diff options
author | Stefan Husmann | 2015-06-09 00:52:05 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Stefan Husmann | 2015-06-09 00:52:05 +0200 |
commit | d4ecea11e8e8f96e4fc878bc2cba6356bd18b7f8 (patch) | |
tree | a0f60ceda71dd7609dbeee3f84bf968606bc97f2 /200_backslashes.diff | |
download | aur-tmview.tar.gz |
initial version
Diffstat (limited to '200_backslashes.diff')
-rw-r--r-- | 200_backslashes.diff | 1326 |
1 files changed, 1326 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/200_backslashes.diff b/200_backslashes.diff new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..72a4933b057d --- /dev/null +++ b/200_backslashes.diff @@ -0,0 +1,1326 @@ +--- tmview-01.03.orig/svga/writevga.c ++++ tmview-01.03/svga/writevga.c +@@ -64,10 +64,10 @@ + if(!MECK) gl_freecontext(&physicalscreen); /* does not hurt if not allocated ? */ + #ifndef VGAHASWAITIO + #ifdef LETSTRYGS +- pfprot("\n\ +-warning: display: use polling when rendering eps-figures due to +- a compiletime-option. If your svgalib is above version 1.2.10, +- recompiling with \"VGAHASWAITIO\" defined may speed up rendering.\n\n"); ++ pfprot("\n" ++ "warning: display: use polling when rendering eps-figures due to\n" ++ "a compiletime-option. If your svgalib is above version 1.2.10,\n" ++ "recompiling with \"VGAHASWAITIO\" defined may speed up rendering.\n\n"); + #endif + #endif + } +@@ -203,9 +203,9 @@ + if (n==0 || !vga_hasmode(n)) { + n=vga_getdefaultmode(); + if((n!=5 && n!=10 && n!=11 && n!=12) || !vga_hasmode(n)) { +- pfprot("\n\ +-warning: display: mode not supported on this machine. Now try -d640x480. +- Check your svgalib configuration.\n"); ++ pfprot("\n" ++ "warning: display: mode not supported on this machine. Now try -d640x480.\n" ++ "Check your svgalib configuration.\n"); + n=10; + } + } +@@ -213,14 +213,14 @@ + MECK=0; + } else { + MECK=1; +- pfprot("\n\ +-warning: display: mode -d640x480 not supported at 256 colors. Now try at +- 16 colors. This will reduce display quality and speed. Check your +- svgalib configuration.\n\n"); ++ pfprot("\n" ++ "warning: display: mode -d640x480 not supported at 256 colors. Now try at\n" ++ "16 colors. This will reduce display quality and speed. Check your\n" ++ "svgalib configuration.\n\n"); + n=4; + if(!vga_hasmode(n)) { +- pfprot("\n\ +-warning: display: mode -d640x480 not even supported at 16 colors.\n"); ++ pfprot("\n" ++ "warning: display: mode -d640x480 not even supported at 16 colors.\n"); + vgaerror("Sorry."); + } + } +--- tmview-01.03.orig/src/help.h ++++ tmview-01.03/src/help.h +@@ -1,598 +1,598 @@ + #define HELPWIDTH 60 +-#define HELPSTR "\ +-LIST OF COMMANDS WITH TYPICAL ARGUMENTS ************ V 01.03 +- +- <i>/<m> goto previous/next page +-(NUM)<g> goto page NUM w.r.t. TeX-counters +- <u>/<n>/<h>/<j> scroll the visible area +- <f>/<c> make scrolling finer/coarser +- <z> center visible area +- <+>/<-> zoom in/out +-(NUM)<v> set zoom-factor to NUM +- +- <b> set a bookmark +- <w> move to a bookmark +- <^> move back +- +- <o> display options +- <x> toggle statusline-information +- <t> set unit of measurement +- +- <l> show/hide screenmark and pagemark +- <y> set pagemark at screenmark position +- <a> show/hide marked rectangle +- <p> show/hide printable area +- <e> set page-offset and -size +- +- <k> show/hide half-hyper-tex-mark +- <TAB> move to next href +- <RET> follow current href +- +- <s> search for text +- <*><r> re-read DVIfile, fonts, eps-figures +- <d> load/kill DVIfile +- <q> quit tmview +- +- +-GENERAL USAGE ******************************************* +- +-When everything is setup right, visiting a DVIfile with +-tmview just means to navigate the visible area along that +-file, using the cursor-keys. Some of the following +-commands obviously require an argument, f.e. <g>. +-Arguments are to be entered BEFORE executing a command. +-When executed by hitting the corresponding uppercase key, +-you will be asked for the argument. While the +-user-interface of tmview is meant to save keystrokes, it +-is not too intuitive. You may either read the following +-instructions, or just do <caps-lock>. +- +-The