Thanks to everyone, I have solved the problem.
I succeeded by installing the package latex2html, which includes the file
html.sty.
NOTE THAT THE FILE html.sty LISTED IN A PREVIOUS MAIL IS NOT VALID BECAUSE I
GOT THE
FILE typehtml.sty FROM ANOTHER SYSTEM AND RENAMED IT TO html.sty TO CHECK
IF
Hi,
I don't know a thing about the debian-guide package and this answer seems
obvious so
forgive me if I'm offbase here.
I see html.sty in the directory you listed but the permissions are wrong. Doing
a
'chmod o+r html.sty' in that directory should fix your problem.
Chris Schleifer
Manuel
On Fri, Nov 05, 1999 at 03:50:55AM +, Chris Schleifer wrote:
Now you can compile the file debian-tutorial.tex by using latex. In my
linux box the
compiling process stops because the file html.sty is not installed. Where
can this
file by obtained from? Is it available in any
On Fri, Nov 05, 1999 at 03:50:55AM +, Chris Schleifer wrote:
Now you can compile the file debian-tutorial.tex by using latex. In my
linux box the
compiling process stops because the file html.sty is not installed. Where
can this
file by obtained from? Is it available in any
Manuel Arenaz Silva ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
1) How can I know the source package name from the output of the command dpkg
--print-avail debian-guide?
I don't understand the question. debian-guide isn't a binary package,
so I don't think it would have useful source code...?
2) I have been
I have downloaded the sources of the Debian linux documentation in the format
.tar.bz2. While compiling the .tex file using the default slink Latex2e, the
compiler
couldn't found the file html.sty. Where can I found this file? Do I have to
install any new package?
Thanks in advance
I've tried some three times to get a book compressed in that bz2 format
uncomperessed to a readable version. But no LaTex, TeX or LyX ever could
read that stuff.
Is there something in general wrong with that bz2 format or are there
available some brand new TeX formats, which no Slink latex
J.H.M. Dassen (Ray) wrote:
On Fri, Oct 29, 1999 at 21:21:32 +0200, Manuel Arenaz Silva wrote:
Where can I download the Latex/EPS source of this package from?
Same as with all source: do a dpkg --print-avail on the package so you have
the source package name, and download that from your
I have installed the package debian-guide from the unstable distribution
in slink and every has gone right.
Now I would like to build the postscript file by myself in order to
change some appearance features. Where can I download the Latex/EPS
source of this package from?
Thanks in advance,
On Fri, Oct 29, 1999 at 21:21:32 +0200, Manuel Arenaz Silva wrote:
Where can I download the Latex/EPS source of this package from?
Same as with all source: do a dpkg --print-avail on the package so you have
the source package name, and download that from your friendly neighbourhood
mirror. Or
Dear Manuel,
If you want to take prints of books put out on the web, I would recommend
is using netscape with a -remote option. Check out man netscape.
PAI
On Thu, Oct 21, 1999 at 17:21:18 +0200, Manuel Arenaz Silva wrote:
This command generates a file tree with a lot of html and gif files. My
question is: Is there any tool to generate a postscript file (for example)
starting from all those files?
There is: htmldoc. Unfortunately, it's a
On Fri, 22 Oct 1999, Shaul Karl wrote:
Another option is http://www2.newriders.com/cfm/prod_book.cfm?RecordID=585 ;
the real source to it is available, and it's fairly easy to produce a
PostScript file from it.
Not Found
The requested URL /debian/debian-guide.tar.bz2 was not found
Available Optional packages in section doc
debian-guide - Text from: Debian GNU/Linux: Guide to Installation and Usage
This package will install the full text in HTML and PostScript formats from
the book Debian GNU/Linux: Guide to Installation and Usage by Debian
developers John Goerzen and
On Fri, 22 Oct 1999, Shaul Karl wrote:
Available Optional packages in section doc
debian-guide - Text from: Debian GNU/Linux: Guide to Installation and Usage
This package will install the full text in HTML and PostScript formats from
the book Debian GNU/Linux: Guide to Installation and
Hello,
I am a beginner in Linux and I am interested in obtaining linux
documentation for free (at least for the moment). Following one of the
suggestions that appeared in the list, I have downloaded an online
Debian Linux book from the O'Reilly site:
wget -r --no-parent www.ora.com
On Thu, Oct 21, 1999 at 17:21:18 +0200, Manuel Arenaz Silva wrote:
This command generates a file tree with a lot of html and gif files. My
question is: Is there any tool to generate a postscript file (for example)
starting from all those files?
There is: htmldoc. Unfortunately, it's a recent
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