The package is used to draw bond graphs in LaTeX. Compared to the bondgraph
package this package relies more on TikZ styles and less on macros, to generate the drawings. As such it can be more flexible than his, but requires more TikZ knowledge of the user.
The package provides a Perl script that allows the uploads of a contribution to CTAN from the command line. The aim is to simplify the release process for LaTeX package authors. Note by the CTAN team (2015-02-05): It seems that this script is currently not working.
The package provides font description files for all the many shapes available from the cbfonts
collection. The files provide the means whereby the NFSS knows which fonts a LaTeX user is requesting.
Tip: installing texlive-cbfonts
will automatically propagate this one.
This package increases the upper limit of math symbols up to 256, using \omath
... primitives. These primitives were originally introduced in Omega and are currently available in the following formats: pLaTeX (runs on e-pTeX), upLaTeX (runs on e-upTeX), and Lamed (runs on Aleph, successor of Omega).
MakeIndex is resolutely stuck with Latin-based alphabets, so will not deal with Greek indexes, unaided. This package provides a Perl script that will transmute the index of a Greek document in such a way that MakeIndex will sort the entries according to the rules of the Greek alphabet.
Sparklines are intense, simple, wordlike graphics. A sparkline can be added using the sparkline
environment. Also, you can add sparkling rectangles for the median and special sparkling dots in red or blue. The package requires pdfLaTeX; sparklines cannot appear in a DVI file. The sparklines package uses PGF.
The package provides commands that enable the user (or package writer) to insert punctuation after the macro. The package provides the commands \xperiod
, \xcomma
and \xperiodcomma
, which follow a similar procedure to that of \xspace
, and insert punctuation if and only if it is necessary.
This package enables users to print some Japanese text that can be used as dummy text. It is a Japanese counterpart of the lipsum
package. Since there is no well-known nonsense text like Lipsum in the Japanese language, the package uses some real text in public domain.
This package, a fork of karnaugh-map
package, draws karnaugh maps with 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 variables. It also contains commands for filling the karnaugh map with terms semi-automatically or manually. Last but not least it contains commands for drawing implicants on top of the map.
This LaTeX library is a companion to the texsurgery
Python project. It will make sure that pdflatex document.tex will work, with reasonable defaults, for a document that is intended to work with texsurgery
, and also has other uses, always in tandem with the texsurgery
Pypi package.
This package provides LaTeX, pdfLaTeX, XeLaTeX, and LuaLaTeX support for Coelecanth fonts, designed by Ben Whitmore. Coelacanth is inspired by the classic Centaur type design of Bruce Rogers, described by some as the most beautiful typeface ever designed. It aims to be a professional quality type family for general book typesetting.
This package package provides one macro to insert a single notes page and another to fill the document with multiple notes pages, until the total number of pages (so far) is a multiple of a given number. A third command can be used to fill half empty pages with a notes area.
This package provides commands to give an easy way to control the size and blackness of delimiters: append 1-4 bs to command for larger sizes; prepend B for for boldface. These commands reduce the likelihood of incomplete delimeter pairs and typically use fewer characters than the LaTeX default.
HA-prosper is a patch for Prosper that adds new functionality to Prosper based presentations. Among the new features you will find automatic generation of a table of contents on each slide, support for notes and portrait slides. The available styles demonstrate how to expand the functionality of Prosper even further.
This package stores values of counters (which have been registered beforehand) on a per chapter base and provides the values on demand in the second LaTeX compilation run. In this way it is possible to know how many sections etc., there are lying ahead and to react to these counter values, if needed.
Petri-nets offers a set of TeX/LaTeX packages about Petri nets and related models. Three packages are available: the first allows the user to draw Petri-nets in PostScript documents; the second defines macros related to PBC, M-nets and B(PN) models; and a third that combines the other two.
The purpose of this package is to provide several layout styles for school documents. It is useful for exercise sheets, exams, course materials. The package sets the page geometry (dimensions of text and margins) and the title typesetting; the various styles define the header, footer and title formatting. Many features are freely configurable.
The class provides a PhD thesis template for the GSEM, University of Geneva, Switzerland. The class provides utilities to easily set up the cover page, the front matter pages, the page headers, etc., conformant to the official guidelines of the GSEM Faculty for writing PhD dissertations.
The package enables typesetting of a three-dimensional product box. This product box can be rendered as it is standing on a surface and some light is shed onto it. Alternatively it can be typeset as a wireframe to be cut out and glued together. This will lead to a physical product box.
This class is intended for generating graduate and final theses according to the instructions of the Faculty of Graphic Arts, University of Zagreb. It does not necessarily correspond to the requirements of each component of the University, but is designed as an idea for linking and uniformizing the look of all graduate papers.
Complexity is a LaTeX package that defines commands to typeset Computational Complexity Classes such as $\P$ and $\NP$ (as well as hundreds of others). It also offers several options including which font classes are typeset in and how many are defined (all of them or just the basic, most commonly used ones).
The easyReview package provides a way to review (or perform editorial process) in LaTeX. You can use the provided commands to claim attention in different ways to part of the text, or even to indicate that a text was added, needs to be removed, needs to be replaced and add comments to the text.
The package allows manipulations of any LuaTeX document. Most of the package's functions are merely for fun or educational use, but some functions (for example, colorstretch
for visualising the badness and font expansion of each line, and letterspaceadjust
doing what its name says) could be useful in a normal LuaTeX document.
This package provides Computer Modern old-style arrows with smaller arrowheads, associated with the usual LaTeX commands. It can be used in documents that contain other amssymb arrow characters that also have small arrowheads. It is also possible to use the usual new-style Computer Modern arrows together with the old-style ones.