cursor-keys <page-up> and <page-down> are taken as <i> +-resp. <m>. The keys <pos1> and <end> select the first +-resp. the last page. The cursor-keys <left> <right> <up> +-and <down> do <h> <j> <u> resp. <n>. All in all this +-means, that the cursor-keys do what they are meant to. +- +-When a mouse is connected, it moves any visible mark. When +-the right or left mousebutton is no good for anything +-else, moving the mouse while holding that button acts on +-the visible area instead. (That sounds bad, but works out +-fine) When the screenmark is shown (see <l>), the left +-mouse-button sets the pagemark (see <y>) and the right +-button marks a rectangle (see <a>). When the +-half-hyper-mark is shown, the left mouse-button follows +-the current href, if any. +- +-********************************************************* +-NON-INTUITIVE USER-INTERFACE **************************** +-********************************************************* +- +-To explain the way tmview expects to receive commands, a +-short nomenclature used in the sequel is given: +- +-Any text within `<' and `>' represents a single keystroke, +-while `(' and `)' mark the beginning resp. the end of a +-string to enter. So <h> is about to hit the key named `h' +-and (25.4) could stand for <2><5> <.><4>. The carriage- +-return-key is referred by <ret>, the backspace-key or +-delete-key by <del> and the escape-key by <esc>. Almost +-whenever a string is expected by tmview, you may use <del> +-to remove the last character you typed. So even +-<2><5><6><del><.><4> results in (25.4). Note that a string +-does not need to be terminated by <ret>. To simplify a +-reference to a string, in this text any uppercase letters +-within `(' and `)' are not meant as a string, but as the +-name of some string. So we may read something like +-`(PP)<h> scrolls PP percent to the left' as `typing in any +-number just before <h> results in scrolling left according +-to that number'. +- +- +-COMMANDS AND ARGUMENTS*********************************** +- +-A command is executed by typing its name, which consists +-of a single character. Some of the above listed commands +-take numerical arguments. Arguments are always +-optional. They may be entered before executing the +-command. Multiple arguments are separated by <,> or +-<;>. If no argument is passed, a default is used. If an +-argument is passed, it serves as the default for following +-commands. Commands doing similar things share the same +-default arguments. +- +-Example: +-Typing (10)<h> results in scrolling 10% to the left and +-sets the default for any scrolling commands to 10%. Thus +-typing <j> afterwards results in scrolling 10% to the +-right. +- +- +-MAGIC ARGUMENT******************************************* +- +-As a special argument some commands accept the magic +-argument <*>. It is used either to vary the command in +-some way or to get the arguments from another place. <#> +-is equivalent to <*> and saves you from holding down the +-shift-key on some keyboards. +- +-<z> for example centers the visible area. It excepts as +-argument the point which will be taken as origin. Since +-this will become the default for a future <z>, you may +-measure out the origin only once. Even quicker it is to +-position the visible area by scrolling and then to do a +-<*><z>. This results in taking the current position as +-centered and so as default for a coming <z>. +- +-As another example look at the command <m>, which moves +-pages forward, according to a given argument resp. a +-default. By moving on the next page there are two modi +-available: 1. keep the visible area; 2. do center like +-<z><z>. <*><m> toggles between these two modi. So in this +-case <*> acts as a kind of flag argument. +- +- +- +-SELECTING THE PAGE**************************************** +- +-<i>/<m> Select a page relative to the current page. +- +- <i> moves towards the beginning of the DVIfile, while +- <m> moves towards the end. A single argument (N) may +- specify the amount of movement in pages. However, (N) +- will NOT become the default value. The argument