Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Maximilian Wollner
Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass this  
information to other users (as I often get to threads in this list  
when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X you  
can easily install both distributions and switch back and forth in  
the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with each other).  
However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more problems  
regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on Islam, so  
there are a lot of special characters...), so I will simply stick  
with XeTeX.


The problem with Hyperref as described is still the same, so no  
change there.


___
Matrikelnummer 0303098
A 296 / A 300
http://www.unet.univie.ac.at/~a0303098/php/





Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Bennett Helm

On Jan 23, 2008, at 1:41 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass  
this information to other users (as I often get to threads in this  
list when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X  
you can easily install both distributions and switch back and forth  
in the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with each  
other). However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more  
problems regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on  
Islam, so there are a lot of special characters...), so I will  
simply stick with XeTeX.


Actually, with recent versions of MacTeX, the gta font definitions  
are included.


Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Maximilian Wollner
Actually, on a MacTeX-Mailing list, where I sought for help, I got  
the advice to use gwTeX, because the gta fonts are not included in  
MacTeX (and I used the version of end of 2007)...


Max


Am 23.01.2008 um 20:09 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Jan 23, 2008, at 1:41 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass  
this information to other users (as I often get to threads in this  
list when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X  
you can easily install both distributions and switch back and  
forth in the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with  
each other). However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more  
problems regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on  
Islam, so there are a lot of special characters...), so I will  
simply stick with XeTeX.


Actually, with recent versions of MacTeX, the gta font definitions  
are included.


Bennett





Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Maximilian Wollner
Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass this  
information to other users (as I often get to threads in this list  
when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X you  
can easily install both distributions and switch back and forth in  
the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with each other).  
However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more problems  
regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on Islam, so  
there are a lot of special characters...), so I will simply stick  
with XeTeX.


The problem with Hyperref as described is still the same, so no  
change there.


___
Matrikelnummer 0303098
A 296 / A 300
http://www.unet.univie.ac.at/~a0303098/php/





Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Bennett Helm

On Jan 23, 2008, at 1:41 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass  
this information to other users (as I often get to threads in this  
list when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X  
you can easily install both distributions and switch back and forth  
in the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with each  
other). However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more  
problems regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on  
Islam, so there are a lot of special characters...), so I will  
simply stick with XeTeX.


Actually, with recent versions of MacTeX, the gta font definitions  
are included.


Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Maximilian Wollner
Actually, on a MacTeX-Mailing list, where I sought for help, I got  
the advice to use gwTeX, because the gta fonts are not included in  
MacTeX (and I used the version of end of 2007)...


Max


Am 23.01.2008 um 20:09 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Jan 23, 2008, at 1:41 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass  
this information to other users (as I often get to threads in this  
list when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X  
you can easily install both distributions and switch back and  
forth in the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with  
each other). However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more  
problems regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on  
Islam, so there are a lot of special characters...), so I will  
simply stick with XeTeX.


Actually, with recent versions of MacTeX, the gta font definitions  
are included.


Bennett





Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Maximilian Wollner
Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass this  
information to other users (as I often get to threads in this list  
when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X you  
can easily install both distributions and switch back and forth in  
the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with each other).  
However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more problems  
regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on Islam, so  
there are a lot of special characters...), so I will simply stick  
with XeTeX.


The problem with Hyperref as described is still the same, so no  
change there.


___
Matrikelnummer 0303098
A 296 / A 300
http://www.unet.univie.ac.at/~a0303098/php/





Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Bennett Helm

On Jan 23, 2008, at 1:41 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass  
this information to other users (as I often get to threads in this  
list when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X  
you can easily install both distributions and switch back and forth  
in the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with each  
other). However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more  
problems regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on  
Islam, so there are a lot of special characters...), so I will  
simply stick with XeTeX.


Actually, with recent versions of MacTeX, the gta font definitions  
are included.


Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2008-01-23 Thread Maximilian Wollner
Actually, on a MacTeX-Mailing list, where I sought for help, I got  
the advice to use gwTeX, because the gta fonts are not included in  
MacTeX (and I used the version of end of 2007)...


