DongHo Kim wrote: > > unscribe For unsubscribing have a look at the "Welcome..."-MSG you received at subscription. Frank -- | Frank Busse, mech. engineer | mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] | | ACCESS Materials Science | http://www.access.rwth-aachen.de | | Intzestr. 5 | tel: +49 (0)241-806721 | | D-52072 Aachen (Germany) | fax: +49 (0)241-38578 |
-- Welcome to the latex2html mailing list! If you ever want to remove yourself from this mailing list, send the following command in email to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]": unsubscribe Or you can send mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" with the following command in the body of your email message: unsubscribe latex2html [EMAIL PROTECTED] Here's the general information for the list you've subscribed to, in case you don't already have it: [Last updated on: Wed Nov 6 18:19:48 1996] LaTeX2HTML info: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Last update: 6 Nov 96 by JCL <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Welcome to the LaTeX2HTML mailing list! -------------------------------------- If you would like to discuss features of LaTeX2HTML, report problems or solutions, or just want to participate in the ongoing evolution of LaTeX -> HTML conversion, you're the right one to join in! To join the list, send mail with empty subject and subscribe latex2html [<address>] in the body to [EMAIL PROTECTED] This will subscribe yourself (or <address> if specified) to the mailing list. To quit the list, send mail with empy subject and unsubscribe latex2html [<address>] in the body to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For more information, send mail with empty subject and help in the body to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To send an article to the list, send it to [EMAIL PROTECTED] If you have trouble with list operations, contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] The articles posted to this list are archived! Do a search on them, or browse them, at http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/latex2html INTRO ----- LaTeX2HTML was initially developed by Nikos Drakos, University of Leeds <http://cbl.leeds.ac.uk/nikos/>. LaTeX2HTML is a package which can be used to translate documents from LaTeX to HTML. If you already knew this, skip the rest of the intro. LaTeX2HTML is a conversion tool that allows documents written in LaTeX to become part of the World-Wide Web. In addition, it offers an easy migration path towards authoring complex hyper-media documents using familiar word-processing concepts. LaTeX2HTML replicates the basic structure of a LaTeX document as a set of interconnected HTML files which can be explored using automatically generated navigation panels. The cross-references, citations, footnotes, the table-of-contents and the lists of figures and tables, are also translated into hypertext links. Formatting information which has equivalent ``tags'' in HTML (lists, quotes, paragraph-breaks, type-styles, etc.) is also converted appropriately. The remaining heavily formatted items such as mathematical equations, pictures or tables are converted to images which are placed automatically at the correct positions in the final HTML document. LaTeX2HTML extends LaTeX by supporting arbitrary hypertext links and symbolic cross-references between evolving remote documents. It also allows the specification of conditional text and the inclusion of raw HTML commands. These hyper-media extensions to LaTeX are available as new commands and environments from within a LaTeX document. LATEST VERSION -------------- The latest version of latex2html, 98.1p1 is available from the release site http://www-dsed.llnl.gov/files/programs/unix/latex2html/ ftp://www-dsed.llnl.gov/files/programs/unix/latex2html/ Also note that the displayed page in the sources subdirectory contains the release history information and lists of known bugs in 98.1p1 (this is just a README file that your http browser autodisplays). 98.1p1 will propagate to the mirrors shortly. See the release information on what has been fixed (thanks to Ross' and other's efforts). This release is a complete release version and fixes many of the common bugs that were discovered in 98.1 Also note that latex2html-95* and -96* are archived in the PREVIOUS subdirectory for historical reasons. Mirror sites shouldn't bother getting those files. ARCHIVES -------- This revision and elder revisions may be obtained from one of the following sites: The main archive: ftp://www-dsed.llnl.gov/files/programs/unix/latex2html/sources http://www-dsed.llnl.gov/files/programs/unix/latex2html/sources Mirrors: http://www.rzg.mpg.de/rzg/software/latex2html ftp://ftp.rzg.mpg.de/pub/soft/latex2html ftp://ftp.th-darmstadt.de/pub/tex/src/latex2html ftp://ftp.cma.fr/pub/unix/Tools/latex2html/ MANUAL ------ The manual of LaTeX2HTML is part of the package, both in printed form (manual.ps) and as LaTeX document. Translate the LaTeX document with LaTeX2HTML to retrieve a full-fledged HTML online manual. The online manual may be viewed at: http://www-dsed.llnl.gov/files/programs/unix/latex2html/manual/ http://cbl.leeds.ac.uk/nikos/tex2html/doc/latex2html/ (Warning: The data transfer might have glacial speed, for frequent references anyway it's better to produce your own online version.) Archived and compressed versions of the manual can be obtained from the mirror sites. FURTHER SUPPORT --------------- To get problems with LaTeX2HTML solved you might want to listen/talk to other groups than the mailing list. Valuable support may be gained from - the comp.text.tex newsgroup or the TeX mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] (they are ported one to another) - the comp.lang.perl.misc (much traffic!) or <country>.comp.lang.perl, the perl newsgroup local to your country - the Perl home page <http://www.perl.com> - support for various browsers (Netscape, etc.) and related problems can be found in the newsgroups comp.infosystems.www.browsers.x comp.infosystems.www.browsers.mac comp.infosystems.www.browsers.misc comp.infosystems.www.browsers.ms-windows watch out for local newsgroups also! - discussion/support for questions on HTML standards is in comp.infosystems.www.authoring.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------