is (*), +- the page-moving-mode is toggled. See above. +- +- Example: +- (1)<i> selects the previous page <m> selects the next +- page +- +-<g> Select a page with respect to TeX counters. +- +- A list of ten arguments (COUNT0; COUNT1; ... COUNT9) +- specifies the page to be selected. <*> may be used as +- wildcard. If there are more than one but less than ten +- arguments given, the others will be taken as <*>. +- +- Example: +- (26)<g> selects the first page after the current page +- with a value of 26 in \\count0. +- +- +- +-MOVING AROUND ON CURRENT PAGE ****************************** +- +-<u>/<n>/<h>/<j> Scrolling the visible area +- +- A single argument (PP) may be used to specify the +- amount of scrolling in percent of the +- screen-width. <u>/<n> resp. <up>/down> both accept +- the argument (*) to toggle between: 1. stay on the +- current page; 2. scroll over pages. When scrolling +- over pages, you may view the whole document while +- using only the single key <n>. +- +- Example: +- (20)<h> scrolls 1/5 to the left. +- +-<f>/<c> Make scrolling finer/coarser +- +- These commands change the default argument for the +- above scrolling- commands. So <f> and <c> don't move +- the visible area at all, but they change the way the +- scrolling-commands act. +- +-<z> Center the visible area +- +- Without any argument <z> centers horizontally only, +- while <z><z> centers in both directions. +- When two arguments (X,Y) are given, they describe +- the point on the page, which will become the middle +- of the visible area. When the argument (*) is given, +- the current position is taken as centered. When the +- screenmark is shown (see below <l>), and the +- argument (*) is given, the position of the +- screenmark becomes the center. This does move the +- visible area, but it does not move the screenmark. +- +- +-ZOOMING **************************************************** +- +-<v> Set the zoom-factor +- +- This command requires one argument (F) which must be +- between 0.05 and 2. F will become the zoom-factor +- and the visible-area will be redrawn. Use (*)<v> to +- adjust the zoom-factor such that the page horizontaly +- fits the visible-area. +- +- If the zoom-factor is 1, the pixels found in pk-files +- are just copied one by one to the screen. Since the +- resolution of our days screens seems to be less than +- that of our days printers, and since you may still +- want to use the same pk-files for printing and +- viewing, F=1 usually results in a magnification. So +- when you're just reading some text in some DVIfile +- you will set F to something like 0.3, depending on +- the involved resolutions. When the screenmark is +- visible (see <l>) the position of the screenmark is +- taken as the origin of zooming, i.e. it is fixed. +- When the screenmark is not visible, the middle of the +- screen is fixed. The current zoom-factor is displayed +- in the optional statusline, see <x>. +- +- There are two zooming modi. The integer modus +- requieres 1/f to be an integer. This modus is quite +- fast, so good values are F=0.5, 0.333, 0.25, 0.2, +- 0.167 etc. The good thing about the slow modus is, +- that it allows you to choose the zoom-factor +- arbitrary (between 0.05 and 2). So poor students with +- small screens might find some optimum to make the +- text fit and still be readable. The bad thing about +- the slow modus is that it is slow. But since once +- zoomed glyphs are kept in memory, this slowness only +- hurts the first few pages after changing the +- zoom-factor. Modus selection is done by the display +- options <o>. +- +-<+>/<-> Zoom in/out +- +- Increase/decrease the zoom-factor. When in the fast +- modus, step through the fast values only (see +- above). When an argument (PP) is given, it is taken +- as the amount of increasing/decreasing in percent of +- the current zoom-factor. This is likely to result in +- the slow modus. +- +- +-BOOKMARKS ************************************************** +- +-A bookmark remembers what is seen on the screen. That is +-the DVIfile, the page within that file, the position of the +-visable area