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cfr
cfr
00:01
@AlanMunn Is it a problem? I'm really looking for cases to test prooftrees or justtrees on, and I'm adjusting them as I go when I find things which seem useful. (E.g. if I can add something small which will let me answer a question much more simply than the current answers.) I'm particularly interested in cases which require text or numbering to the left and/or right.... Only I don't want to flood the front page with them. I can just keep the answers, if necessary, without posting them.
cfr
cfr
00:12
@ArthurReutenauer The earlier thing you pinged me about. I hadn't read what you'd just said above. I just responded to the ping.
@cfr Well my answer is above :-) About accents and diacritic signs generally. There was a very nice talk by Karel Horák about accents in Czech once in BachoTeX (around 2008 I think), I though it would be nice to complete it.
Ha, it was 2007. Here is the abstract: gust.org.pl/bachotex/EuroBachoTeX2007/prog.html#Horak_1 and proceedings were published in the TUGboat the next year, his article is here: tug.org/TUGboat/tb29-1/tb91horak.pdf
By the way @yo' should like that too :-)
 
2 hours later…
02:31
Latex is not consistent. To change the color of the text, one writes \textbf{text} but to change the font of the text, it is {\small text}. They should both work the same way.
03:25
@Nasser {\bfseries text}, {\small text}. There, now it is consistent. :-)
04:08
@Nasser That drives me crazy as well. \textbf{foo} vs {\bf foo}
04:20
@PaulGessler thanks, will then use {\bfseries text}. But then again, this means there is more than one way to make the text bold? This is not good. A language should have one and only one obvious way to do something. I do not like TIMTOWTDI languages :) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There%27s_more_than_one_way_to_do_it
 
4 hours later…
07:57
@Johannes_B I didn't get the reference. Did I do something about this?
08:55
Hi
May I ask a question about TeX editors?
@EnthusiasticStudent As David would say: Don't ask to ask, just ask. What were you wondering about?
:))
Sure.
I have recently installed TeX Live 2015
it has TeXworks editor installed
@EnthusiasticStudent Good plan
@EnthusiasticStudent Indeed: you are on Windows then
@JosephWright Yes I am on windows 7
Today I saw WinEdt
Can I have both winedt and texworks editors?
@EnthusiasticStudent Another editor with a long history
@EnthusiasticStudent Yes
08:58
@EnthusiasticStudent Yes.
@EnthusiasticStudent TeX files are just text files: you can edit them with whatever you want
So I should just download and install the windedt editor?
@EnthusiasticStudent If you want to try it, yes.
No need to configure the Path of tex files or anything else?
@EnthusiasticStudent Never used WinEdt, but usually the binaries are placed in the path, so you don't have to configure the editor.
@EnthusiasticStudent If WinEdt cannot find pdflatex etc., then you may have to point it to the correct folder. But again, I'm not familiar with it.
09:02
@EnthusiasticStudent WinEdt has a config wizard that will find your TeX system
@TorbjørnT. I used to use WinEdt ;-)
@JosephWright Then I'll leave you to answer any further questions.
Morning @DavidCarlisle
@JosephWright hi
@JosephWright wrote some chained callbacks last night to check your allocation code, seemed to work:-)
Thanks all.... @JosephWright @TorbjørnT.
@DavidCarlisle Good: I introduced no new errors
09:17
AH! I did not know that winedt is not free! TeXworks is free... Better I read their website before I download winedt.
@EnthusiasticStudent You can try WinEdt without paying
@JosephWright Yes, one month evaluation is free of charge; but I want to have something for long time use; I think that texworks is more suitable for me. I have used it about 3 years, from the first day I got familiar with TeX and LaTeX
463
Q: LaTeX Editors/IDEs

hayalciWhat editors/IDEs are available for easing the process of writing TeX/LaTeX documents? Please state some useful features like code completion, spell checking, building final DVI or PDF files, etc. This question is undergoing a systematic refurbishment, see Let’s polish the Editors/IDEs questi...

