Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Emil Sköldberg
2c18674c17 Fixed "test ==" issue. 2007-01-10 11:30:45 +00:00
Emil Sköldberg
a5c4390092 Update to version 1.11.
Changes (w.r.t. lhs2TeX 1.9)
----------------------------

[Note that 1.10 has never been released to avoid confusion
with some privately distributed versions.]

* Specification code is now handled correctly (that is, ignored)
  in the "code" and "newcode" styles.

* Comments and Pragmas are handled in a better way by
  the "newcode" style.

* There are some new forms of implicit formatting directives.

* The LaTeX code produced in the poly style looks slightly
  more beautiful.

* There is a new Library section, containing some frequently
  used formatting directives.

* Generation of file/linenumber directives in the produced
  LaTeX code, for Stefan Wehr's "adjust" tool. Based on a
  patch submitted by Stefan Wehr.

* lhs2TeX can now replace ghc's literate preprocessor.

* Improved efficiency of \eval and \perform (to call ghci
  or hugs from lhs2TeX documents).
2006-08-28 11:28:52 +00:00
Emil Sköldberg
83a421ddf0 Modifications to FileNameUtils.lhs done using subst.mk instead of manually
using ${SED} as suggested by Min Sik Kim.
2005-11-14 14:04:00 +00:00
Emil Sköldberg
2b07ec19ed lhs2TeX is a preprocessor to generate LaTeX code from literate Haskell sources.
lhs2TeX includes the following features:

    * Different styles to process your source file: for instance, "tt"
      style uses a monospaced font for the code while still allowing you to
      highlight keywords etc, whereas "poly" style uses proportional fonts
      for identifiers, handles indentation nicely, is able to replace binary
      operators by mathematical symbols and take care of complex horizontal
      alignments.
    * Formatting directives, which let you customize the way certain
      tokens in the source code should appear in the processed output.
    * A liberal parser that can handle most of the language
      extensions; you don't have to restrict yourself to Haskell 98.
    * Preprocessor-style conditionals that allow you to generate
      different versions of a document from a single source file (for
      instance, a paper and a presentation).
    * Active documents: you can use Haskell to generate parts of the
      document (useful for papers on Haskell).
    * A manual explaining all the important aspects of lhs2TeX.
2005-11-11 23:58:54 +00:00