and the zoom-factor. There are three kind of +-bookmarks ... +- +-file-bookmarks: +-Each file visited has a file-bookmark, containing the above +-information about what was seen on the screen when visited +-the last time, plus some information on the file, that is +-the paper-offset and -position, the location of the +-printable-area. file-bookmarks are generated automaticly. +-This results in easy re-visiting a DVIfile: you'll find it +-as left. A file-bookmark is removed by killing the DVIfile +-with <d><k>, see <d> below. +- +-back-bookmarks: +-When searching a text-string, following a href or moving to +-a bookmark, the position within the DVIfile might be +-changed to somewhere far far away. To simplify recovering +-fromsuch excursions, a back-bookmark will be generated +-automaticly. To prevent getting fed up with thousands of +-back-bookmarks, the total number of theese is limited. See +-<^> below. +- +-manual-bookmarks: +-After all you may install your own bookmarks, marking often +-visited places, say in some manuals. manual-bookmarks are +-named by a number. This number has to be unique whithin +-the DVIfile they belong to. To define a manual-bookmark +-use <b>. Since manual-bookmarks belong to the DVIfile they +-are defined on, they get lost, when that DVIfile is killed +-by <d><k>. +- +-All kind of bookmarks are kept in a ring-buffer. There is a +-so called current bookmark of each type. Visiting the +-bookmarks along the ring-buffer is done by <w> for file- +-and manual-bookmarks, while <^> acts on back-bookmarks. +- +-<b> Define/undefine manual-bookmark. +- +- When the current position is not already defined as +- a manual-bookmark, <b> defines one. When an single +- numeric argument (NUM) is given, NUM will be the +- name of the newly defined bookmark. With no +- argument, a name will be generated automaticly. See +- <w> below, for how to visit manual-bookmarks. When +- the current position is already defined as a +- manual-bookmark, <b> undefines that manual-bookmark. +- +-<w> Move to bookmark. +- +- When a single numeric argument (NUM) is given, <w> +- moves to the manual-bookmark named NUM, if +- any. Since manual bookmarks are bound to DVIfiles, +- the current DVIfile will never change in that +- case. If no argument is given, <w> goes moves the +- postion either thrue the ring-buffer of +- file-bookmarks or thrue the one of +- manual-bookmarks. To toggle between theese two modi, +- use the magic argument <*>. +- +-<^> Move back +- +- Move to the latest back-bookmark, if any. When a +- single numeric argument (TOTAL) is given, keep the +- TOTAL latest back-bookmarks and discard all the +- others. +- +- +-CHOOSING WHAT'S ON THE DISPLAY ***************************** +- +-<o> Display options +- +- This command collects a number of general options +- on how the things get on the screen. Use the cursor +- keys (or <u>/<n>/<h>/<h>) to navigate. +- +- > Greyscales. When the zoom-factor is less than 1, +- the glyphs may be displayed using grey-levels, making +- them more smooth. This takes some memory, so you are +- allowed to switch it off. On high-res displays there +- is no need for greyscaling anyway. +- +- > Eps-rendering. There is limited support for +- rendering eps-files by running ghostscript. However, +- this sometimes is quite slow and memory intensive, so +- you may turn it off. If rendering is enabled the +- results are buffered. Hence, if the eps-files are +- updated by some graphics program, you need to do a +- <*><r> to force rerendering. To disable certain +- eps-files individually, abort the rendering process +- by <esc>. +- +- > Double-page. There is also limited support for +- viewing two pages beside each other. Again their +- is some memory required to keep it all buffered. +- You may disable double paged viewing entirely. You +- may let tmview deceide on basis of the zoom-factor. +- Or you may permanently enable this feature. +- +- > Zooming. There is a fast zooming mode allowing +- only zomming by 1/f where f is required to be an +- integer. And there is an arbitrary mode to be +- selected. +- +-<x> Toggle