@EnthusiasticStudent Well yes
@JosephWright I wouldn't commit to saying that:-), but as I mentioned earlier examples of multiple functions used on the same callback were rather thin on the ground for the existing code, I'll probably tidy these up later and make an example or test file that might come in useful (it's a pointless callback function just abusing the input buffer with gsub but easy to test multiple replacements done in various orders)
@DavidCarlisle All true
09:30
Good day/night friends... thanks for answering my question. You are always so kind to me.
09:55
Top of the morning, gentlemen!
So in a couple of weeks I am about to get me a new bicycle. I had no idea they now have disc brakes!
@PauloCereda hopefully more success than last time:-)
@DavidCarlisle Exactly. :)
@DavidCarlisle awwww
10:38
@percusse That was a reference to the former discussion in may where SE rules where criticied.
@ArthurReutenauer The only way to find that out is by asking. In germany we have a saying: Fragen kostet nichts :-)
@Johannes_B Ein Bier bitte. :)
11:12
@PauloCereda The yearly Bergstadtfest is happening right now, lot's of beer is served. ;-)
11:26
@Johannes_B :)
11:51
@ArthurReutenauer one for you:
I would guess that in text mode the entire word is being passed to the otf handler and ligaturing is happening there, but in math mode as tex is positioning each character, each letter is being sent separately. hmmmm — David Carlisle 26 secs ago
12:19
@StefanKottwitz @JosephWright @clemens latex-community.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=26440#p90454
13:09
@cfr No, I don't think it's a problem at all. I just thought it was funny to see all these old tree questions that I'd given an answer to revived with a new one from you. And I agree with you: your take on these is really nice. I also liked the idea of clear cutting with forest. :)
@Nasser no, they shouldn't.
@Nasser {\bfseries xxx} isn't the same as \textbf{xxx} usually the latter is better but in some contexts you need \bfseries (same kind of contexts where you need \small typically). It is very rare to need a size change in the kind of context where you would use\textbf
@PauloCereda Provided they are not really cheap ones you should be OK
2
Q: How do LaTeX macros interact with the TeX engine?

Alexandru BarbarosieFrom wiki on LaTeX the basic requirement is to have a TeX compiler (which is used to generate output files from source), fonts, and the LaTeX macro set. Assuming I have a TeX engine and I would like to add to it LaTeX support. I would expect it to be similar to any language where I shoul...

Thoughts on the dupe or otherwise
13:26
@JosephWright marginal but as he accepted your answer could un-dup it. but the followup comment shows he's still confused anyway, so probably intended to ask the "difference between latex and tex question"
@JosephWright :(
0
A: Incorrect Cyrillic (Macedonian) glyphs in Computer Modern

David CarlisleThis isn't directly related to cm but looks like a bug in the core latex utf8 mapping, this fixes it for now \documentclass[varwidth]{standalone} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage[T2A]{fontenc} \usepackage{xcolor} \makeatletter \AtBeginDocument{% \DeclareUnicodeCharacter{0403}{\@tabaccklu...

@WillRobertson hi
@DavidCarlisle hi :)
@WillRobertson Hi
amazing, all my friends are here!
@JosephWright did you see @WillRobertson's question on site?
@DavidCarlisle One for path level one?
@DavidCarlisle Yes
@WillRobertson :-)
13:37
kind of a worry, hey David? We might have to tell people to use \textit after all :)
@JosephWright I would guess so, it looks like a straight typo (I always got accents the wrong way round doing French O'level:-)
@WillRobertson depends a bit if it's fixable in xetex, if not then yes
fingers crossed. Thanks for the reminder about base mode…
@ArthurReutenauer ^^^^^^^
@JosephWright Oh they are expensive. :)
@WillRobertson Hi from a duck! :)
@JosephWright running build check now (although I doubt any of our test files pick up Macedonian accents...)
13:53
@DavidCarlisle Ha, well done, pity I never noticed it! :-)
@ArthurReutenauer but I meant you to look at Will's problem (which I can't fix in xetex) not the cyrillic accents:-)
@DavidCarlisle Oh sure; since you didn’t specify a chat line I just jumped to what was the most obvious ;-)
@DavidCarlisle Thanks, found it. No time right now, I’ll make a note of it.
@ArthurReutenauer thanks I did have a quick look at the xetex source in that general area but decided i didn't have a clue:-)
13:58
@DavidCarlisle — btw things are going well futzing around inside of unicode-math
@DavidCarlisle I may reach the same decision ;-) But I’ll look into it.
Hi, I have a quick question. Is it possible in the array environment to draw lines from one element to another element in a different row?
I had my head inside NFSS for probably too long today and I think it overtaxed my brain
@WillRobertson no point if the engines are all broke anyway, may as well give up and blame @ArthurReutenauer :-)
nah, even if the ligatures aren't there it's still very worthwhile
13:59
@Jun-GooKwak pstrikz or tikz can do this
@DavidCarlisle Thanks. I'll look into the documentation.
@WillRobertson if you published a math paper with a missing ligature you'd kill @barbarabeeton. Do you want that on your conscience?
Hah! I'd just blame it on the publisher.
(Apparently I have to lead how to do threads properly in this thing. How do you manage David? Do they have an emacs interface to chat.sx??)
s/lead/learn/
@WillRobertson not quite yet, only the main site stackapps.com/questions/3950/sx-stack-exchange-for-emacs
@DavidCarlisle AMAZING
14:03
@Johannes_B Not sure what you mean here. I was referring to people who ask a question with a precise solution in mind, and refuse all the answers that don’t recommend that exact solution. But the solution they originally had in mind doesn’t work, of course - otherwise they wouldn’t have asked the question - and what they are seeking is a slight modification of their “solution” in subtle, unspecified, ways. This does happen a lot.
@WillRobertson to reply select reply from the menu at the left of each comment or use the arrow on the right
@Johannes_B In a way we’re all in that situation to some extent, but sometimes it’s more obvious than other times :-)
@ArthurReutenauer Ah, now i understand.
@DavidCarlisle Ta. It's less so the how, more so the remembering to :)
Quack. :(
14:15
@ArthurReutenauer No. Both tilda and tilde are valid words but mean different things. tilde refers to the accent, tilda is the second person simple present of the verb tildar (which has as one of its meanings "to put the accent").
Has anybody ever seen \end{textit} before?
@Johannes_B No. I had seen \begin{itshape}...\end{itshape} since some people tend to use font switches as environments.
@GonzaloMedina Yah, \end{textit} would be pretty bad :)
@GonzaloMedina @WillRobertson I wish the user had taken care of error right away. Now, the OP needs to fix that log file golatex.de/viewtopic,p,73217.html#73217
@ArthurReutenauer I wrote "second person" and it should be "third person".
14:24
@Will: quack?
@DavidCarlisle It turns out that unicode-math already (supposedly) activates mode=base. Which is good (subject to further tests) except that I'd forgotten about it. Sigh :)
@WillRobertson :-)
Now I end up explaining a WordPress plugin on the main site o.O
@PauloCereda quack :)
@WillRobertson yaaay :)
14:35
@Johannes_B are you referring to this?
1
Q: How to change the shape of reference numbers in both bibliography (as boldface) and citations (as italic)

