From texhax-digest-outgoing-request@nottingham.ac.uk Thu Mar 7 17:53:49 1996 Received: from jess.ccc.nottingham.ac.uk (jess.ccc.nottingham.ac.uk [128.243.40.193]) by granby.ccc.nottingham.ac.uk (8.6.12/8.6.12) with ESMTP id RAA09784 for ; Thu, 7 Mar 1996 17:53:47 GMT Message-Id: <199603071753.RAA09784@granby.ccc.nottingham.ac.uk> Received: from nottingham.ac.uk by jess.ccc.nottingham.ac.uk id <26648-0@jess.ccc.nottingham.ac.uk>; Thu, 7 Mar 1996 17:29:03 +0000 From: Majordomo list server To: texhax-digest@nottingham.ac.uk Subject: TeXhax Digest V96 #3 Reply-To: TeXhax@tex.ac.uk Errors-To: owner-texhax-digest@nottingham.ac.uk Precedence: bulk Date: Thu, 7 Mar 1996 17:29:03 +0000 Sender: owner-texhax-digest@nottingham.ac.uk TeXhax Digest Thursday, 7 March 1996 Volume 96 : Number 003 (incorporating UKTeX Digest) Today's Topics: TeX/LaTeX on Windows Re: TeXhax Digest V96 #2 Re: TeXhax Digest V96 #2 spell checker for sun(UNIX) permille, fractions, space, \afterpage and procs Table of contents, TUGboat 16(2) Announcing TUG'96 in Dubna (Russia) July 28-Aug 2 1996 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: bkph@ai.mit.edu (Berthold K.P. Horn) Date: Wed, 17 Jan 1996 16:11:04 -0500 Subject: TeX/LaTeX on Windows From: "Sam Nelson (CO)" Sam Nelson, Comp Sci, Stirling U, FK9 4LA, Scotland ,->0->M > Email: sam@cs.stir.ac.uk Pager: 0839 456640 I->3-+->2->R=->-+->4->O > Tel: +44 1786 467443 Fax: +44 1786 464551 `->1->S=->-' > URL: http://www.cs.stir.ac.uk/~sam R$+@$+ $@smtp$#$2$:$1@$2 DISCLAIMER: respondent has connections with Y&Y ------------------------------ From: Jonathan Dixon Date: Fri, 19 Jan 96 13:59:29 MST Subject: Re: TeXhax Digest V96 #2 You wrote: > From: "Dr. Ke Chen" > Date: Fri, 12 Jan 1996 17:11:18 +0800 (GMT+0800) > Subject: latex2e IEEEtran macro wanted. > > I found the previous IEEEtran.sty did not work in LaTex2e. Some days ago, > a person sent me his own new IEEEtran.sty but there are a few problems > such as that the title of section is always typeset with a small font, > etc. As a result, I would appreciate it if anyone could tell me where > a complete IEEEtran macro in latex2e is available. > > Ke Chen > > #========================================================================# > # Dr. Ke Chen, Associate Professor Tel: +86-10-2751935(O) # > # National Lab of Machine Perception +86-10-2585703(H) # > # The Center of Information Science Fax: +86-10-2563883,2552779 # > # Peking University Email: chen@cis.pku.edu.cn # > # Beijing 100871, China chenke@pku.edu.cn # > #========================================================================# I have a version I modified to make an IEEEtran.cls. I haven't tested it extensively, but for what I've done it seems to work. If someone can provide a place to post it to, I'd be more than willing to have it distributed. - -- Jon Dixon dixonj@colorado.edu http://spot.colorado.edu/~dixonj/ ------------------------------ From: "Dr. Ke Chen" Date: Mon, 22 Jan 1996 09:20:40 +0800 (GMT+0800) Subject: Re: TeXhax Digest V96 #2 On Fri, 19 Jan 1996, Jonathan Dixon wrote: > Date: Fri, 19 Jan 96 13:59:29 MST > From: Jonathan Dixon > To: TeXhax@tex.ac.uk > Cc: chen@cis.pku.edu.cn > Subject: Re: TeXhax Digest V96 #2 > > You wrote: > > From: "Dr. Ke Chen" > > Date: Fri, 12 Jan 1996 17:11:18 +0800 (GMT+0800) > > Subject: latex2e IEEEtran macro wanted. > > > > I found the previous IEEEtran.sty did not work in LaTex2e. Some days ago, > > a person sent me his own new IEEEtran.sty but there are a few problems > > such as that the title of section is always typeset with a small font, > > etc. As a result, I would appreciate it if anyone could tell me where > > a complete IEEEtran macro in latex2e is available. > > > > Ke Chen > > > I have a version I modified to make an IEEEtran.cls. I haven't tested it > extensively, but for what I've done it seems to work. If someone can > provide a place to post it to, I'd be more than willing to have it distributed. > > -- > Jon Dixon > dixonj@colorado.edu > http://spot.colorado.edu/~dixonj/ > Thanks very much for your kind response. I think you might upload it to CTAN archives. In addition, I would appreciate it if you would send this macro to me by email for my immediate use. Ke Chen #========================================================================# # Dr. Ke Chen, Associate Professor Tel: +86-10-2751935(O) # # National Lab of Machine Perception +86-10-2585703(H) # # The Center of Information Science Fax: +86-10-2563883,2552779 # # Peking University Email: chen@cis.pku.edu.cn # # Beijing 100871, China chenke@pku.edu.cn # #========================================================================# ------------------------------ From: dhlee@pearl.cs.pusan.ac.kr (DoHoon Lee) Date: Tue, 30 Jan 96 19:02:12 