statusline-information +- +- While the standard statusline shows you the +- page-number of the current page and the arguments +- you are about to enter, you may select optional +- information for measuring out distances and so. See +- below. +- +-<t> Set unit of measurement +- +- Whenever you specify arguments which are to describe +- a point on the page, this is done w.r.t. a unit of +- measurement, i.e. cm, mm, a.s.o.. This unit is also +- used, when the position of a mark is displayed in +- the statusline. +- +- +-MEASURING ************************************************** +- +-To allow you to measure distances on the page, there are +-two marks, the screenmark, which is fixed on the physical +-screen you're looking at, and the pagemark, which is fixed +-on the DVIfiles page. When you move the visible-area, the +-screenmark acts as drawn with edding on your monitor. The +-pagemark acts as drawn on the page. The optional statusline +-tells the position of the pagemark relative to the corner +-of the sheet of paper you're viewing. It also tells the +-position of the screenmark relative to the pagemark. To +-measure distances you first may switch this marks on, using +-<l>. When the marks are shown, the scrolling commands don't +-act on the visible area anymore, but move the screenmark. +-For that case only moving the screenmark at the boarder of +-the screen results in scrolling. To move the pagemark just +-move the screenmark at the desired position and use <y> to +-make the pagemark follow. +- +-<l> Show/hide screenmark and pagemark +- +- This commands takes the two arguments +- (PM_X;PM_Y). The pagemark is put at position PM_X +- PM_Y w.r.t. the upper left corner of the page. The +- Screenmark may be moved with the scrolling-commands. +- +-<y> Set pagemark at the position of the screenmark +- +-Beside of these marks there are three rectangles for +-measurement. First there is the boarder of the paper setup +-by the command-line options -h,-v and -p. Then there is +-the printable area, setup with the -k command-line option. +-Third the so called marked rectangle used. +- +-<a> Show/hide marked rectangle +- +- The four arguments (LEFT,TOP,WIDTH,HIGHT) specify +- the position on page an the size of the marked +- rectangle. When pagemark and screenmark are shown, +- their positions are used as default. When they are +- hidden, the last position of the marked rectangle is +- used as default. +- +-<p> Show/hide printable area +- +- The four arguments (LEFT,RIGHT,TOP,BOTTOM) specify +- the margins of the printable area, w.r.t. the +- boarder of the page. When pagemark and screenmark +- are shown, the argument (*) sets the printable area +- to the rectangle described by screenmark and +- pagemark. When they are hidden, (*) takes the +- command-line-options resp. defaults -k of the +- printable area. +- +-<e> Set paper-offset and -size +- +- The four arguments (HOFF;VOFF;WIDTH;HEIGHT) specify +- the boarder of the page. Have the top-left corner of +- a sheet of paper in mind. Then (HOFF,VOFF) is the +- offset of the DVIfile's origin to the left boarder +- of the paper. Standard values are +- HOFF=VOFF=2.54cm. WIDTH and HEIGHT are the width and +- the height of the sheet of paper. The sheet of paper +- is represented only by a frame on the screen. It +- does not affect the drawing of the DVIfile. +- +- When pagemark and screenmark are shown, the argument +- (*) sets the boarder of the page to the rectangle +- described by screenmark and pagemark. When they are +- hidden, (*) takes the command-line-options +- resp. defaults -h,-v and -p. +- +- +-HALF-HYPER ************************************************* +- +-tmview does some of the fancy hyper-tex things. I talk +-about HALF-hyper-tex, because tmview follows only links +-which point to somewhere within the currently visited +-dvi-file. So there is no connection to the net or so. But +-you might find it usefull (when editing a major project) to +-view an equation number this-and-that by clicking on +-this-and-that whereever the text refers to that equation. +-For information about