The package is intended for setting rich text into titling capitals (in which the first character of words are capitalized). It automatically accounts for diacritical marks (like umlauts), national symbols (like ae), punctuation, and font changing commands that alter the appearance or size of the text. It allows a list of predesignated words to be protected as lower-cased, and also allows for titling exceptions of various sorts.
The package provides the commands \blindtext
and \Blindtext
for creating "blind" text useful in testing new classes and packages, and \blinddocument
, \Blinddocument
for creating an entire random document with sections, lists, mathematics, etc. The package supports three languages, english
, (n)german
and latin
; the latin
option provides a short "lorem ipsum" (for a fuller "lorem ipsum" text, see the lipsum
package).
This package defines a few LaTeX commands that may be useful when you proofread a LaTeX document. They allow you to easily highlight text and add comments in the margin. Vim escape sequences are provided for inserting or removing these LaTeX commands in the source. Options are provided for displaying the document with extra line spacing, and for displaying it in either corrected or uncorrected state, both without margin notes.
This package aims to provide a single style file containing most configurations and macros necessary to write appealing publications in High Energy Physics. Instead of reinventing the wheel by introducing newly created macros, hep-paper preferably loads third party packages as long as they are light-weight enough. For usual publications it suffices to load the hep-paper
package, without optional arguments, in addition to the article
class.
This template is devoted to the quicker preparation of exams in LaTeX. Its main features are:
minimalistic design;
include the custom logo of the affiliation;
predefined commands for a subject, study year, study program, exam type, place of exam, date;
many macros contained in this package speed up the process of preparing the necessary ingredients for the exam;
automatic calculation of total points.
The package provides a set of LaTeX
macros (based on PSTricks) for plotting the kind of graphs and figures that are usually employed in digital signal processing publications. DSPTricks provides facilities for standard discrete-time lollipop plots, continuous-time and frequency plots, and pole-zero plots. The companion package DSPFunctions (dspfunctions.sty
) provides macros for computing frequency responses and DFTs, while the package DSPBlocks (dspblocks.sty
) supports DSP block diagrams.
The package extracts information in .bib
files, makes it available in the current document, and sorts lists of entries according to that information and the user's specifications. Citation and bibliography styles can then be written directly in TeX, without any use of BibTeX. The package works with all formats that use plain TeX's basic syntactic sugar; the distribution includes a third-party file for ConTeXt and a style file for LaTeX.
This package provides a number of macros for rendering flags of countries and their associated artefacts using PSTricks. Formatting of the resulting drawings is entirely controlled by TeX macros. A good working knowledge of LaTeX should be sufficient to design flags of sovereign countries and adapt them to create new designs. Features such as color or shape customisation and dynamic modifications are possible by cleverly adjusting the options supplied to the TeX macros.
The package combines a document's columns into a PDF ``article thread''. PDF readers that support this mechanism can be instructed to scroll automatically from column to column, which facilitates on-screen reading of two-column documents. Even for single-column documents, threadcol supports the creation of multiple article threads, which help organize discontiguous but logically related regions of text into a form that the user can scroll through as if its contents were contiguous.
The PSTricks macros cannot be used (directly) with pdfTeX, since PSTricks uses PostScript arithmetic, which isn't part of PDF. This package circumvents this limitation so that the extensive facilities offered by the powerful PSTricks package can be made use of in a pdfTeX document. This is done using the shell escape function available in current TeX implementations. The package may also be used in support of other PostScript-output-only packages, such as PSfrag.
This package provides a LaTeX environment listing
, an alternative to the built-in verbatim
environment. The listing
environment is tailored for including listings of computer program source code into documents. The main advantages over the original verbatim
environment are: environments automatically fixes leading whitespace so that the environment and program listing can be indented with the rest of the document source, and; listing
environments may easily be customised and extended.
This package provides macros and an environment for easy worksheet creation:
use the
exercise
environment for formatting exercises in a simple, efficient design;typeset customized and automatically numbered worksheet titles in the same way as standard LaTeX titles (using
\maketitle
);provide course and author information with a
scrlayer
-scrpage
based automated header;
This package conforms to different Babel languages. (Currently English, French, and German are supported.)
Clear Sans was designed by Daniel Ratighan. It is available in three weights (regular, medium, and bold) with corresponding italics, plus light and thin upright (without italics).