Max


Am 23.01.2008 um 20:09 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Jan 23, 2008, at 1:41 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Sorry for pushing this old thread but I have found some hints, why  
the problems mentioned appeared and I consider it useful to pass  
this information to other users (as I often get to threads in this  
list when searching for a problem via search engines).


To use gtamachoefler, gtamacdidot and the others, one needs to use  
gwTeX and not MacTeX (though both are based on TeXLive). On OS X  
you can easily install both distributions and switch back and  
forth in the systems preference pane (they don't conflict with  
each other). However, using gwTeX and gtamachoefler made even more  
problems regarding special characters (I am writing a thesis on  
Islam, so there are a lot of special characters...), so I will  
simply stick with XeTeX.


Actually, with recent versions of MacTeX, the gta font definitions  
are included.


Bennett





Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-10 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 08.12.2007 um 09:14 schrieb Maximilian Wollner:


Until a few days ago I had a TeX installation from around two (or  
more) years ago (a gwTeX) and a MacTeX from early 2007, in the  
systems preferences the TeXlive 2007 was selected. I removed gwTeX,  
removed (as much as I could) from the MacTeX and installed the  
latest MacTeX; at least I managed to have only one possible TeX  
distribution in systems preferences. Well... I think I'll install  
the latest MacTeX on my girlfriends iBook (which is absolutely TeX- 
free so far) and then I'll see, whether I have to clean up my  
hidden folders (and all possible files of earlier distributions)  
that might cause a conflict.


Ok, I tried that now on my girlsfriends' Mac and got the same error.  
It seems that without further setting up (probably something like  
this: http://tug.org/mactex/pracjourn/wierda_2006-1.pdf) this won't  
work. So I'll simply stick with either the LaTeX fonts (which are not  
too beautiful, but that's a very individual question) or with XeTeX  
(which would mean to not be able to use many regular TeX packages,  
right? Like hyperref, microtype, ...?)


(Or, I'll do the steps described in that pdf. But I can't bother with  
that now, since I've got too much else going on.)


Greetings from Vienna,

Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-10 Thread Nick and Anne Hopton

Maximilian Wollner wrote:

I'll simply stick with either the LaTeX fonts (which are not too 
beautiful, but that's a very individual question) or with XeTeX (which 
would mean to not be able to use many regular TeX packages, right? Like 
hyperref, microtype, ...?)


Hyperref seems to work perfectly well with xelatex here, using MiKTeX 
2.7 under XP(SP2). The document needs at least two passes through xelatex.


Regards,
Nick.

--
Nick and Anne Hopton, Caversham, Reading, England.


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-10 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 08.12.2007 um 09:14 schrieb Maximilian Wollner:


Until a few days ago I had a TeX installation from around two (or  
more) years ago (a gwTeX) and a MacTeX from early 2007, in the  
systems preferences the TeXlive 2007 was selected. I removed gwTeX,  
removed (as much as I could) from the MacTeX and installed the  
latest MacTeX; at least I managed to have only one possible TeX  
distribution in systems preferences. Well... I think I'll install  
the latest MacTeX on my girlfriends iBook (which is absolutely TeX- 
free so far) and then I'll see, whether I have to clean up my  
hidden folders (and all possible files of earlier distributions)  
that might cause a conflict.


Ok, I tried that now on my girlsfriends' Mac and got the same error.  
It seems that without further setting up (probably something like  
this: http://tug.org/mactex/pracjourn/wierda_2006-1.pdf) this won't  
work. So I'll simply stick with either the LaTeX fonts (which are not  
too beautiful, but that's a very individual question) or with XeTeX  
(which would mean to not be able to use many regular TeX packages,  
right? Like hyperref, microtype, ...?)


(Or, I'll do the steps described in that pdf. But I can't bother with  
that now, since I've got too much else going on.)


Greetings from Vienna,

Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-10 Thread Nick and Anne Hopton

Maximilian Wollner wrote:

I'll simply stick with either the LaTeX fonts (which are not too 
beautiful, but that's a very individual question) or with XeTeX (which 
would mean to not be able to use many regular TeX packages, right? Like 
hyperref, microtype, ...?)