NameUsing the answer provided in How to change the shape of reference numbers in the bibliography, I have a document where the reference numbers in the bibliography are shown as boldface. Now at the same time that this number is shown in boldface in the bibliography I would like that when citing tha...

i've just taken a look at this, and it seems that an explicit italic correction is ignored because of the machinations in \cite processing. i'm about to put together a complaint for latex-bugs.
@PauloCereda getting a bike has made the BBC news:
@DavidCarlisle ooh
@David: it's a very strong controversy in SP. :)
Great success
@WillRobertson luatex?
@DavidCarlisle Yep
@DavidCarlisle All the mode switching happens behind the scenes, so everything kinda just works.
14:42
@WillRobertson not sure I like the monospaced ff ligature in \mathtt but I suppose that's a font choice?
@DavidCarlisle Yeah that's super ugly. I haven't investigated why it's there exactly, but yes — a font thing.
@WillRobertson so what to do about xetex
@barbarabeeton hi, no, actually it is this golatex.de/viewtopic,p,73217.html#73217
The ligature can be disabled with \setmonofont[Color=550055,Ligatures=NoCommon]{texgyrecursor-regular.otf} — feel free to ask Jacko why you'd have monospaced ligatures in the first place :)
@WillRobertson yes I was just wondering why anyone would have sat down and created such a thing
14:46
The XeTeX version
@DavidCarlisle I have to admit in theory it might have seemed like a good idea at the time :)
Note the difference between \mathbf and \symbf in the XeTeX version — it's still a huge improvement
@DavidCarlisle So I'd say we can live with it until we can find someone to fix it for us! (tex.sx bounty??)
@WillRobertson yep. Could consider having an option to make \mathit basically be \textit but that has other side effects and probably adds confusion to an already confusing array of options. Hopefully xetex can acquire a hook to fix this.
@DavidCarlisle The bigger worry for me now is how to update unicode-math with sufficient backwards compatibility to keep people happy and also without ending up with a boggling number of interface choices. Lucky I have a couple weeks before this conference :)
@WillRobertson why longtable v5 is in github and not on ctan (and most of the intended updates are not even checked in to github) not sure there is ever a good answer. (see starred comment on the right:-)
@DavidCarlisle :) Reminds me of the "I assure you [my problems] are still greater" quote — yes unicode-math is very small fry in comparison!
@WillRobertson not really, I don't think I've ever needed a longtable in any document I've ever done, but math fonts are somewhat more core, sorry:-)
14:58
@DavidCarlisle Hah!
@DavidCarlisle I've used long table in the documentation for unicode-math, so where does that put us? I haven't used unicode-math for my real work yet either, but perhaps this is the year for it.
@WillRobertson I do use siunitx ;-)
@JosephWright I use siunitx ALL THE TIME
And I have the same 'what can I change' problem (v3 would be lovely if it were not for users)
@JosephWright So thank you again :)
@WillRobertson No problem
15:04
@WillRobertson seriously I think the logical conclusion of all the work on the 2015 release to support unicode texs in the kernel is that fontspec/unicode-math somehow migrates from "contrib" to "core" status. (not sure what the expl3 code implications are though, bit backwards to have latex2 core depend on "exp(erimental)l(atex)3")
@WillRobertson I've never used it, if that helps
@DavidCarlisle That idea scares me very much. I think both packages would need a solid re-think before adopting them. But I agree I would love to start re-working the NFSS to better allow the layering we've done.
(I did convert the entire NFSS to expl3 a while back, and then didn't know what to do with the edge cases.)
@WillRobertson scary it may be but saying latex2e kernel supports xetex but by default you can only use 8bit fonts doesn't seem like a story that you can really sell.
@DavidCarlisle Doesn't stand for experimental anymore ;-)
@DavidCarlisle, @WillRobertson Re. the LuaTeX stuff, I'm planning to re-add l3luatex to expl3 to cover the bits I am certain we need: a name for \directlua and related things. OK?
@DavidCarlisle Aye. But then, 2e doesn't support graphics out of the box either :) Just joking. I fully support something happening in this space—it will become a little more clear to me in the next 6 months what my involvement will be able to be. (As always I hope for more but…)
@JosephWright Certainly. Definitely makes sense.
@WillRobertson One for the team meeting agenda ;-)
@DavidCarlisle The release approach to l3kernel is nowadays very careful: nothing is getting added that will break stuff without careful notification
15:10
@WillRobertson well that's the point, it does, that's why graphics/color etc were in the Required packages core distribution, it's not defined in the format, but then neither is \section
@DavidCarlisle, @WillRobertson Perhaps we can sort \tl_to_lowercase:n soon as it's the one case we know needs a breaking change
@JosephWright Oops, I thought we had :) Sorry
@DavidCarlisle I should probably do graphics support for expl3
@WillRobertson No: still no final agreement on the one use we do need for \lowercase, making 'odd' chars
@JosephWright By "do" do you mean a (xtemplate-based) user interface?
@WillRobertson No, I mean something at the expl3 level: I did box scaling and the like (still formally experimental) but didn't do graphics inclusion
15:15
@JosephWright Ah, I see what you mean. Hey, we really should organise a formal agenda for this meeting don't you think?
@WillRobertson Well first we should agree we are having some kind of meeting (of the team specifically), but as this is perhaps a unique opportunity for a good number of us to meet up physically it seems sensible to me
@WillRobertson One for the team list I guess
@WillRobertson Email coming up
15:32
@ChristianHupfer no need to delete the whole answer, just delete the \
@ChristianHupfer What @DavidCarlisle said ;-)
@DavidCarlisle, @WillRobertson Hope team list mail gets the tone right: I've no idea what the usual is at TUG meetings in the regard!
@DavidCarlisle, @WillRobertson I guess I better finish Greek case changing!
Hello @StefanKottwitz
@JosephWright Hi!
@StefanKottwitz How are you?
@JosephWright we've varied from just chatting over dinner to going a day early and getting the local organisers to allocate a room etc...
@DavidCarlisle Indeed
@DavidCarlisle I'm thinking perhaps the first approach
15:35
@JosephWright Too busy these days :-o but fine
@StefanKottwitz Ah
@StefanKottwitz Not I think as busy as Martin
@JosephWright, @WillRobertson so who wants to explain the logical nature of tex math font encodings?
1
Q: Why does \mathbf work for uppercase Greek but not for lowercase

uranixI was always using \boldsymbol to make Greek letters bold, but today I made a typo and found that \mathbf also worked for \Omega. Now I am curious, why does it work for uppercase and does not for lowercase Greek? May I rely on this behaviour, or may it change across various LaTeX distributions?

