This package fixes mark handling so that \firstmark is taken from the
first column if that column has any marks at all. It also keeps two
column floats like figure* in sequence with single column floats like
figure.
This package enables to generate multilingual bibliographies in
cooperation with babel. Two approaches are possible: each citation
may be written in another language, or the whole bibliography can be
typeset in a language chosen by the user. In addition, the package
supports commands to change the typography of the bibliographies.
libspectre 0.2.5 (18 April 2010)
================================
This is another bugfix only release in the libspectre's 0.2 series.
This release contains two important fixes:
- The first one is a portability issue that caused crashes on
big-endian 64 bit systems. Thanks to Rogério Brito who spotted the
problem, see launchpad bug
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libspectre/+bug/298139
- The second one is a crash when something goes wrong while running
pdf exporter. (Bug #26592)
A package for adding a columns of numbering to the general text so
that the text can be properly referenced. The vertical ruler can be
scaled and moved freely. Supports LaTeX and plain TeX.
This package defines macros \includeversion{NAME} and
\excludeversion{NAME}, each of which defines an environment NAME whose
text is to be included or excluded from compilation. Although the
command syntax is very similar to that of comment, comment.sty is to
be preferred to version.sty for documents where significant chunks of
text may be excluded.
The package defines a single command \verbdef (which has a *- form,
like \verb). \verbdef will define a robust command whose body expands
to verbatim text. By using commands defined by \verbdef, one can put
verbatim text into the arguments of commands; since the defined
command is robust, it doesn't matter if the argument is moving. (Full
details of syntax and caveats about use are in comments in the file
itself.)
The package provides an \ul (underline) command will break over line
ends; this technique may be used to replace \em (both in that form and
as the \emph command), so as to make output look as if it comes from a
typewriter. The package also offers double and wavy underlining, and
striking out (line through words) and crossing out (/// over words).
Documentation is to be found in the package file itself.