd like to have this not be the case :)
 
2 hours later…
07:43
A nice video for restraining appetite:
 
2 hours later…
09:27
Good work everyone on the unanswered list
09:54
@JosephWright Hi Joseph. Do you already notice that the environment function defined by l3doc is also defined by algorithm2e? So I can't use l3doc in combination with algorithm2e:-(
@MarcoDaniel Not surprising
@MarcoDaniel I'm not sure I see why you need the two together!
@JosephWright I wanted to use the environment algorithm. Now I do:
\let\Origfunction\function
\let\endOrigfunction\endfunction
\let\function\relax
\let\endfunction\relax
\usepackage[lined,commentsnumbered]{algorithm2e}
\let\function\Origfunction
\let\endfunction\endOrigfunction
@MarcoDaniel As you know, there are only limited names available and for an arbitrary document you can't be sure there will never be a clash
@JosephWright Indeed.
10:33
@Nasser the question seems confused. \mathbf gives access to the bold roman text font so doesn't need bold math fonts. \bm does need bold math fonts but produces bold math italic, completely unlike \mathbf. mathptmx dates back to the earliest days of latex2e when there were very few fonts available, there are beter choices for times roman style math now.
@egreg You are the master of math mode, so a question on 'good style'
You might have seen in my blog I'm thinking about what should happen 'next' with siunitx or rather 'beyond siunitx' in terms of what I've learned about typesetting units
@egreg My feeling now is that it would be better to stick to math mode for numbers/units, but should the commands that do this be math mode only?
E.g. \qty{10}{\metre} or $\qty{10}{\metre}$ (I'm pretty sure I should have picked slightly different names for the commands)
Ah, speak of the devil ...
Perhaps @DavidCarlisle has a view
10:56
@JosephWright You know that I'm in general against using \ensuremath, but for this case I think it would be too burdensome for users. What's almost sure is that the thing itself should be in math mode: numbers are used in their mathematical sense.
@JosephWright what @egreg said
@DavidCarlisle :-)
@egreg Broadly matches my reasoning
The problem with allowing text mode is actually more that it restricts certain outcomes
I'm still worrying about \boldmath, but that's a separate issue
@JosephWright by the way someone was moaning here the other day about your \metre command, they may have a point and that like \color the latex-way is to mis-spell it:-)
@DavidCarlisle I saw that, but they are wrong on this one :-)
@DavidCarlisle The BIPM rules are clear: the unit of measure is a 'metre', irrespective of where you live
@JosephWright Oh good OK, last stand of the empire against the colonies:-)
11:09
@DavidCarlisle The BIMP is ruled by the French (or used to be)
Probably they'll impose an accent and that colons have spaces before and after.
@egreg Ah no, no accents allowed in units other than ångström
@egreg Yes
If one of you should ever be really stressed out, just relax and do the safety dance
Sssss
Aaaa
Ffff
Eeee
Tttt
Yyyy