@DavidCarlisle That's not our fault :-)
@DavidCarlisle Let @egreg do it!
@DavidCarlisle This is exactly why \mathbf needs to default to working with greek in unicode-math :)
@DavidCarlisle Another reminder that one way or another we do have to move on from pdfTeX
@WillRobertson Indeed
15:38
@JosephWright I hope you are fine too? I see you are progressing towards the TUG meeting
@WillRobertson It would if it loaded a proper large text bold font:-)
@DavidCarlisle Also a reason for needing the TeX Gyre math fonts (try explaining that to one J Fine)
@GonzaloMedina Thanks, I stand corrected. I really wonder where my former maths teacher got “tilda” then - he systematically called this accent that, which is not his name in French, or English, or even Spanish. Strange.
@StefanKottwitz Yes, two talks to write (depending on some discussion, possibly on the way there)
@DavidCarlisle Am reading your testing e-mail now
Oh no, people are talking abot TeX in here. We need some cricket info!
15:40
@JosephWright Are you talking to him at all these days?
@DavidCarlisle Not really I think—you still need to do the mathcode remapping to get plane 1 symbols.
@StefanKottwitz The golatex-time seems to be almost 5 minutes in the future.
@WillRobertson yes but not for \mathbf
@JosephWright: any dates for this year's UK-TUG meeting? :)
@Johannes_B Just enough advance to the spammers ;-)
15:41
@StefanKottwitz :-) There was no spam for weeks. Just that strange GloTeX Vanillepudding incident.
@PauloCereda Need to hassle people about that, but first we need to sort some other issues (@ArthurReutenauer knows the issue I refer to: he had a committee mail about it today)
@ArthurReutenauer Haven't heard from him other than renewal
@JosephWright Yes I was about to talk to you about that. Do you want to discuss it in Darmstadt?
@PauloCereda Vanillepudding
@ArthurReutenauer You were not at the UK-TUG meetings were TeX Gyre Math discussion got really heated
@Johannes_B I'll check the time. Just have to deliver a coffee to my girl
15:43
@JosephWright I'm looking for the GuIT meeting, but maybe I could go to ours as well. :)
@ArthurReutenauer I think so: Kaveh will be there too so it will be a good time to do it
@DavidCarlisle Oh, I guess it'd work, but I'm still not sure that's how we'd like to recommend it happen :)
@StefanKottwitz Kuchen as well?
@JosephWright Now you mention it I think I heard about it.
@JosephWright Sure, let’s do that.
@WillRobertson That's what I'd expect \mathbf (or \mathit) to do.
15:44
@JosephWright I missed out on opentype math fonts gossip?? Perhaps you can fill me in in Germany
@Johannes_B If I would call a delivery service ;-)
@WillRobertson Yes, probably the best plan
@Johannes_B Das Vanillepudding. :)
@StefanKottwitz golatex.de/viewtopic,p,73214.html#73214 Last paragraph. Your whole family could come too :-)
@DavidCarlisle Right—if \gamma is defined as being a plane1 math gamma, then switching to \mathbf for a font with bold symbols in the same slot should do the right thing.
15:46
@DavidCarlisle Could you remind me where luaregisternames is?
@DavidCarlisle Ah, I checked GitHub but looked for a separate repo, not inside the general one
@WillRobertson No I think \gamma should be a gamma and then \mathbf should not use the plane 1 slots so you get the normal bold gamma out of a normal bold text font (your \symbf should do the mapping version) but there should be an option to make \mathbf=\symbf
@DavidCarlisle But what is "a gamma"?
@WillRobertson U+03b3
@WillRobertson these should do the same thing \mathbf{γ} and \mathbf{\gamma}
15:54
@DavidCarlisle @JosephWright: Nope, my first guess was completely wrong, it's better to drop that answer
@DavidCarlisle But if you don't remap symbols, then these glyphs are intended for text purposes according to Unicode. You might be able to find fonts that have italic (mathematical) greek symbols there, but that's not how the current Unicode maths fonts work.
To be a bit more specific, they use the text slots for upright and the math (plane 1) slots for italic.
@WillRobertson yes you need to remap if using the math font but \mathbf should set the mathcodes to use the natural slots so that \mathbf and \textbf are using the same glyphs if using the same font
@ChristianHupfer Your call
@DavidCarlisle Indeed, that'll be how the next version of unicode-math works :)
