The UMTypewriter font family is a monospaced font family that was built from glyphs from the CB Greek fonts, the CyrTUG Cyrillic alphabet fonts (LH), and the standard Computer Modern font family. It contains four OpenType fonts which are required for use of the xgreek
package for XeLaTeX.
The package takes care of switching fonts when you switch from one Unicode block to another in the text of a document. This way, you can write a document with no explicit font selection, but a series of rules of the form ``when entering block ..., switch font to use ...''.
The package provides the language definition file for support of Hebrew in babel. Macros to control the use of text direction control of TeX--XeT and e-TeX are provided (and may be used elsewhere). Some shortcuts are defined, as well as translations to Hebrew of standard LaTeX names.
The cooltooltips
package enables a document to contain hyperlinks that pop up a brief tooltip when the mouse moves over them and also open a small window containing additional text. cooltooltips
provides the mechanism used by the Visual LaTeX FAQ to indicate the question that each hyperlink answers.
This LaTeX package will greatly simplify filling entries for your FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC) engineering or outreach notebook. We developed this package to support most frequently used constructs encountered in an FTC notebook: meetings, tasks, decisions with pros and cons, tables, figures with explanations, team stories and bios, and more.
This package provides a macro \centeredline
, which allows one to conveniently center a line inside a paragraph while allowing usage therein of \verb
or other macros changing catcodes. It works nicely in list environments, and material whose natural width exceeds the current line width will get properly centered too.
Algorithmicx provides a flexible, yet easy to use, way for inserting good looking pseudocode or source code in your papers. It has built in support for pseudocode, Pascal and C, and offers powerful means to create definitions for any programming language. The user can adapt a pseudocode style to his native language.
BaskervilleF is a fork from the Libre Baskerville fonts (Roman, Italic, Bold only). Their fonts are optimized for web usage, while BaskervilleF is optimized for traditional TeX usage, normally destined for production of PDF files. A bold italic style was added and mathematical support is offered as an option to newtxmath
.
GFS Complutum derives from a minuscule-only font cut in the 16th century. An unsatisfactory set of majuscules were added in the early 20th century, but its author died before he could complete the revival of the font. The Greek Font Society has released this version, which has a new set of majuscules.
The package allows you to use the Ibycus 4 font for ancient Greek with Babel. It uses a Perl script to generate hyphenation patterns for Ibycus from those for the ordinary Babel encoding, cbgreek. It sets up ibycus
as a pseudo-language you can specify in the normal Babel manner.
This package provides \VerbatimCopy{in}{out}
that will enable LaTeX to take a verbatim copy of one text file, and save it under another name. The package provides a means to specify the output directory to be used, but does no checking and may therefore overwrite an important file if used injudiciously.
The MetaPost format plain.mp
provides only five built-in colour names (variables), all of which are defined in the RGB model: red, green and blue for the primary colours and black and white. The package makes more than 500 colour names from different colour sets in different colour models available to MetaPost.
Plotting numeric data is a task which has often to be done for scientific papers. LaTeX itself provides no facilities for drawing more than the simplest plots from supplied data. The package will process user input, and uses PSTricks to plot the results. The package provides Matlab functions to transform Matlab results to plottable data.
Mismatches of parentheses, braces, (angle) brackets, especially in TeX sources which may be rich in those, may be difficult to trace. This little Ruby script helps you by writing your text to standard output, after adding a left margin to your text, which will normally be almost empty, but will clearly show any mismatches.
Package listings
does not support files with multi-byte encodings such as UTF-8. In the case of \lstinputlisting
, a simple workaround is possible if a one-byte encoding exists that the file can be converted to. The package requires the e-TeX extensions under pdfTeX (in either PDF or DVI output mode).
This package lets you customize the appearance of the vertical rule that appears between columns of multicolumn text. It is primarily intended to work with the multicol
package, hence its name, but also supports the twocolumn
option and \twocolumn
macro provided by the standard classes (and related classes such as the KOMA-Script equivalents).
The package allows you to change the colour of the structural elements (inner theme and outer theme) of your Beamer presentation during the presentation. There is a manual option but there is also the option to have your structure colour change from one colour to another as a function of how far through the presentation you are.
texlogfilter
is a Perl script designed to filter LaTeX engines output or log file (LaTeX, pdfLaTeX, LuaLaTeX or XeLaTeX). It reduces the LaTeX output or log to keep only warnings and errors. The result is colorised. Options allow masking specific warnings, such as box or references/citations warnings. It's also possible to add custom filter patterns.
returntogrid
offers a few commands to get something like an simple, semi-automatic grid typesetting. It does more or less what the existing gridset
package does. The main differences to gridset are that returntogrid
works also with LuaLaTeX and that it has also a command to do some horizontal movements to get to Tab positions.
The bundle provides a package that implements both author-year and numbered references, as well as much detailed of support for other bibliography use. Also Provided are versions of the standard BibTeX styles that are compatible with natbib--plainnat, unsrtnat, abbrnat. The bibliography styles produced by custom-bib are designed from the start to be compatible with natbib
.
The Plain TeX graphics package is mostly a thin shell around the LaTeX graphicx
and color
packages, with support of the LaTeX-isms in those packages provided by miniltx
. The bundle also contains a file picture.tex
, which is a wrapper around the autopict.sty
, and provides the LaTeX picture mode to Plain TeX users.
The package revives Frutiger's Algol alphabet, designed in 1963 for the code segments in an ALGOL manual. It provides OpenType and Type 1, regular and medium weights, upright and slanted variations. Albeit not monospaced, this font is good for listings if you don't need code to be aligned with specific columns. It also makes a passable but limited text font.
This package provides a program that converts LaTeX source to Braille/Nemeth. It supports the Greek language, which is only Braille level 1, but also English at level 1. Simple pictures in PSTricks are also supported in order to produce tactile graphics with specialized equipment. Note that embossing will need LibreOffice and odt2braille
as this project does not deal with embossers drivers.
This package provides the Merriweather and MerriweatherSans families of fonts, designed by Eben Sorkin, with support for LaTeX, pdfLaTeX, XeLaTeX, and LuaLaTeX. Merriweather features a very large x-height, slightly condensed letterforms, a mild diagonal stress, sturdy serifs and open forms. The Sans family closely harmonizes with the weights and styles of the serif family. There are four weights and italics for each.