Hyperref seems to work perfectly well with xelatex here, using MiKTeX 
2.7 under XP(SP2). The document needs at least two passes through xelatex.


Regards,
Nick.

--
Nick and Anne Hopton, Caversham, Reading, England.


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-10 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 08.12.2007 um 09:14 schrieb Maximilian Wollner:


Until a few days ago I had a TeX installation from around two (or  
more) years ago (a gwTeX) and a MacTeX from early 2007, in the  
systems preferences the TeXlive 2007 was selected. I removed gwTeX,  
removed (as much as I could) from the MacTeX and installed the  
latest MacTeX; at least I managed to have only one possible TeX  
distribution in systems preferences. Well... I think I'll install  
the latest MacTeX on my girlfriends iBook (which is absolutely TeX- 
free so far) and then I'll see, whether I have to clean up my  
hidden folders (and all possible files of earlier distributions)  
that might cause a conflict.


Ok, I tried that now on my girlsfriends' Mac and got the same error.  
It seems that without further setting up (probably something like  
this: http://tug.org/mactex/pracjourn/wierda_2006-1.pdf) this won't  
work. So I'll simply stick with either the LaTeX fonts (which are not  
too beautiful, but that's a very individual question) or with XeTeX  
(which would mean to not be able to use many regular TeX packages,  
right? Like hyperref, microtype, ...?)


(Or, I'll do the steps described in that pdf. But I can't bother with  
that now, since I've got too much else going on.)


Greetings from Vienna,

Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-10 Thread Nick and Anne Hopton

Maximilian Wollner wrote:

I'll simply stick with either the LaTeX fonts (which are not too 
beautiful, but that's a very individual question) or with XeTeX (which 
would mean to not be able to use many regular TeX packages, right? Like 
hyperref, microtype, ...?)


Hyperref seems to work perfectly well with xelatex here, using MiKTeX 
2.7 under XP(SP2). The document needs at least two passes through xelatex.


Regards,
Nick.

--
Nick and Anne Hopton, Caversham, Reading, England.


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-08 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 08.12.2007 um 01:07 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:44 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive.  
Then you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX  
but I still get the same error message. What can I do?
If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from  
somewhere.

Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/ 
gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/ 
tex/latex folder but apart from another local-folder (which is  
empty) inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not gtamacfonts  
folder whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with  
that name either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me  
not running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an  
administrators account to install MacTeX...


Doesn't the MacTeX installer require an administrative password to  
work? (Otherwise it wouldn't be able to write files to /usr/local.)  
If you really installed the latest MacTeX -- available here:


http://www.tug.org/mactex/

-- then gtamacfonts are installed.

(Note that Spotlight doesn't index folders that are normally hidden  
by the Finder, including everything in /usr. So you shouldn't  
expect Spotlight to find it.)


I know. Sometimes, however, it does find hidden folders, this way I  
found the texmf-local folder (with exactly that path). Anyway :)




Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not  
find it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)


Note that i-Installer is now unsupported software, and people are  
instead encouraged to use MacTeX. I haven't used i-Installer for  
over a year now, but it did include gtamacfonts as a part of its  
standard teTeX/gwTeX installation. (Gerben Wierda was behind the  
development of gtamacfonts, and the g is for Gerben.)


Yes, however, it's still part of MacTeX (and recommended for, say,  
uninstall). I thought that I might easily install single packages via  
i-installer (eg. the needed gtamac...).




I wonder if you have multiple TeX installations. You can check by  
going to System Preferences and clicking on the TeX Distribution  
icon in the Other category. Make sure TeXLive-2007 is selected.


Until a few days ago I had a TeX installation from around two (or  
more) years ago (a gwTeX) and a MacTeX from early 2007, in the  
systems preferences the TeXlive 2007 was selected. I removed gwTeX,  
removed (as much as I could) from the MacTeX and installed the latest  
MacTeX; at least I managed to have only one possible TeX distribution  
in systems preferences. Well... I think I'll install the latest  
MacTeX on my girlfriends iBook (which is absolutely TeX-free so far)  
and then I'll see, whether I have to clean up my hidden folders (and  
all possible files of earlier distributions) that might cause a  
conflict.