@WillRobertson so if I specify a bold text font for \mathbf , and that font has greek and cyrillic, then the greek and cyrillic goes bold doesn't it?
15:59
@DavidCarlisle I guess I'd have to check, but I don't see why not—actually adding official support for setting up Cyrillic is on my todo list somewhere.
@WillRobertson sounds good to me:-)
This is from literal input \def\XX{ffiЖγ}
okay i'm definitely up later than i should be. catch you all soon i hope :)
@WillRobertson See you
@WillRobertson sleep well:-)
cfr
cfr
16:36
What's with the sudden fascination with pst-barcode?
@cfr │┃│┃┃┃┃│┃│┃┃┃│┃│
@cfr New user editing a tag in
@Johannes_B time corrected
@StefanKottwitz Nice, thank you. That was driving me insane. :-)
22 hours ago, by David Carlisle
@Johannes_B maybe that already happened?
17:32
@DavidCarlisle and @WillRobertson -- sorry to butt in here. one of the reasons for adding the math alphanumerics in plane 1 was so that they could be searched in output files. if you say that it's simply an ordinary bold gamma, then it can't be recognized in searching as math at all. please think about this before "freezing" anything.
@barbarabeeton I'm intrigued by that
@barbarabeeton At the point of typesetting you loose all of that semantic stuff: you are making marks on a page which need human interpretation
@barbarabeeton I think making the typeset result readable takes precedence, the plane 1 characters (in all current fonts) are unusable for multi-letter words, so not usable for \mathbf \mathit etc.
@JosephWright -- on paper, yes. in a file (text or pdf), no -- that's what unicode partially based their decision on. unicode does require markup for some things (and mathml should take care of that).
@barbarabeeton mathml in some contexts, latex in this one, surely.
@barbarabeeton But that's a special pleading for one area: what makes maths so special that it gets this whereas all other areas have to rely on people
17:40
@DavidCarlisle -- yes, i understand that plane 1 characters aren't meant for multi-letter words, but every single manuscript file i've seen here uses \mathbf{x} for a bold "x" in math. you would do away with that. i don't want to have to explain to ams authors (and production staff) that they need to change that to \symbf{x}!
@barbarabeeton no neither do I, final call is with Will but I hope the \mathbf/\symbf distinction isn't really exposed to end users, just that both methods are available and when setting up a font whoever is writing the font package has to choose. But for all current fonts the default for \mathbf is best set to be a normal text bold font
@barbarabeeton yes and currently they get a bold x from a text bold font when they do that, all I'm saying is that should be the case also if you use xetex.
@JosephWright -- no. math is (to unicode) just another "language". why else would there be separate "A" shapes in ascii (latin), greek, and cyrillic? unicode hates duplication!!! this is not just a matter of appearance; it's semantics.
@DavidCarlisle -- computer modern doesn't have a bold math alphabet because knuth didn't have enough room, either memory, or families.
@barbarabeeton It doesn't have a non bold math roman either, but still as I say above I do not see what you lose if \mathbf is defined to be the same in uniocde-math as classic cm setup.
@DavidCarlisle -- i will stop my whining if you can assure me that the output (pdf file) of \mathbf(x) is there as a plane 1 character that can be searched as such.
by the time text + math gets to pdf, the only thing that will identify a bold symbol "x" as math is its plane1-ness. (\mathrm is only very rarely used for single letters.)
17:56
@barbarabeeton no it would be an ascii a
@barbarabeeton yes but how come it's Ok for log to be ascii so no specific math hint in the unicode text, but a disaster if Hom is encoded as ascii Hom ?
@barbarabeeton and surely \mathbf and \mathit should have similar definitions?
@DavidCarlisle -- you mean \mathrm{a} ? (in math, as in journals and books here, single letters are almost invariably (math) italic; only operator names are usually roman.)
@barbarabeeton I guess what we have here is a limitation of the fact that Unicode tried to ignore formatting and it was then added in for maths, whereas in fact formatting is a series of axes (as seen in NFSS) along with others (such as case) which map out a multi-dimensional surface.