Safety Dance
@egreg, @DavidCarlisle Thanks for the input: very useful
 
3 hours later…
13:52
@egreg you always know that a referee report is by someone French by the colons ;)
@tohecz :)
@egreg but the last one I got is confusing: the colon in "Referee report for article : Spectral ..." is wrong, but the ones in the text are correct...
14:21
@tohecz LOL
By the way, first time using pgfplots with gnuplot as backbone: holy cow, the thing is powerful!
@PauloCereda hi pal! :)
@tohecz Hi Tom! <3
@PauloCereda Yup
@PauloCereda I don't use the gnuplot part, but it works very well
@JosephWright it's a pity I don't need any plots made ;(
\addplot +[red, no markers, raw gnuplot] gnuplot {
    plot 'data/predictiveapriori.dat' smooth sbezier;
};
@JosephWright: ^^ this is insane!
OK, cue.
This is madness!
14:44
@PauloCereda Seems like @PauloCereda needs to do the Safety Dance ;- )
@Johannes_B <3
14:59
@Paulo So have you thought about the lilypond thingy?
@tohecz I had some ideas, but I need to write them. :)
in what language?
Python.
@PauloCereda good choice for such a thing, I'd say :)
But I mean, I can code it myself, but somehow it's more a question of design
@tohecz :)
@tohecz: that a look at cheetahtemplate.org
I think it's just a matter of including things you need and setting up variables.
You could create a DSL for your needs.
15:14
it looks like easy-to-make text-file filtering, with the ability to do crazy stuff in Python if needed. Right?
@tohecz Pretty much it. :)
15:25
xkcd is getting more obscure, or i'm getting more stupid. for example what does this mean?
@PauloCereda and it's included in Fedora, yay!
@FaheemMitha There's a negative timeshift between the 2nd and the 3rd situation.
@FaheemMitha see the hidden text: the countdown is going up...
@StefanKottwitz Yes, I sort of gathered that. So it goes back in time to when it is off. But why would it do that?
@FaheemMitha why? It isn't real life:-)
15:34
@DavidCarlisle Yes, I saw that. I still don't see the point.
@DavidCarlisle Well, Ok.
@FaheemMitha "unusual humor (which may be unsuitable for adults),"
Ah I just got it! Thanks @David
@DavidCarlisle Is that a quote?
@FaheemMitha see the bottom of each page
@FaheemMitha I guess to let a fantastic capability do something useless. i.e. nothing
15:36
@StefanKottwitz Hmm, Ok.
btw, reminds me of Black Adder -- Back and Forth :)
Warning: this comic occasionally contains strong language (which may be unsuitable for children), unusual humor (which may be unsuitable for adults), and advanced mathematics (which may be unsuitable for liberal-arts majors).
15:54
You mean the comedy value of having a time that goes back in time to switch itself off?
Sometimes the xkcd cartoons can be quite uncanny - like they are reading my mind. This is definitely not one of them.
This one is kind of funny, and kinda on-topic here. https://xkcd.com/1209/
I've never seen an interrobang in LaTeX
This one is pretty good. xkcd.com/979
3
They should post this one on the front page of Stack Exchange, or something.
The hidden text here appears to be a reference to "A Wrinkle in Time", but I've no idea what the point is. xkcd.com/1221
It's a little disturbing that I can instantly recognize a reference to a children's book I last read 10 years ago (or thereabouts).
16:14
@FaheemMitha Do you now wxplain xkcd? explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php/1203:_Time_Machines
@Johannes_B No, I didn't. Thanks.
Apparently xkcd.com/1221 references some Abbott and Costello routine which I have never heard of.
@FaheemMitha A classic!
@PaulGessler Apparently. Since xkcd references it.
@PaulGessler Eh, kind of lame.
17:25
i think i have asked this before, but don't remember the answer. if i have a bunch of prices in a table column, and i want the decimal point to line up, but still want the column centered, how can I do it?
@FaheemMitha the two usual packages are dcolumn or siunitx (depends which package author you want to offend:-)
@DavidCarlisle Thanks. Why I am offending anyone?
@FaheemMitha well you have to choose between me and @JosephWright (and we offend very easily:-)
@DavidCarlisle And you're both British, what's more.
17:42
@tohecz Yay!
Ahm
Ahm
Hello All. May I get help on the question posted at tex.stackexchange.com/q/163217/23594
@DavidCarlisle You forget rccol :-)
18:25
@DavidCarlisle Suppose I use \newcolumntype{d}[1]{D{.}{.}{#1}}
but if I use d{2} as a col specifier, it still doesn't center.
it's off to the right
For the header I used \multicolumn{1}{c}{Stuff}
@FaheemMitha 2 means flush right, leaving enough space for 2 decimal places, so if all the numbers have 2 or less dp the . will line up
@PauloCereda well, I decided to stick to pure Python, OTOH, I learnt what (?<!%) is ;)
@DavidCarlisle Oh. Is there any option to center, lining up around the decimal point?
@FaheemMitha try -1
@DavidCarlisle Ok
@DavidCarlisle That works, but why?
18:33
@FaheemMitha because that's what -1 means (there are three different allignment options, -1 n or n.m -1 means centre on the . (more or less) n means n decimal places and n.m means specifying the whole and fractional part (and overprint the column if larger) texdoc dcolumn:-)
@DavidCarlisle Oh. I guess I should have read the documentation. Sorry.
18:57
@FaheemMitha If people read documentation we wouldn't need this site:-)
10
@DavidCarlisle I sometimes read documentation. I don't always understand it.
@FaheemMitha 99% of users never get that far:-)
@DavidCarlisle I'm gratified to know I am one of the elite.
I often find latex package documention hard to understand.
@FaheemMitha rule # 63 of documentations: It is difficult to write good documentation
Which is not uncommon. Documentation is hard work to write, and not fun, i suppose.
I actually don't particularly mind it, but I think I'm in the minority.
@tohecz What is rule 62?
19:05
@FaheemMitha there's none. It was a random number I picked up ;)
@tohecz Too bad. I was hoping for a list of rules. :-)
@FaheemMitha Rule 73 of documentation: The longer it has been reading ones own documentation, the more »Why did i do that the way I did«-moments you get.
19:31
how come this very new user is getting to -4 without any comments?
-2
Q: \tableofcontents overwrites default header