hyper-tex, related macropackages and +-fully compatible viewer scan the net ... +- +-<k> Show/hide half-hyper-mark +-<TAB> Goto next href +-<RET> Follow current href, if any +- +- +-MISC ******************************************************* +- +-<s> Search for text +- +- You will be asked for the text-string to be searched. +- You may enter a regular expression describing that +- string, that includes especially just to enter the +- string as it is. +- +- tmview will take the entire DVIfile as one huge +- text-string and then search for the next substring, +- fitting the regular expression you've enterd. Thereby +- \"next\" is ment with respect to the current page. +- +- So far this sounds quite easy, but there are some ugly +- details, based on the fact, that a DVIfile contains +- information on how to draw a bitmap representing your +- text. It does not contain information about from what +- characters in which order your text is made up. Even +- the PKfiles used to draw your text consist only of +- lots of glyphs but no character-codes, like ASCII or +- so. Building a huge text-string from a DVIfile is some +- kind of guessing. +- +- Fisrt: What kind of huge-string is build from the DVIfile? +- +- This string will consists of the letters <A> ... <Z>, +- <a> ... <z>, the accent <\"> and the digits <0> +- ... <9>. It does NOT contain anything else, like +- <space>, <ret> or <->: +- Whenbeingprinteditwouldlooklikethisnotreadableatall. +- Taking the DVIfile as huge string allows you to find +- all locations of a sub-string, say +- \"commandlineoptions\", even those that are seperarted +- by linebreaks (and hyphens) or pagebreaks. In turn, +- there is no chance to find all those locations, where +- \"commandlineoptions\" is seperated by a hypenation. To +- keep tmview from being confused by headings, there is +- another rule for building up the huge text-string: any +- glyph outside the printable area (see <p>) is +- ignored. So you may setup the printable area to ignore +- headings when searching. +- +- Second: How is the huge-string build up? +- +- To translate the list of glyphs found in the DVIfile +- to a text-string, the tfm-files are asked for the +- encoding-scheme. This does work with dc-fonts and +- cm-fonts, since the following encoding-scheme names +- are accepted: \"ASCII\", \"TeX text\", \"TeX math italic\", +- \"TeX math symbols\", \"TeX typewriter text\", \"Extended +- TeX Font Encoding - Latin\", \"Adobe StandardEncoding\". +- The alphanumerics <A>...<Z>, <a>...<z>, <0> ... <9> +- are copied one by one to the huge text-string. Glyphs +- that \"look like\" a simple alphanumeric will be taken +- as that one it looks like. So the Tex input '\\c o', +- producing an 'o'-with-an-cedilla-accent, will be +- represented as a simple (o) in the text-string. This +- rule also works for all kind of ligatures. The TeX +- input 'ffl\\AE' will be represented by (fflAE). Any +- accent ON TOP of a glyph will be translated to a (\"), +- preceding whatever the glyph without that accent would +- be translated to. The TeX input '\\\"a' producing the +- german umlaut 'a'-with-two-dots-on-top, will be found +- as (\"a) in the generated text-string. The TeX input +- '\\aa' producing the scandinavian +- 'a'-with-circle-on-top will be found as (\"a) too. Any +- other glyphs are ignored. +- +- Third: In what does the above result? +- +- Visiting english documents, say manuals to some +- computer related stuff like elisp.dvi, searching for +- keywords works fine. Searching in documents in which +- extensive use of accents and funny characters is made +- works too, but requires some luck or/and experiance in +- how TeX acts on such things. +- +- +- Example: +- +- Take the file story.tex from the TeXbook, chapter 6, +- page 24. It contains the line +- galaxy called \\\"O\\\"o\\c c, +- The text-string build from the corresponding story.dvi +- will therfore contain +- galaxycalled\"O\"oc +- You may search for ... getting as result ... +- galaxy found +- galaxycalled found +- galaxy called not found +- d\" found +- galaxy.