@DavidCarlisle -- Hom is a darn good example. and i think i'll send it off to murray to see what he says about how to recognize "log" or "sin" in a search. it could possibly make them think about adding the latin alphabet to plane 1 for math.
@barbarabeeton yes in mathematics as a subject I know, all variables are called x and all functions are called f, I was a professional mathematician for a long time:-) but there are many other disciplines that use mathematical layout where identifiers are commonly multi-letter and commonly use font variations.
@barbarabeeton it's no good adding more math alphabets to plane 1 unless the fonts add kerning and ligatures for those characters.
@JosephWright -- unicode was acting on their usual principles of "no unnecessary duplication", and preferably no duplication at all if they could get away with it. they're loosening up. if you look at recent entries, you will find a number of "duplicate" shapes, with different meanings (usually associated with spacing differences on account of usage), being added.
18:04
Back from my tour in the mountains.
@barbarabeeton so to be specific what unicode characters would you like to see from $\mathit{apples} + \mathit{pastry} = \mathbf{pie}$ (question is serious, even if expression is not)
@barbarabeeton Yes, I understand that but a multiple-axis scheme doesn't mean duplication, it means having different identifiers for different things (e.g. A = a = \textsc{a} in some contexts so we could store just 'a' and then a case axis)
@DavidCarlisle -- you're ignoring the fact that \mathit does use the \textit font. the reason for the name is a matter for historical speculation, or asking dek. i can't say what the unicode committee will decide on a particular topic; i can only say what i know they've decided in the past, and the grounds on which the decision was made. that's why i suggested throwing this question out to murray, explicitly asking about the searching aspect.
can we work together on coming up with a really thorny and ambiguous text that we would like to know how to input/encode in order to search?
@barbarabeeton I think we can look forward to some interesting/useful discussion at the TUG meeting!
@barbarabeeton \mathit uses the same font as \textit and \mathbf uses the same font as \textbf, there is a pleasing consistency there that you seem to object to?
18:11
@DavidCarlisle Not really: the encoding for \mathit is OT1, for \textit it may be different.
@DavidCarlisle -- maybe there's a surface consistency, but i think it's only surface. i'm even willing to ask don.
@barbarabeeton I guess the interesting thing for me here is that you feel you should be able to do this search at all. With my day-job hat on as a chemist, I can't do the same for a chemical name and expect only to be able to search on an ASCII basis in a PDF. For 'real' chemical data I expect to have to use a structured database.
@barbarabeeton it doesn't have to be thorny, look at any category theory paper and look for \mathbf{Var}
@barbarabeeton huh?? how surface can it be? in plain tex and by default in latex it's the same font.
@JosephWright -- and i've heard discussions at the utc regarding chemistry. they won't go near it! but there really are no structured databases for math. i can't even drum up any support for creating a symbols list by area of mathematics.
@barbarabeeton taking \mathbf{Var} then if you use the plane 1 alphabet in any of the currently available fonts there is no kerning between V and a and it looks horrible, if you do as tex has always done and use a text bold font then you do get kerning and its readable.
18:14
@DavidCarlisle -- the reason, as i said, is that there weren't enough families, and not enough memory for another distinct math font.
@barbarabeeton have you seen my latest answer on site? :-)
@barbarabeeton I wouldn't suggest going near any arbitrary subject: I'm sure we all have our own conventions :-) (My specific one here is that chemicals in a paper are given bold numbers normally, but if I want to search a paper I'm just looking for numbers, so it's actually easier to look through by hand than ask Reader or whatever to search.)
5
A: Why does \mathbf work for uppercase Greek but not for lowercase