VenkateshI am using Springer's svmult package. The default header gives the name of the author in the top right corner and the title in the top left. When I use \tableofcontents, the default header is overwritten with "Contents" in both sides of the page.

19:44
@tohecz LOL
@DavidCarlisle Now it's back to zero, thankfully.
but it's cool :)
btw, I'm starting to be afraid that my luggage is over the 2x20 kg limit. But I have no way to check it before getting to the airport :-/
@tohecz Oh.
@PauloCereda and I really don't know. Because it is heavy and it is quite full, so heavy could mean over the limit :(
and it's EasyJet-no-mercy
anyways, it just means I have to get to the airport in a long advance
and if it is overweight, I'll have to choose what to put in trash :-/
btw, got the lilypond thingy (almost perfectly) working, I only need to sort out some spacing issues :)
@tohecz ooh! :)
@DavidCarlisle I thought site policy was minimal downvoting.
Which I think is a good idea, incidentally. I only downvote spam.
20:07
@FaheemMitha Indeed it is. But it's like with the world's democracy: you have handful people trying to abuse it, and it's on the rest to be strong enough not to let them take over the power
@tohecz That is very philosophical. Now it only remains to find the naughty down-voters and teach them the error of their ways.
@FaheemMitha no. You're not strong in goodness by punishing the badness. (Now that's even more philosophical, and it uses TeX's language :p )
@tohecz It sounds more like yoda. And I don't follow your point.
@FaheemMitha read Mathew gospel ch. 5, around v. 30 IIRC
@tohecz Ok, I'm on it.
I'm seeing
20:12
@FaheemMitha Sorry it's probably later Mt5:28
Matthew 5:30 is the thirtieth verse of the fifth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament and is part of the Sermon on the Mount. Part of the section on adultery, it is very similar to the previous verse, but with the hand mentioned instead of the eye. For a discussion of the radicalism of these verses see Matthew 5:29. Jesus had stated that looking at a woman in lust is equal to the act of adultery itself and in this verse he recommends cutting off one's hand to prevent sinning. In the King James Version of the Bible the text reads: :And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it ...
which doesn't quite seem to fit.
@tohecz v5:28 is about adultery, which seems even less relevant. and isn't 28 before 30?
damn, sorry I can't write :D
its v 38
38 Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth:

39 But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.

40 And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also.

41 And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain.

42 Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee turn not thou away.