Bennett


You're my man, Bennett :) If you are fed up or bored, don't worry,  
I'll simply use XeTeX then. Nevertheless, thank you for your patience  
and help,


Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-08 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 08.12.2007 um 01:07 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:44 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive.  
Then you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX  
but I still get the same error message. What can I do?
If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from  
somewhere.

Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/ 
gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/ 
tex/latex folder but apart from another local-folder (which is  
empty) inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not gtamacfonts  
folder whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with  
that name either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me  
not running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an  
administrators account to install MacTeX...


Doesn't the MacTeX installer require an administrative password to  
work? (Otherwise it wouldn't be able to write files to /usr/local.)  
If you really installed the latest MacTeX -- available here:


http://www.tug.org/mactex/

-- then gtamacfonts are installed.

(Note that Spotlight doesn't index folders that are normally hidden  
by the Finder, including everything in /usr. So you shouldn't  
expect Spotlight to find it.)


I know. Sometimes, however, it does find hidden folders, this way I  
found the texmf-local folder (with exactly that path). Anyway :)




Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not  
find it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)


Note that i-Installer is now unsupported software, and people are  
instead encouraged to use MacTeX. I haven't used i-Installer for  
over a year now, but it did include gtamacfonts as a part of its  
standard teTeX/gwTeX installation. (Gerben Wierda was behind the  
development of gtamacfonts, and the g is for Gerben.)


Yes, however, it's still part of MacTeX (and recommended for, say,  
uninstall). I thought that I might easily install single packages via  
i-installer (eg. the needed gtamac...).




I wonder if you have multiple TeX installations. You can check by  
going to System Preferences and clicking on the TeX Distribution  
icon in the Other category. Make sure TeXLive-2007 is selected.


Until a few days ago I had a TeX installation from around two (or  
more) years ago (a gwTeX) and a MacTeX from early 2007, in the  
systems preferences the TeXlive 2007 was selected. I removed gwTeX,  
removed (as much as I could) from the MacTeX and installed the latest  
MacTeX; at least I managed to have only one possible TeX distribution  
in systems preferences. Well... I think I'll install the latest  
MacTeX on my girlfriends iBook (which is absolutely TeX-free so far)  
and then I'll see, whether I have to clean up my hidden folders (and  
all possible files of earlier distributions) that might cause a  
conflict.




Bennett


You're my man, Bennett :) If you are fed up or bored, don't worry,  
I'll simply use XeTeX then. Nevertheless, thank you for your patience  
and help,


Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-08 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 08.12.2007 um 01:07 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:44 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive.  
Then you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX  
but I still get the same error message. What can I do?
If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from  
somewhere.

Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/ 
gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/ 
tex/latex folder but apart from another "local"-folder (which is  
empty) inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not "gtamacfonts"  
folder whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with  
that name either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me  
not running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an  
administrators account to install MacTeX...


Doesn't the MacTeX installer require an administrative password to  
work? (Otherwise it wouldn't be able to write files to /usr/local.)  
If you really installed the latest MacTeX -- available here:




-- then gtamacfonts are installed.

(Note that Spotlight doesn't index folders that are normally hidden  
by the Finder, including everything in /usr. So you shouldn't  
expect Spotlight to find it.)


I know. Sometimes, however, it does find hidden folders, this way I  
found the texmf-local folder (with exactly that path). Anyway :)




Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not  
find it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)


Note that i-Installer is now unsupported software, and people are  
instead encouraged to use MacTeX. I haven't used i-Installer for  
over a year now, but it did include gtamacfonts as a part of its  
standard teTeX/gwTeX installation. (Gerben Wierda was behind the  
development of gtamacfonts, and the "g" is for Gerben.)


Yes, however, it's still part of MacTeX (and recommended for, say,  
uninstall). I thought that I might easily install single packages via  
i-installer (eg. the needed gtamac...).