David CarlisleTeX was designed at a time when using 8bit fonts with 256 characters was considered rather exotic, so while it could do that all the standard fonts only use 128 characters per font. That combined with the limit on 16 math families per expression meant that some "interesting" design decisions had ...

@DavidCarlisle -- i agree for multi-letter bits. and thanks for linking in your answer that says the same thing about limits. what i care about is the single bold math letter. remember, unicode didn't exist when tex was hatched. personal computers, laser printers, pdf, and the web didn't either. the challenge now is to make "best" use of all these "new" tools. oh -- don't forget accessibility; that's by and large simply ignored these days, but won't/can't be forever.
@JosephWright -- looking "by hand" (by eye?) is practical if you've narrowed something down to one paper. what if you're searching 10 years' worth of papers for a particular compound? i guess that's what your database is for.
@barbarabeeton I can't speak for maths but for chemistry I don't see accessibility from typeset works being realistic: need the kind of structures that XML is good at
@barbarabeeton One should never be searching the original literature directly, that's what abstracts, databases, etc. are for (For a start, the legal situation means you can't have access to all relevant data.)
18:28
@JosephWright -- i don't disagree with the principle that abstracts and databases should be searched first. for math, that should identify the items covering relevant concepts. but i've spent hours poring over pages looking for single symbols -- even though i already knew (because i had the tex source) they were there, and even approximately where. that's how the stix info for unicode was compiled. it's thankless.
@barbarabeeton Like I said, I think there is useful discussion to have on this area at the TUG meeting
@JosephWright -- re accessibility, i can see why chemistry isn't a good subject for a sightless person to be pursuing. but math is different in that regard. there are perhaps not many blind mathematicians, but it's certainly not out of their reach. and the day is going to come when one or more of them is going to cite the american disabilities act and insist that the mathematical literature be made available to them. (it can be done. unicode is part of it. but it needs proper thought.)
@JosephWright -- this area and several others. i'm making my list.
@barbarabeeton Can that really work? Straight text is OK but the moment you have a table or figure the PDF version can't describe semantics and you need the XML data version to describe the structure properly
@JosephWright -- figures would have to be explained in words. an xml structure for tables is probably reasonable, but would need a well-conceived audio (or braille?) output. but the math i'm talking about is more likely to be "equations" (formulas of various kinds). see cs.cornell.edu/home/raman/aster/aster-toplevel.html and allthingsd.com/20130604/…
18:48
@barbarabeeton I was thinking that the moment you have say a matrix then anything relying purely on Unicode for semantics is in trouble
@JosephWright -- for anything remotely two-dimensional, unicode insists that markup is required. that's why (la)tex source is requested by mathematicians who can't read a paper on paper, and the ams will provide that on request, after checking into the circumstances.
@barbarabeeton I don't think it's a is documentable interface to tell people to use different markup for a bold V and a bold Var, if if the math font plane 1 alphabet isn't suitable for Var it isn't suitable for V.
19:03
@DavidCarlisle -- i didn't say it was easy, and i didn't say i had an answer. i'm just asking for you to think about how a letter might be made searchable in the output, which is one of the rationales for why the plane 1 alphanumerics were encoded. (i've seen operator names rendered in fraktur, for goodness sakes. mathematicians will do what they want, but if searching is a criterion, then some rational approach needs to be found.)
@barbarabeeton /ActualText?
@barbarabeeton yes agreed (making, or at least trying to specify, accessible math markup has been a large part of my day job for last 15 years:-) but I think the plane 1 math alphabets are at best only a slight hint in that area, and you need markup structure or tagged pdf for any real distinguishing of the math use, so if bold x comes out as U+0078 in times bold font, I wouldn't lose too much sleep over it.
@DavidCarlisle Yes, I suspect you are right
cfr
cfr
19:19
@JosephWright Oh, right. Yes, I see. I just looked at the front page and it seemed an odd fashion to have suddenly hit.
I love soup.
2
@DavidCarlisle Anything further to do on the LuaTeX stuff at this stage?
@JosephWright wait, then post:-)
19:59
@egreg excellent sporting news: bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/33298267
20:18
@DavidCarlisle That's shocking!
@Johannes_B Thanks for having pinged me for the openbib question.
@egreg Someone has to answer :-) You were out all day, i figured you could need a bit help to get capped ;-)
@DavidCarlisle :-)
@Johannes_B That was not a problem. :)
@egreg :-p
@Johannes_B And I even had ice cream. :) In one of my favorite places in view of the Dolomites.
20:23
by the way, who starred that soup post? :-)
@egreg That second part sounds nice, ice cream ... not as much. Do they serve soup?
@Johannes_B That would be me: be glad it's not mod-pinned :-)
@JosephWright :-D Do you love soup as well?
@Johannes_B The place only sells ice cream, milk and cheese.
@egreg I am getting a cart and seel different soups on the side of the street, how about it? Would you buy a pot of nice heart warming soup?
hm, i would need chairs, or something for people to sit on.
Hammocks don't seem like a good idea with hot soup.
@Johannes_B No, thanks. What about a Wurst in front of a beautiful mountain lake, like I had for lunch?
20:29
@egreg :-) What kind of Wurst?
@Johannes_B Bratwurst
@Johannes_B There was no choice, actually. Standard Südtirol Wurst, I guess.
@egreg That is beautiful. Never been to Italy before. Should definitely fill that gap one day.
cfr
cfr
Is this on topic?
0
Q: Writing chemical reaction with WP-Quick latex?