KST Subject: spell checker for sun(UNIX) I am looking for spell checker utility for LaTeX. Does anybody know where this be found ? Or If you have spell checker for LaTeX, please let me got it. Thanks in advance, Dohoon Lee ============================================================ Dept. of Computer Science Pusan National University Pusan 609-735, Korea dhlee@pearl.cs.pusan.ac.kr ============================================================ ------------------------------ From: Kris Lockyear Date: Tue, 30 Jan 1996 16:17:08 PST Subject: permille, fractions, space, \afterpage and procs Could anyone help me with five queries? The first two are perhaps simple, the last two I am unsure about. FYI I am using LaTeX2e with emTeX on a PC. 1) How can I get a permille sign (like a percent sign but with two zeros -- 0/00). I scanned the tables in The Companion and The Book but don't see it. 2) How can I get nice in-text fractions? By that I mean not 1/2 which $1/2$ would give you, or \frac{1}{2}, but a fraction where there is a small 1, a diagonal line and a small 2. (I usually use the Times package and a PS laserprinter). 3) I have a chapter which is nearly all text with some headings/sub-headings and footnotes. In places, LaTeX has increased the white space between paragraphs or around sub-headings in order to place a \section at the top of a page. This looks very ugly and I would rather have a little extra white space at the bottom of the page, than extra white space between paragraphs. Is there any way I can stop LaTeX adding this extra space? 4) In another chapter I have a lot of tables and figures. Following advice in The Companion, I often use \afterpage{\clearpage} to flush out the figures etc. Unfortunately, this occasionally results in a blank page with the header at the top, and a footnote at the bottom. Any suggestions? 5) Lastly, later this year I have to produce a set of conference proceedings. Could I have some pointers to classes/packages and/or articles which would enable me to do this in LaTeX2e. Specifically, including authors names and addresses in paper titles and the TOC etc. Many thanks in advance, Kris Lockyear. ------------------------------ From: Robin Fairbairns Date: Thu, 01 Feb 1996 14:36:53 +0000 Subject: Table of contents, TUGboat 16(2) It appears that we (the TUGboat production team) did not post this table of contents. Apologies to all ... TUGboat Volume 16, Number 2 / June 1995 Guest Editor: Malcolm Clark ================================ Addresses 99 General Delivery Michel~Goossens 101 Opening words Malcolm~Clark Introduction 101 Theme Issue on Portability of Electronic Documents Michel~Goossens and Janne~Saarela A practical introduction to SGML 103 Peter~Flynn HTML & TeX: Making them sweat 146 Geeti~Granger The inside story of life at Wiley with SGML, 151 LaTeX and Acrobat Mark~D.~Doyle The Los Alamos e-print archives: HyperTeX in action 154 Otfried~Schwarzkopf The Hyperlatex story 159 Yannis~Haralambous and Sebastian~Rahtz LaTeX, hypertext and PDF, or the entry of TeX into the world of hypertext 162 Michel~Goossens and Janne~Saarela TeX to HTML and back 174 News & Announcements Calendar 215 Late-Breaking News Mimi~Burbank and Barbara Beeton Production notes 100 Coming next issue TUG Business Institutional members 217 Forms TUG membership application Advertisements TeX consulting and production services 218 Index of advertisers 218 %%% end of file ------------------------------ From: Michel Goossens Date: Wed, 7 Feb 1996 00:44:11 +0100 (MET) Subject: Announcing TUG'96 in Dubna (Russia) July 28-Aug 2 1996 ====================================================================== The 17th Annual TeX Users Group Meeting polyglot polytechnic polymath POLY-TeX polymath polytechnic polyglot July 28-- August 2, 1996 in JINR, Dubna, Russia Organized jointly by: TUG, CyrTUG, JINR CALL FOR PAPERS ====================================================================== Dear TeX Friends! So the time has arrived when TeX, the Polyglot, who has for many years happily ``spoken'' many different languages written in the Latin alphabet, extends its knowledge in the field of other alphabets. During the Summer of 1996, a visit is planned to Russia where TeX will have its first practical session in Cyrillic. Russia is that large country, with its enormous spaces, inhabited by those enigmatic Russians, who started the century with a Revolution, and ended it with ``Perestroyka''. A country who founded a brilliant mathematical school, colonized the Cosmos, and conquered the world with its literature, music, and ballet. So what awaits the TeX user who plans to attend TUG'96? At Moscow's international Sheremetevo-2 Airport, conference participants will be met by a member of the