I wonder if you have multiple TeX installations. You can check by  
going to System Preferences and clicking on the "TeX Distribution"  
icon in the "Other" category. Make sure TeXLive-2007 is selected.


Until a few days ago I had a TeX installation from around two (or  
more) years ago (a gwTeX) and a MacTeX from early 2007, in the  
systems preferences the TeXlive 2007 was selected. I removed gwTeX,  
removed (as much as I could) from the MacTeX and installed the latest  
MacTeX; at least I managed to have only one possible TeX distribution  
in systems preferences. Well... I think I'll install the latest  
MacTeX on my girlfriends iBook (which is absolutely TeX-free so far)  
and then I'll see, whether I have to clean up my hidden folders (and  
all possible files of earlier distributions) that might cause a  
conflict.




Bennett


You're my man, Bennett :) If you are fed up or bored, don't worry,  
I'll simply use XeTeX then. Nevertheless, thank you for your patience  
and help,


Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Helge Hafting

Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Am 05.12.2007 um 02:01 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a 
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except 
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my 
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my last 
entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs. 
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering 
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link 
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it 
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where 
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not 
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if it 
would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to 
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as an 
option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.


I forgot to write that I tried this out as well (as well as all other 
options I could find in the hyperref manual). I have also tried to 
play around with \hypersetup and it still did not work.


Which is not to bad, if this would work:



By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard 
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then you 
can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX. I 
tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I 
still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.

Helge Hafting


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:44 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive.  
Then you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but  
I still get the same error message. What can I do?
If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from  
somewhere.

Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/ 
gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/ 
latex folder but apart from another local-folder (which is empty)  
inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not gtamacfonts folder  
whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with that name  
either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me not  
running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an administrators  
account to install MacTeX...


Doesn't the MacTeX installer require an administrative password to  
work? (Otherwise it wouldn't be able to write files to /usr/local.)  
If you really installed the latest MacTeX -- available here:


http://www.tug.org/mactex/

-- then gtamacfonts are installed.

(Note that Spotlight doesn't index folders that are normally hidden  
by the Finder, including everything in /usr. So you shouldn't expect  
Spotlight to find it.)


Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not  
find it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)


Note that i-Installer is now unsupported software, and people are  
instead encouraged to use MacTeX. I haven't used i-Installer for over  
a year now, but it did include gtamacfonts as a part of its standard  
teTeX/gwTeX installation. (Gerben Wierda was behind the development  
of gtamacfonts, and the g is for Gerben.)


I wonder if you have multiple TeX installations. You can check by  
going to System Preferences and clicking on the TeX Distribution  
icon in the Other category. Make sure TeXLive-2007 is selected.


Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but  
I still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/ 
latex folder but apart from another local-folder (which is empty)  
inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not gtamacfonts folder  
whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with that name  
either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me not  
running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an administrators  
account to install MacTeX...




(Are you sure you didn't mistype it into your preamble?)


Absolutely, I checked that several times.



Bennett


Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not find  
it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)

Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX.  
I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I  
still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/gtamachoefler.sty

(Are you sure you didn't mistype it into your preamble?)

Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Helge Hafting

Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Am 05.12.2007 um 02:01 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a 
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except 
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my 
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my last 
entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs. 
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering 
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link 
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it 
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where 
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not 
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if it 
would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to 
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as an 
option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.


I forgot to write that I tried this out as well (as well as all other 
options I could find in the hyperref manual). I have also tried to 
play around with \hypersetup and it still did not work.


Which is not to bad, if this would work:



By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard 
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then you 
can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX. I 
tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I 
still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.

Helge Hafting


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:44 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive.  
Then you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but  
I still get the same error message. What can I do?
If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from  
somewhere.

Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/ 
gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/ 
latex folder but apart from another local-folder (which is empty)  
inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not gtamacfonts folder  
whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with that name  
either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me not  
running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an administrators  
account to install MacTeX...


Doesn't the MacTeX installer require an administrative password to  
work? (Otherwise it wouldn't be able to write files to /usr/local.)  
If you really installed the latest MacTeX -- available here:


http://www.tug.org/mactex/

-- then gtamacfonts are installed.