user80946I want to show series of some chemical reaction on wordpress using popular chemfig and mhchem package however i always encounter some problem . For example . I want to show reaction in series like this : A + B -> C D + E -> F and much more like that In Wordpress post i post like this isn't it...

What is WP-Quick LaTeX?
@Johannes_B It's a side valley of Pustertal, which is a very beautiful place, from Brixen to Lienz.
cfr
cfr
@egreg Prydferth!
20:38
@Johannes_B From home to that lake it's 231 km.
@cfr Yeah! Dolomites are the most beautiful mountains in the world. Well, very high ranked anyway.
@egreg Freiberg --> Berlin: 236 km :-)
1
Q: changing font of wordpress quick latex

user80946The font of word press quick latex looks so light and not so good. Is it possible to change the font a bit dark and a bit cool? and i am writing chemical reaction so i must use wp quick latex as i have not found any other plugin that writes chemical reaction on word press on fly. I want to show...

@Johannes_B Even without high mountains. For the journey back I climbed four mountain passes. Of course, the route was completely different.
@egreg I am taking care of the dog next week. I want to walk 30 km at least once. I hope it doesn't get too warm.
cfr
cfr
21:00
@JosephWright He's the author of the package... ;).
@Johannes_B Thanks.
21:27
@cfr A WordPress (WP) plugin for LaTeX which is quite comfortable. It's possible to load traditional packages
cfr
cfr
21:45
@ChristianHupfer Thanks. Yes. I followed the links from the question posted above and read a little bit about it. Sounds interesting.
@cfr I used it on my WP site, but some pages are hidden so far
 
1 hour later…
22:50
@JosephWright @DavidCarlisle @WillRobertson @egreg I suppose you’ve all booked your hotel room for Darmstadt? If not we need to talk ;-)
@ArthurReutenauer Yes, I have.
23:43
@DavidCarlisle I found something very special in a bookstore today
but alas, it is a different image :( I was convinced earlier
370
A: How can I explain the meaning of LaTeX to my grandma?

David CarlisleIt does this but it uses a computer and so requires less manual labour. (image from Wikipedia)


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