Adam Lindsay wrote:
Adobe Reader 7.0 is out.
ah, great, they changed the user interface again, imagine that over the last
5000 years the way of using books has changed each year ...
Hans
-
Micha Morawski wrote:
So I hope, it is not very difficult to include this possibilities into
Context. Am I right?
no; actually i have it someplace on my machine, but since svg support was rather
bugged in acrobat 6 the code never made it into the distribution; i'll have a
look at it
Hans
The one good thing about working with Acroread under Linux is that the
interface doesn't change. Ever.
Taco
Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Adobe Reader 7.0 is out.
ah, great, they changed the user interface again, imagine that over the last
5000 years the
Micha Morawski wrote:
PDF supports SVG graphic starting from version 5 of Acrobat (according
adobe)
I would like to obtain effects similar to
http://www.learnsvg.com/pdf/chapter09_svg.pdf
So I hope, it is not very difficult to include this possibilities into
Context. Am I right?
do you know an
Taco Hoekwater wrote:
The one good thing about working with Acroread under Linux is that the
interface doesn't change. Ever.
well, somehow i got the feeling that this time for windows users updating does
not bring anything really new
the only happy users will be mac users who now have proper
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote :
\appendtoks
\livesupsub@
\to\everymath
in t-nath.tex after the definition of livesupsub@ and
killsupsub@
Hmm... It seemed to work at first, but it just moved the problem. Now
it's (\sum) limits that are typeset like in inline style.
Maybe Hans has some
David Munger wrote:
Maybe Hans has some suggestion for a better solution: the
problem is that the mathcode is ignored for characters with
code 7 or 8 (sup- or subscript). So I'm currently changing the
catcode of ^ and _ when entering mathmode.
I hope he has!
wel, then make me a zip with
(1) the
Also, Acrobat Reader 7 starts up much faster than AR 6 on Mac.
On Thu, 23 Dec 2004, Hans Hagen wrote:
Taco Hoekwater wrote:
The one good thing about working with Acroread under Linux is that the
interface doesn't change. Ever.
well, somehow i got the feeling that this time for windows users