It has minimized, unambiguous characters and slightly narrow proportions, making it ideal for UI design. Its strong, recognizable forms avoid distracting ambiguity, making Clear Sans comfortable for reading short UI labels and long passages in both screen and print. The fonts are available in both TrueType and Type 1 formats.
This package provides simple tools for creating redacted contents. Its tools are useful for lawyers, workers in sensitive industries, and others who need to easily produce both unrestricted versions of documents (for limited, secure release) and restricted versions of documents (for general release). Redaction is done both by hiding all characters and by slightly varying the length of strings to prevent jigsaw identification. It also is friendly to screen readers by adding alt-text indicating redacted content.
This package provides a LaTeX class for typesetting books with a colorful design. Currently, it has native support for Chinese (both simplified and traditional), English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese (European and Brazilian), Russian and Spanish typesetting. It compiles with either XeLaTeX
or LuaLaTeX.
This is part of the colorist class series and depends on colorist.sty from the colorist package. The package name "beaulivre" is taken from the French words "beau" (= "beautiful") and "livre" (= "book").
Latex2man is a tool to translate UNIX manual pages written with LaTeX into the troff format understood by the UNIX man(1) command. Alternatively HTML, TexInfo, or LaTeX code can be produced too. Output of parts of the text may be suppressed using the conditional text feature (for this, LaTeX generation may be used). There is a LaTeX package (latex2man.sty
) for writing the man page and a Perl script, latex2man
that does the actual translation.
hepthesis
is a LaTeX class for typesetting large academic reports, in particular PhD theses. In particular, hepthesis
offers:
attractive semantic environments for various rubric sections;
extensive options for draft production, screen viewing and binding-ready output;
helpful extensions of existing environments, including equation and tabular;
support for quotations at the start of the thesis and each chapter.
The class is based on scrbook
, from the KOMA-Script bundle.
In LaTeX typesetting, one usually needs to use different variants of a math symbol to clarify the meanings. For example, in linear algebra literature, it is common to use boldfaced symbols to represent vectors, and normal symbols to represent scalars. However, applying these variants by typing \mathbf
, \mathrm
commands manually can be daunting. This package aims to provide an automatic and customizable approach for math symbol styling which eliminates the need to enter style commands repeatedly.
This package implements an interface for embedding video and audio files in SVG output. SVG with embedded media is very portable, as it is supported by all modern Web browsers across a variety of operating systems and platforms, including portable devices. All DVI producing TeX engines can be used. The dvisvgm
utility converts the intermediate DVI to SVG. By default, media files are embedded into the SVG output to make self-sufficient SVG files.
This package provides an environment for coloured and framed text boxes with a heading line. Optionally, such a box may be split in an upper and a lower part; thus the package may be used for the setting of LaTeX examples where one part of the box displays the source code and the other part shows the output. Another common use case is the setting of theorems. The package supports saving and reuse of source code and text parts.
The RIT font collection provides versions of ten font families in Malayalam (the language spoken in the southern Indian state of Kerala) script in TrueType and WOFF2 formats. The fonts are: RIT Rachana, RIT Panmana, RIT MeeraNew, RIT TN Joy, RIT Karuna, RIT Keralayeeam, RIT Sundar, RIT Uroob, RIT Ezhuthu, and RIT Kutty.
A LaTeX package that will help users to make use of these Unicode-compliant fonts in LaTeX documents with XeTeX or LuaTeX is also provided.
The package defines two macros which decide to typeset a number either as an Arabic number or as a word (or words) for the number. If the number is between zero and twelve (including zero and twelve) then words will be used; if the number is outside that range, it will be typeset using the package numprint Words for English representation of numbers are generated within the package, while those for German are generated using the package zahl2string
.
The facsimile
class provides a simple interface for creating a document for sending as a fax, with LaTeX. The class covers two areas. First, a title page is created with a detailed fax header; second, every page gets headers and footers so that the recipient can be sure that every page has been received and all pages are complete, and in the correct order. The class evolved from the fax
package, and provides much better language support.
This package allows the easy and consistent writing of ordinary, partial and other derivatives of arbitrary (algebraic or numeric) order. For mixed partial derivatives, the total order of differentiation is calculated by the package. Optional arguments allow specification of points of evaluation (ordinary derivatives), or variables held constant (partial derivatives), and the placement of the differentiand (numerator or appended). The package is built on xtemplate and the configurability it enables, extending to differentials (including simple line elements) and jacobians.