(Note that Spotlight doesn't index folders that are normally hidden  
by the Finder, including everything in /usr. So you shouldn't expect  
Spotlight to find it.)


Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not  
find it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)


Note that i-Installer is now unsupported software, and people are  
instead encouraged to use MacTeX. I haven't used i-Installer for over  
a year now, but it did include gtamacfonts as a part of its standard  
teTeX/gwTeX installation. (Gerben Wierda was behind the development  
of gtamacfonts, and the g is for Gerben.)


I wonder if you have multiple TeX installations. You can check by  
going to System Preferences and clicking on the TeX Distribution  
icon in the Other category. Make sure TeXLive-2007 is selected.


Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but  
I still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/ 
latex folder but apart from another local-folder (which is empty)  
inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not gtamacfonts folder  
whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with that name  
either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me not  
running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an administrators  
account to install MacTeX...




(Are you sure you didn't mistype it into your preamble?)


Absolutely, I checked that several times.



Bennett


Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not find  
it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)

Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX.  
I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I  
still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/gtamachoefler.sty

(Are you sure you didn't mistype it into your preamble?)

Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Helge Hafting

Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Am 05.12.2007 um 02:01 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a 
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except 
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my 
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my last 
entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs. 
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering 
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link 
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it 
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where 
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not 
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if it 
would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to 
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as an 
option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.


I forgot to write that I tried this out as well (as well as all other 
options I could find in the hyperref manual). I have also tried to 
play around with \hypersetup and it still did not work.


Which is not to bad, if this would work:



By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard 
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then you 
can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX. I 
tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I 
still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.

Helge Hafting


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:44 PM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:

Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive.  
Then you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but  
I still get the same error message. What can I do?
If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from  
somewhere.

Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/ 
gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/ 
latex folder but apart from another "local"-folder (which is empty)  
inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not "gtamacfonts" folder  
whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with that name  
either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me not  
running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an administrators  
account to install MacTeX...


Doesn't the MacTeX installer require an administrative password to  
work? (Otherwise it wouldn't be able to write files to /usr/local.)  
If you really installed the latest MacTeX -- available here:




-- then gtamacfonts are installed.

(Note that Spotlight doesn't index folders that are normally hidden  
by the Finder, including everything in /usr. So you shouldn't expect  
Spotlight to find it.)


Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not  
find it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)


Note that i-Installer is now unsupported software, and people are  
instead encouraged to use MacTeX. I haven't used i-Installer for over  
a year now, but it did include gtamacfonts as a part of its standard  
teTeX/gwTeX installation. (Gerben Wierda was behind the development  
of gtamacfonts, and the "g" is for Gerben.)


I wonder if you have multiple TeX installations. You can check by  
going to System Preferences and clicking on the "TeX Distribution"  
icon in the "Other" category. Make sure TeXLive-2007 is selected.


Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 07.12.2007 um 22:05 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use  
XeTeX. I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but  
I still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/gtamachoefler.sty


Well, that's strange, I've got a /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/ 
latex folder but apart from another "local"-folder (which is empty)  
inside it, that folder is empty, too. So not "gtamacfonts" folder  
whatsoever. Indeed, Spotlight can't find any folder with that name  
either.
Just a stupid question: it does not have to do anything with me not  
running an admin user, does it? Nor did I use an administrators  
account to install MacTeX...




(Are you sure you didn't mistype it into your preamble?)


Absolutely, I checked that several times.



Bennett


Anyway, I tried to find the package via i-installer (but did not find  
it, probably I lack the proper search term. There is a Font  
Utilities.pkg but when I launch it, it tells me that it's going to  
install MacTeX 2006 (so I aborted it).


Thanks again for your help and your patience :)

Max


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-07 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 7, 2007, at 5:38 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:


Maximilian Wollner wrote:


By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your  
standard font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX.  
I tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I  
still get the same error message. What can I do?

If you don't have this gtamachoefler.sty, download it from somewhere.
Not as a part of the latest MacTex, but as a separate package.