*\"O\"oc found +- Ooc not found +- +- +-<r> Re-read current DVIfile and re-draw screen. +- +- Note: <r> will not re-initialize the fontdatabase, +- nor the buffer for rendered eps-figures. To force +- everything beeing re-read, use (*)<r>. +- +- +-<d> Load/kill DVIfile +- +- After typing <d> you may select between <l> to load a +- DVIfile and <k> to kill a DVIfile. +- +- Loading a DVIFile: +- +- tmview will look for a file-bookmark belonging to that +- file. If there is one, it becomes the current +- file-bookmark. The DVIfile will be shown as left, and +- any defined manual-bookmarks are accessable by +- <w>. When loading a DVIfile for the first time, a new +- file-bookmark will be generated. This will be setup +- with default values from the command-line options and +- won't contain any manual-bookmarks. +- +- Killing a DVIfile: +- To kill a DVIfile means to kill its file-bookmark and +- any related manual-bookmark. Killing a DVIfile won't +- hurt the file itself. You don't have to kill a +- DVIfile just to load another one. +- +-<q> Quit tmview +- +- When quitting, a startup-file will be written. When +- running tmview next time, you will find almost +- everything as you left it. +- +- +-********************************************************** +-End of help*********************************************** +-\n\n\n" ++#define HELPSTR "\n" \ ++"LIST OF COMMANDS WITH TYPICAL ARGUMENTS ************ V 01.03\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <i>/<m> goto previous/next page \n" \ ++"(NUM)<g> goto page NUM w.r.t. TeX-counters\n" \ ++" <u>/<n>/<h>/<j> scroll the visible area\n" \ ++" <f>/<c> make scrolling finer/coarser\n" \ ++" <z> center visible area\n" \ ++" <+>/<-> zoom in/out\n" \ ++"(NUM)<v> set zoom-factor to NUM\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <b> set a bookmark\n" \ ++" <w> move to a bookmark\n" \ ++" <^> move back\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <o> display options \n" \ ++" <x> toggle statusline-information\n" \ ++" <t> set unit of measurement\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <l> show/hide screenmark and pagemark\n" \ ++" <y> set pagemark at screenmark position\n" \ ++" <a> show/hide marked rectangle\n" \ ++" <p> show/hide printable area\n" \ ++" <e> set page-offset and -size\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <k> show/hide half-hyper-tex-mark\n" \ ++" <TAB> move to next href\n" \ ++" <RET> follow current href\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <s> search for text\n" \ ++" <*><r> re-read DVIfile, fonts, eps-figures\n" \ ++" <d> load/kill DVIfile\n" \ ++" <q> quit tmview\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"GENERAL USAGE *******************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"When everything is setup right, visiting a DVIfile with\n" \ ++"tmview just means to navigate the visible area along that\n" \ ++"file, using the cursor-keys. Some of the following\n" \ ++"commands obviously require an argument, f.e. <g>.\n" \ ++"Arguments are to be entered BEFORE executing a command.\n" \ ++"When executed by hitting the corresponding uppercase key,\n" \ ++"you will be asked for the argument. While the\n" \ ++"user-interface of tmview is meant to save keystrokes, it\n" \ ++"is not too intuitive. You may either read the following\n" \ ++"instructions, or just do <caps-lock>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"The cursor-keys <page-up> and <page-down> are taken as <i>\n" \ ++"resp. <m>. The keys <pos1> and <end> select the first\n" \ ++"resp. the last page. The cursor-keys <left> <right> <up>\n" \ ++"and <down> do <h> <j> <u> resp. <n>. All in all this\n" \ ++"means, that the cursor-keys do what they are meant to.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"When a mouse is connected, it moves any visible mark. When\n" \ ++"the right or left mousebutton is no good for anything\n" \ ++"else, moving the mouse while holding that button acts on\n" \ ++"the visible area instead. (That sounds bad, but works out\n" \ ++"fine) When the screenmark is shown (see <l>), the left\n" \ ++"mouse-button sets the pagemark (see <y>) and the right\n" \ ++"button marks a rectangle (see <a>). When the\n" \ ++"half-hyper-mark is shown, the left mouse-button follows\n" \ ++"the current href, if any.