@HenriMenke If you want to \mfunctionlabeltext, then you also need to define \setupmathlabeltext[argmax=argmax]. \mfunctionlabeltext is a generalization of \labeltext: the context mechanism for multi-lingual output. For example, if you want argmax to appear as blabla in french (you can see, I am just making this up), you can add \setupmathlabeltext[fr][argmax=blabla]. Then if you use \mainlanguage[fr] $\argmax$ the output will be blabla.
I want to know the meaning of the triple $ in my document.
\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[letterpaper]{geometry}
\geometry{top=1.5cm, bottom=2.5cm, left=3cm, right=3cm}
\usepackage{amsmath}
\usepackage{multicol}
\usepackage[usenames]{color}
\begin{document}
\section*{Solucionario}...
After reading Hidden Features and Dark Corners of C++/STL on comp.lang.c++.moderated, I was completely surprised that the following snippet compiled and worked in both Visual Studio 2008 and G++ 4.4.
Here's the code:
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int x = 10;
while (x --> 0) // x goes ...
The code $\LEFTRIGHT\{\}{S_n}$ produces
whereras the code $\left\{ S_n \right\}$ produces
.
Is this a bug or feature? As the content in the braces grow larger, the visual effect of the unbalance is reduced. The above output of \LEFTRIGHT really looks ugly to my eyes.
Note: my preamble has ...
%% Copyright 1996 1997 Frank Mittelbach and David Carlisle.
%% Copyright 2001--2009 Frank Mittelbach, David Carlisle, Walter Schmidt, Mike Spivak
\NeedsTeXFormat{LaTeX2e}[1997/06/01]
\ProvidesPackage{mtpro2}
@PauloCereda I removed one line from a script which only means one test is skipped, and we get a hang on the CI server later in the test run. I'm not sure why, nor do I see it on my machine here: will need to work on it later on my VM.
@PauloCereda No, but has to be a particular length. Trouble is there system moves any wrapped figures around. I had this before on a full proposal but for the outline stage thought I was OK: nope
@PauloCereda I'm asking these people for serious cash
@Canageek there are some answers on site about that but basically yes, macros can be more or less safely rolled out as and when people upload a package to ctan, but compiling and testing all the binaries on all the platforms really has to be done off line then upload a fixed stable release and binaries typically don't change until the next year
@DavidCarlisle Couldn't they make an upgrade packages that copies the ones that don't change from my TeX2015 directory to the TeX2016 directory to save download time?
@Canageek they could but it would make tlmgr more complicated and its just Norbert in his spare time... for example this year they have added gpg hash checking of the downloads so an existing tl2015 installation can't just be copied over as the metadata for the downloaded packages is in the wrong format
@DavidCarlisle Is there a way to tell it to stop downloading from Dalhousie? That is 4000 km away from me, and a very slow server despite being in the same country
@PauloCereda @JosephWright would probably prefer to be given a copy of latex.ltx to make up slides for a talk video than the html/javascript concoctions I've used on other occasions.
This I'm surprised at: No torrent for TeXLive to reduce the load on CTAN and provided built in verification of download 2) That it isn't compressed for distribution. TeX should compress SUPER well.
@Canageek it's not that easy. There's many versions of the install files, and you don't need them once installed. This both means not many people would have the correct torrent.
@yo' Themed collections of packages for those of us that want science based ones, but don't care about writing in German or such.
@yo' And the packages don't, only the binaries. I watch the download. Almost all of it is the packages, not the system specific stuff. Siunitx is just a collection of .tex and .sty files right? Those aren't system specific.
@DavidCarlisle How do I run this again?
@DavidCarlisle Lualatex .\David.tex got me an error
@yo' PFB, TFM, AFM, OTF and TTF are 59% of my TeXLive install, a fairly minimal setup. If you installed everything that would grow a LOT, since you'd add all the language files and such.
@DavidCarlisle Run KDirStat on your install, what does it show?
@DavidCarlisle My install is 1.3 GB
@DavidCarlisle Hah, almost my entire install is the fonts directory at 848 MB. Might want to consider paring that down, I could get my install even smaller. >.>
@DavidCarlisle The Travis-CI situation is weird: my VM has an issue with load order so I'm struggling to pin it down (on the VM the order of file listings is random, so it's not identical to the CI)
@Canageek You might be interested in what I'm up to: I've got Karl to set up a truly minimal installer for TL, which doesn't install anything except tlmgr: you can then pick exactly what you want
@JosephWright Don't need it THAT minimal. 1.3 GB isn't that bad.
@JosephWright Really, if I went with a minimal install + publisher style files now it would be pretty tiny. Next time I'll not install the full fonts tree, just the basic one.
looks That said, once I delete windows.old I'll have another 100 GB
@egreg if you can be kind enough to post this as answer, so I can make a link to it when I file a bug report for lualatex, otherwise, I do not know what to say since this is a bit over my head to describe what you did.