organizing committee and escorted by bus to Dubna, where from July 28 to August 2, the 17th TUG conference will take place (see below for more about Dubna). If, for some reason or another, you envision cold, the taiga, and white bears, then we can reassure you, Dubna is in the European part of Russia, and if you want to see the ice on the nordic oceans, you will have to travel further than you would to reach the subtropics of the Black Sea shore. Indeed, you will soon find that the pine forest in which the comfortable town of Dubna is situated will remind you of a park. In July and August, the weather is mostly warm and sunny, with an average temperature of 28 degrees Centigrade. Guests will be housed in a comfortable hotel on the banks of the Volga river in single or double rooms (hot water, shower, telephone, and television). The Russian ``cuisine'' is characterized by its abundance, so one can forget about slimming. The social program includes a picnic on the picturesque banks of the Volga, where we will be taken by boat, a bus excursion to Sergiev Posad (the center of the Russian Orthodox Church, where Andrey Slephkhin works--- see his article on page 373 of TUGboat 16#4 or the EuroTeX'95 proceedings page 331), and, on the last day a visit to Moscow, following which the participants can be dropped of at the airport to fly home, or at one of the railway stations, if they want to prolong their visit. The conference's preliminary program will be announced as soon as we receive from you, dear readers, proposals for presentations, courses that you would like to teach or attend, poster sessions, or any problem(s) or subject(s) that interest you. Please send your suggestions to the conference electronic address TUG96@pds.jinr.ru ================= The theme of the Conference is: PolyTeX, TeX or the art of multi-lingual, maths and technical typesetting. polyglot polytechnic polymath POLY-TeX polymath polytechnic polyglot =================== PROGRAM COMMITTEE =================== Evgeniy Vasilievitch Pankratiev Moscow, Russia Email: pankrat@shade.msu.ru Michel Goossens Geneva, Switzerland Email: goossens@cern.ch Mimi Burbank Florida, USA Email: mimi@scri.fsu.edu =========== DEADLINES =========== Submission of abstracts February 20 <<<<<<< Acceptance signified to authors February 29 <<<<<<< Preliminary articles March 31 <<<<<<< Proposals for workshops, demos, and poster sessions April 20 Registration and transfer of a non-refundable sum of $100 per person to a Dubna bank May 31 Visa supporting information June 5 Revised articles June 10 <<<<<<< Start of Conference July 28 ====================== ORGANIZING COMMITTEE ====================== Vladimir Vasilievitch Korenkov Dubna, Russia Email: korenkov@cv.jinr.ru Irina Anatolievna Makhovaya Moscow, Russia Email: irina@mir.msk.su Sebastian Rahtz Oxford, UK Email: s.rahtz@elsevier.co.uk ====================== PRACTICAL INFORMATION ======================= - - ---------------- Conference costs - - ---------------- The Conference Committee foresees a cost in the range 550--600 USD. This sum includes the complete cost of the conference, namely the registration fee, lodging (6 nights with six breakfasts, lunches, and dinners), coffee/tea breaks, social events, and transport from Sheremetevo Airport to Dubna. The payment should be made in the following way: a `non-refundable' sum of $100 per person should be transferred to a bank account (to be announced) before June 1st. After receipt of that sum an official invitation, necessary for obtaining a visa (see below), will be faxed to the participant. The rest will be payable in cash upon arrival at the Conference (no credit cards or cheques can be used in Dubna). %For participants of economically weaker countries or for students %we hope to arrange partial support via sponsors. We hope to arrange bursary funds for support of students and those participants who demonstrate need. - - ----- Visas - - ----- Most of the visitors from outside Russia will need a visa to attend the Conference. Therefore, for arranging a visa into Russia, participants should inform the Mrs. N. Dokalenko, Conference Secretariat E-mail nataly@ypr.jinr.dubna.su; Fax 7 095 975 2381 or 7 09621 65 891 of their and (possibly) the accompanying person(s)'s full name, date of birth, citizenship, passport number, arrival and departure dates. The Secretariat will forward by fax the visa support message to the participants with which they should apply for visas to the nearest Russian Embassy or Consulate. Please note that you should apply for a visa valid for Dubna, Moscow, and Sergiev Posad. (If you plan to visit other cities in Russia you should obtain the relevant documents and join them to the visa application, so that the names of all