- partial rewrite of the find & replace feature. This should solve most of
the performance problems
- new option `keep aspect ratio' in graphics dialog
- revert to the old behaviour when creating new floats (figure,
table...): the empty paragraph in the float now is a caption. It
seems that 1.2.0 behaviour was confusing too many people
- it is now possible to set the float placement parameters to
"document defaults"
- when the cursor is inside a collapsible inset, `Edit>Open/close
float' will leave it after the inset after closing it (this should
help entering of ERT insets)
- update Finnish, Danish, French and Russian localizations
- update Tutorial to 1.2.x features
- better support for entering Cyrillic and Greek alphabets
- cleanup shortcuts for section layouts. Starred versions are now
obtained by prepending a * to the section number (M-p asterisk 0, ...,
M-p asterisk 6)
- add keyboard shortcuts to the Documents menu
- support the numpad direction keys as equivalent to normal cursor
keys
- it is now possible to specify a non-existent file name on the command
line and have this file created for you
- new class cl2emult; update template for IEEEtran; small update to
heb-article and hollywood textclasses
using netbsd-1.5.3/alpha and the gcc-2.95.3 package.
while here fix the test for endian-ness instead of relying on a small
set of hard coded processor types.
Acrobat Reader is part of the Adobe Acrobat family of software, which lets
you view, distribute, and print documents in Portable Document Format
(PDF)--regardless of the computer, operating system, fonts, or application
used to create the original file. PDF files retain all the formatting,
fonts, and graphics of the original document, and virtually any
PostScript(TM) document can be converted into a PDF file.
Tested on NetBSD/i386 and Solaris/sparc. Problems were found on
NetBSD/sparc, so this is marked ONLY_FOR_PLATFORM *-*-i386 and
SunOS-*-sparc for now.
hbf.tar.gz seems to get generated automatically by tarring up the directory
on the distribution site. XXX: This should be fixed, the files in that
dir haven't changed for ca. 5 years now.
Provided in PR 17646 by Rui-Xiang Guo (rxg@ms25.url.com.tw)
CJK-LyX is a multibyte version of LyX, the text processing document
processor, or simply a new and advanced kind of word processors. More
specifically, CJK-LyX is the patched version of LyX for Chinese,
Japanese and Korean language users. CJK-LyX is based on the earlier
patch against lyx-1.0.3 by Masahiko Kawakami and critical
contributions from Chideok Hwang, who is also the author of the Korean
input method Ami.
Bg5pdf is a simple wrapper for wrapping big5 encoding text file into
PDF file by using PDFlib. The output of this program does not contain
embedded fonts. You have to download the Acrobat Acroread Asianfont pack
to view and print the output file or use TrueType fonts with Xpdf.
This wrapper does not provide any formatting functions except simple
line wrapping. If you need sophisticated formatting, you should try
CJK-LaTex or other equivalent tools.
Provided in PR 17536 by Jeremy Reed (reed@reedmedia.net). Slight
modifications by myself to make this compile with pth-syscall, and
to bring it forward to the newer version 0.7.5 - the existing
distfile had disappeared from the master site.
Scribus is a publishing layout program for X using QT interface.
It can be used to create stationery, small posters, brochures,
layout newsletters and other documents. It can export in postscript
and PDF formats; and data is saved in XML format.
Scribus aims to be similar to Adobe PageMaker and Quark XPress.
It can do typical tasks of placing and rotating text and images.
CNPRINT is a utility to print Chinese/Japanese/Korean (CJK) text
(or convert to PostScript) under DOS, VMS and UNIX systems. It
works just as a print command on your system. Currently GB, Hz,
zW, BIG5, CNS, JIS, EUC, Shift-JIS, KSC, UTF8, UTF7 and UTF16
formats are supported.
CNPRINT also has many other features, among them:
* print all CJK codes using a single Unicode CJK font
* print GB using Big5 fonts or print Big5 using GB fonts
* multiple columns, vertical printing, change font or character
size within document
* phrase-based GB<->BIG5 conversions
* built-in HZ<->GB conversion
* repair/re-format functions for CJK text
* envelope and address label printing
* decode MIME quoted printable (=20=3C=5E like text)
* true type fonts (TTF) support
With its full Unicode support, it should be able to print other
language (e.g. Thai, Vietnames, Arabic as well). For more information,
please read the help file.
Package created after reading Hal Snyder's excellent article on DaemonNews:
http://ezine.daemonnews.org/200202/japanese-netbsd.html
gimp-print to not use those bits anyway. This sidesteps that awfulness
in src/cups that potentially creates empty directories in /usr, then later
removes them if they're empty.
Fixes pkg/17244 by douglas@fang.demon.co.uk.
PDFlib 4.0.3 is a free maintenance release for all customers with a 4.x
license. Your previous license key will work with this update, too. A
detailed account of changes since PDFlib 4.0.0 is available in the change log
at http://www.pdflib.com/pdflib/changes4.txt.
Remove `-p' from mkdir arguments, it is already part of ${MKDIR}.
While here substitute a couple of ${PREFIX} by `%D' in
`@exec ${MKDIR} ...' lines and add a couple of missing `%D' in such lines too!
convert Big5/GB encoded files to postscript
---
bg5ps is a Python script that generates Postscript from Chinese
Big5/GB encoded files, using ttf fonts.
yup provides a PostScript printer with the capability of printing any
number of reduced page images on one physical sheet of paper, be they
PostScript or ASCII text.
Supplied by grant at grunta.com in PR#14128. Thanks!
yup provides a PostScript printer with the capability of printing any
number of reduced page images on one physical sheet of paper, be they
PostScript or ASCII text.
Supplied by grant at grunta.com in PR#14128. Thanks!