Dear Michal, Wonderful, thank you! It worked perfectly. Thank you for your help!
Best wishes, Alex On Thu, Jan 11, 2018 at 1:04 PM, Michal Hoftich <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear Alex, > > > > When I have `\textsuperscript{r}` in my document, tex4ht produces output > > that elevates the "r" not by using Word's "superscript" feature (Format > > > Font... > Effects > Superscript). Instead it seems to decrease the font > size > > manually (from 12pt to 9.5pt) and elevate it some other way. (Example > input > > and output attached.) The result is unfortunate, because this elevated > "r" > > disrupts the document's overall line spacing. I am also concerned that > the > > publisher's software won't know what to do with it, so that it will > continue > > to look bad. > > > > I think this issue is on Word's side. tex4ht creates text styled with > style:text-position="super 80\%" property. LibreOffice can display it > correctly. I also compared code created by LibreOffice when I created > a superscript manually and it seems that the only difference is that > it uses "super 58%" as a value for text-position property. When I > tried to change the tex4ht style to use this value, Word could open it > as well. So it seems that Word has some hard-coded rules that > superscript is only text with "super 58%" text-position. > > Anyway, I don't think that 80% which tex4ht uses has any deep meaning, > so we can use 58% instead. I also found that there was missing for > \textsubscript, which is now part of LaTeX core, so I added the > support for it to both ooffice and HTML formats. > > You can use the following config file until the update gets to TeX Live: > > \Preamble{xhtml} > \Configure{textsuperscript} > {\HCode{<text:span text:style-name="textsuperscript">}} > {\HCode{</text:span>}} > \OOstyles{% > <style:style style:name="textsuperscript" style:family="text">\Hnewline > <style:text-properties style:text-position="super 58\%"/>\Hnewline > </style:style>\Hnewline > } > \begin{document} > \EndPreamble > > > Best regards, > Michal >