But it *is* a part of the latest MacTeX; it can be found at:

/usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/tex/latex/gtamacfonts/gtamachoefler.sty

(Are you sure you didn't mistype it into your preamble?)

Bennett


Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-05 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 05.12.2007 um 02:01 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a  
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except  
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my  
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my  
last entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs.  
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering  
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link  
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it  
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where  
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not  
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if  
it would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to  
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as  
an option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.


I forgot to write that I tried this out as well (as well as all other  
options I could find in the hyperref manual). I have also tried to  
play around with \hypersetup and it still did not work.


Which is not to bad, if this would work:



By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard  
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX. I  
tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I  
still get the same error message. What can I do?




Bennett


Thanks for your help,
greetings from Vienna,

Max

Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-05 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 05.12.2007 um 02:01 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a  
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except  
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my  
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my  
last entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs.  
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering  
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link  
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it  
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where  
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not  
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if  
it would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to  
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as  
an option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.


I forgot to write that I tried this out as well (as well as all other  
options I could find in the hyperref manual). I have also tried to  
play around with \hypersetup and it still did not work.


Which is not to bad, if this would work:



By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard  
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX. I  
tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I  
still get the same error message. What can I do?




Bennett


Thanks for your help,
greetings from Vienna,

Max

Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-05 Thread Maximilian Wollner


Am 05.12.2007 um 02:01 schrieb Bennett Helm:


On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a  
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except  
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my  
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my  
last entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs.  
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering  
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link  
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it  
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where  
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not  
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if  
it would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to  
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as  
an option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.


I forgot to write that I tried this out as well (as well as all other  
options I could find in the hyperref manual). I have also tried to  
play around with \hypersetup and it still did not work.


Which is not to bad, if this would work:



By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard  
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then  
you can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Yes, Hoefler Text is (so far) the only reason for me to use XeTeX. I  
tried to put the command in my preamble but got an error:


LaTeX Error: File `gtamachoefler.sty' not found.

Then I installed the latest MacTeX package, reconfigured LyX but I  
still get the same error message. What can I do?




Bennett


Thanks for your help,
greetings from Vienna,

Max

Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-04 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a  
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except  
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my  
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my  
last entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs.  
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering  
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link  
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it  
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where  
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not  
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if  
it would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to  
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as an  
option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.

By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard  
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then you  
can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Bennett

Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-04 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a  
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except  
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my  
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my  
last entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs.  
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering  
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link  
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it  
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where  
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not  
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if  
it would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to  
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as an  
option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.

By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard  
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then you  
can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Bennett

Re: XeTeX and Hyperref

2007-12-04 Thread Bennett Helm

On Dec 4, 2007, at 2:32 AM, Maximilian Wollner wrote:


Hello,


I am using LyX 1.5.2 on a PPC Mac and XeTeX to be able to use a  
system font (Hoefler Text). So far, everything works fine, except  
for Hyperref. Following the orders from the wiki I put this in my  
preamble (and following a suggestion on the XeTeX list, it's my  
last entry in my LyX-Preamble):


\usepackage[dvipdfm]{hyperref} % Sorgt für Verlinkung in PDFs.  
Funktioniert gegenwärtig nicht mit XeTeX.


And it does work to some degree. Eg. it does make links (hovering  
over one with the mouse changes the mouse pointer to a “link  
pointer” and a “content outline” (don't know how you call it  
properly, that thing eg. in Acrobat Reader on the left side where  
you can directly click on chapters, sections etc.) but I can not  
actually click on any of them; if I do nothing happens.


Now, I think I could live without Hyperref but would be happy, if  
it would work. Any suggestions here?


It turns out hyperref has changed how they do things so as to  
accommodate XeTeX. Now instead of calling hyperref with dvipdfm as an  
option, you should call it with xetex as an option:


\usepackage[xetex]{hyperref}

I've updated the wiki page to reflect this change.

By the way, if all you want is to use Hoefler Text as your standard  
font, you can accomplish this using


\usepackage[osf]{gtamachoefler}

in your preamble (at least with recent versions of texlive. Then you  
can typeset using pdflatex and so use microtype, e.g.


Bennett