43 Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy.
@tohecz Nice, but hardly practical advice.
"but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also." That's been satirized a lot.
And for good reason.
@FaheemMitha well, because it's difficult to understand the true meaning of that.
There is a really good sf story whose name escapes me about how dangerous it is to take the bible literally.
@tohecz It seems clear enough to me.
20:18
however, it doesn't say "let be bullied wherever someone wants", which is what people often read in it
I know people who got repeatedly imprisoned for no reason and were treated badly, beaten and such. They said: "If you're strong in your faith, you can show the bullies that you're not broken down because they beat you."
@tohecz well, i guess i don't understand the point of the text, then.
@FaheemMitha well, it's difficult. Considering the "cloak" and "go with him 2 miles": There were laws that Romans could ask anyone to borrow them his cloak, and ask anyone to carry their luggage for a mile. The text says: "Do more than you're oblidged to."
@tohecz Ok.
@DavidCarlisle You said "mathptmx dates back to the earliest days of latex2e when there were very few fonts available, there are beter choices for times roman style math now." Can you please recommend what else to use if not mathptmx? I liked mathptmx when I tried it, as it makes the font little more darker than the default one, and it seems to save little bit of space as well. What else should I be using? The default one is not as dark as I like. The pdf file looks better with mathptmx
@FaheemMitha it is a problem of the Bible: we are missing the historical relations, and then some texts sound ridiculous and get a very different meaning from what was the intention
20:28
@tohecz That might be true. But how can one know?
What is the true intention, that is.
I read about this package from the book latex and friends (seems like a good book!) where it says: "The mathptmx package sets the default font to Times Roman. This is a very compact font, which may save you precious pages in the final document. Using the font is especially useful when you’re fighting against page limits."
@FaheemMitha well, in my case, going to sermons, bible studies, reading biblical magasins etc.
@tohecz I see.
amongst the people who mis-interpret the Bible the most are right-wing radicals, and some Christians themselves :-/
@Nasser yes but as I said in the comment you are replying to there are a lot newer choices for Times (or Times-like) fonts these days, mathptmx dates back to when there was no designed math font for Times available so it mashes together whatever was available. a trivial search of this site shows up an answer of @egreg: tex.stackexchange.com/questions/56876/…
20:35
@tohecz Last week's mass gospel, I guess. :) @egreg can confirm. :)
@PauloCereda well, it was on the program for that week, if you happen to be in this series (because there's 7 parallel series of scripture recommendations, and you somehow rotate them, or don't follow them at all :) )
@FaheemMitha yes I just wondered why that one got so many downvotes (while teh OP was still editing the question) (I upvoted it even though the question was rubbish;-)
@tohecz :)
@PauloCereda but I agree with @FaheemMitha that the text is a bit unfortunate, in the context of our society
@DavidCarlisle One of the problems with downvotes is that some people tend to upvote as a reaction, thus giving undeserved upvotes. This is similar in principle to affirmative action. I don't agree with either of those procedures.
20:49
@FaheemMitha yes I know in general but getting to -4 within a few minutes of joining the site seemed like it was worth a corrective upvote or two, anyway OP edited the question to be a bit more reasonable and got an answer accepted so it ended well enough:-)
@DavidCarlisle Ok.
21:07
@DavidCarlisle for a reason, I did not upvote when it was already not sinking ;)
Ahm
Ahm
I would be thankful if someone could help me with the question I posted at tex.stackexchange.com/questions/163217/…
@Ahm Hello! :) Sadly I think the TikZ/PGFPlots experts are not here ATM. :( But eventually they will help you. :)
21:32
@Ahm Writing a comment now. :)
Ping, pong. Does someone know, if there’s a difference between \vspace{1 cm} and \vspace{1cm}? And also as package option: 12 pt vs. 12pt.
Hmm @JosephWright ^^ Do you know?
@Speravir the first takes one extra character in the input file:-)
@DavidCarlisle Oh, logged in again. I do not understand. I actually want to answer someone who does this systematicly.
@Speravir the syntax for a TeX primitive length allows space before the unit so the vspace examples are the same but latex does not "know" that. all space is removed from the option list before it is split on commas so 12 pt is explicitly changed to 12pt before it is looked at
@DavidCarlisle OK, and for vspace?
21:46
@Speravir the first sentence of my comment above:-)
@DavidCarlisle But you wrote about an extra character – a space?
They cost you a byte of memory if done in a macro, \newcommand\foo{\vspace{1 cm}} takes more storage space than \newcommand\foo{\vspace{1cm}} but people care less about saving 1 byte of memory ow than we did when designing latex2e:-0
@Speravir sorry ignore the first reply which was meant as a joke: there is no difference in behaviour, the only difference is that your input file is 1 character longer (the space)
Ahm
Ahm
@PaulGessler: I corrected the problem of using the latest version of pgfplots. I still have the problem when the axis multiplier is large for example .10^16. The following picture is the result for large multiplier. oi57.tinypic.com/2gxlpvp.jpg