places to be visited can be entered on the visa form as required.) - - -------------- Transportation - - -------------- The Organizing Committee will arrange direct transportation by bus from the Sheremetevo-2 Airport to Dubna (130 km north of Moscow). The Secretariat should be informed of the flight number, precise date and time of arrival (Moscow time) `no later than' four working days before a participant wishes to be met at the airport. It is our intention to have each participant met by a member of Organizing Committee. Details will be available later. ==================== WELCOME TO DUBNA ! ==================== Dubna was founded in 1956 when the Convention establishing the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research was signed. The town is situated on the picturesque banks of the Volga river and the Moscow sea 120 km to the north of Moscow. One can reach Dubna from Moscow within 2 hours going by car, by bus or by express train. It will take you 1.5 hours to go to Dubna from the Sheremetevo-2 International Airport. Waterways connect Dubna not only to the Russian Volga cities, but also to the waters of the Black, the Caspian, the Baltic and the White seas. There is no harmful environmental impact from the industrial plants; this together with the large tracts of forest in the environs of Dubna, and the vast water area dotted with small islands, makes the area quite attractive for tourism and rest. The Volga embankment is one of the prettiest parts of the town. In springtime, the streets of Dubna are full of the odour of lilacs, the apple trees are pink-white; in summer, lime trees, maples, birch trees and poplars make the town seem totally green; in autumn the town is all golden excepting the evergreen of old pine trees. The town's modern look harmonizes with the quietness of the surrounding forest. The town was built in the midst of a forest. There are separate patches of trees in the town itself, and the town park is just a part of the forest. It takes just a few minutes to get to the forest from the shopping centre on foot. A few minutes' walk and you are outside the city limits! Small as it is, Dubna is a real metropolis. It is a scientific metropolis. It is a ``big little city'', as a visiting American scientist called it many years ago. Since the foundation of the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR), the name of Dubna has constantly been in the pages of the world's newspapers and journals. Dubna is one of the world centres for fundamental research in nuclear physics. The Joint Institute plays an important role as a coordinator of investigations of the scientists from 18 JINR member-state institutes. Wide international scientific and technical cooperation is one of the fundamental concepts of the JINR. Dubna is indeed a town of international friendship. Foreign speech can be heard everywhere. But the words, no matter in which language they are pronounced, are clear to everybody: friendly cooperation and fraternity unite all the physicists and mathematicians living and working in Dubna into an international scientific community. On October 3, 1994, Dubna opened its doors to its first university, ``International University of Dubna: Nature, Society and Man''. The university is composed of five "cathedra" or faculties, including socioeconomic sciences, ecology and earth science, computer education, linguistics, and health and physical education. Two more faculties--- law and government and technology--- are also being contemplated. The town has great experience in holding international conferences, and exchanges of delegations between countries in the sphere of science, education and culture. Dubna and La Crosse, Wisconsin, USA, are sister cities. Dubna is famous for its hospitality. Famous scientists, public figures and statesmen from different countries visit Dubna. They are always impressed by the gracious welcome they receive in Dubna and warm generosity which Dubna residents demonstrate. ======================= A FEW WORDS ON MOSCOW ======================= Moscow, the capital of Russia, has a population of some nine million people. It is a city rich in cultural, architectural and historical monuments, and, at the same time, boasts a rapidly developing modern urban community with brand new blocks of flats, long, straight and broad avenues, parks, gardens, stadiums, schools, cinemas, department stores, recreation centres, bridges and highways. Though forward-looking, it cherishes the memory of its past, and its old sections lend it a special charm. Michel Goossens / TUG President ------------------------------ End of TeXhax Digest V96 #3 *************************** About TeXhax... 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