@DavidCarlisle :-) The questioner does use it outside of a newcommand.
@DavidCarlisle AAargh :-D
@Ahm Again, writing a comment to you now. :)
Ahm
Ahm
21:52
@PaulGessler: I really appreciate your help :)
@Speravir the vspace form is perfectly OK (although a bit eccentric) I''d say [12 pt] as an option is very bad style as it suggests that it is using the length syntax (and that [16 pt] might work but actually as you know there are specific options that are called 10pt 11pt and 12pt but they could have been called red black blue, they are just labels and 12 pt works by accident as space is removed to simplify splitting the comman list of options.
@DavidCarlisle Just as reference: Remove page number from book title. Very "nice" example code. To my question: I consciously not have seen this until now.
@DavidCarlisle Do you want to add this as comment?
@Speravir not really, you could add a blank line before \endgroup % instead of "}" though
@DavidCarlisle Aah, yes.
@Speravir you can use size commands (or any command really) as environments, but either way they should end with par
21:59
@DavidCarlisle Or so, but we should not tell him. ;-)
@Speravir probably makes no difference in this case as the last paragraph is just one line so the fact that it uses the "wrong" baselineskip is academic, but it's good style anyway
@DavidCarlisle one of the "design decisions that turn out not to be really good in couple years"
@DavidCarlisle What I do not understand, how one can input a package three times.
@tohecz needing a par or not separating commands and environments?
@DavidCarlisle the latter. needing a \par is a more complicated thing. I could actually imagine a desing where \endlarge=\endsmall=...=\par, and then making \begin{large} ... \end{large} the preferred way of elarging the whole paragraph properly
22:02
@Speravir do you mean how someone could type that, or how we could make it work?
@DavidCarlisle First case.
@tohecz it catches everyone out but it's not clear (given tex's linebreaking is optimised over the paragraph) what a better syntax would be: you can change the values, but the ones at the end are what counts...
@DavidCarlisle yep, I know. But \let\endlarge=\par would solve the issue to some extent, wouldn't it?
@Speravir given that it occurs in lots of "minimal" examples I assume it occurs almost all the time in real examples. I think people don't even look at the list, the whole preamble is just accumulated magic picked up at different times and concatenated
@PauloCereda Yes, I can. Sorry but I was watching TV. :-D
22:06
@DavidCarlisle You may be right … and copied together from other sources.
@egreg Yay! :)
@tohecz oh yes for the environment form, which basically is the difference between \sloppy and sloppypar or \raggedright and \begin{flushleft}
@DavidCarlisle yep, that's what I mean
@egreg so you get the same gospels all around the world?
@tohecz It'll all be fixed in latex3 (or context, or microsoft Word, or somewhere)
@tohecz Yes. This year most readings are from Matthew
22:08
@DavidCarlisle cool
@egreg cool
@tohecz There's a three year cycle.
@egreg well, that seems similar to the Scot's Kirk here. But I believe the cycle is 7 years for presbyterians, and it's much less strict and much less a cycle :)
btw, sipping last beer of my Paris stay this semester :)
@tohecz ah you mean in current readings? I thought you meant in the book itself, even with my little knowledge I thought that would be the case:-)
@tohecz So, this year, on Palm Sunday St. Matthew's Passion will be read. St. John's Passion is read every year on Good Friday.
@egreg complicated rules :p
22:11
@DavidCarlisle Oh my bad, this is mentioned in accepted answer the linked question tex.stackexchange.com/questions/7312/… without the \par stuff.
@tohecz Oh, no, they're quite easy. Year A: Matthew; Year B: Mark; Year C: Luke. John's Gospel is read during all three years. On some big feasts there's the same reading every year.
@egreg ok :) That differs from our tradition: You usually have 2 readings: one from the Old Testament, and one from the New Testament, but not necessarily from a gospel. The sermon usually involves both, yet the NT one more. However, sometimes you get basically an OT sermon. For example last year, we did the Stories of Israel throughout the year in Prague, and NT reading was there to "show what the message is for Christians"
@tohecz For instance, Midnight Christmas Mass has always the same readings, and the same for the Easter Vigil, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Pentecost.
@tohecz We actually have four: Old Testament, a Psalm, New Testament and Gospel.
@egreg Psalm is often as an introit, but even that is not fixed. And sometimes you have a sermon on a psalm, these are often very insteresting :)
@egreg not the case for us. We mostly don't have the vigil seperately, my church is having the Jewish Seder dinner on Thursday, and we have a very simple servise on Friday morning that consist only of reading of the story of crucifixion and of singing some old hymns unisono
23:05
Hmm @JosephWright still logged in: The profile image of this user Mohammad Fajar looked familiar. Putting i.sstatic.net/lY7eG.jpg into Google image search it turned out this is an image of Idi Amin. Isn’t this rather questionable? At least thePOwers that be should decide in such cases. We already had a similar issue last time.
@Speravir I'll ask in the mod chat room
@JosephWright You also remember the avatar of user Vochmelka?
@Nasser See this answer of Mico tex.stackexchange.com/a/59706/5001 (missing STIX in special and Open-/Truetype in general).
@Speravir thanks! Looking at it now. Useful link

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