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"*********************************************************\n" \ ++"NON-INTUITIVE USER-INTERFACE ****************************\n" \ ++"*********************************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"To explain the way tmview expects to receive commands, a\n" \ ++"short nomenclature used in the sequel is given:\n" \ ++" \n" \ ++"Any text within `<' and `>' represents a single keystroke,\n" \ ++"while `(' and `)' mark the beginning resp. the end of a\n" \ ++"string to enter. So <h> is about to hit the key named `h'\n" \ ++"and (25.4) could stand for <2><5> <.><4>. The carriage-\n" \ ++"return-key is referred by <ret>, the backspace-key or \n" \ ++"delete-key by <del> and the escape-key by <esc>. Almost \n" \ ++"whenever a string is expected by tmview, you may use <del>\n" \ ++"to remove the last character you typed. So even\n" \ ++"<2><5><6><del><.><4> results in (25.4). Note that a string\n" \ ++"does not need to be terminated by <ret>. To simplify a\n" \ ++"reference to a string, in this text any uppercase letters\n" \ ++"within `(' and `)' are not meant as a string, but as the\n" \ ++"name of some string. So we may read something like\n" \ ++"`(PP)<h> scrolls PP percent to the left' as `typing in any\n" \ ++"number just before <h> results in scrolling left according\n" \ ++"to that number'.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"COMMANDS AND ARGUMENTS***********************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"A command is executed by typing its name, which consists\n" \ ++"of a single character. Some of the above listed commands\n" \ ++"take numerical arguments. Arguments are always\n" \ ++"optional. They may be entered before executing the\n" \ ++"command. Multiple arguments are separated by <,> or\n" \ ++"<;>. If no argument is passed, a default is used. If an\n" \ ++"argument is passed, it serves as the default for following\n" \ ++"commands. Commands doing similar things share the same\n" \ ++"default arguments.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"Example: \n" \ ++"Typing (10)<h> results in scrolling 10% to the left and\n" \ ++"sets the default for any scrolling commands to 10%. Thus\n" \ ++"typing <j> afterwards results in scrolling 10% to the\n" \ ++"right.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"MAGIC ARGUMENT*******************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"As a special argument some commands accept the magic\n" \ ++"argument <*>. It is used either to vary the command in\n" \ ++"some way or to get the arguments from another place. <#>\n" \ ++"is equivalent to <*> and saves you from holding down the\n" \ ++"shift-key on some keyboards.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<z> for example centers the visible area. It excepts as\n" \ ++"argument the point which will be taken as origin. Since\n" \ ++"this will become the default for a future <z>, you may\n" \ ++"measure out the origin only once. Even quicker it is to\n" \ ++"position the visible area by scrolling and then to do a\n" \ ++"<*><z>. This results in taking the current position as\n" \ ++"centered and so as default for a coming <z>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"As another example look at the command <m>, which moves\n" \ ++"pages forward, according to a given argument resp. a\n" \ ++"default. By moving on the next page there are two modi\n" \ ++"available: 1. keep the visible area; 2. do center like\n" \ ++"<z><z>. <*><m> toggles between these two modi. So in this\n" \ ++"case <*> acts as a kind of flag argument.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"SELECTING THE PAGE****************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<i>/<m> Select a page relative to the current page. \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" <i> moves towards the beginning of the DVIfile, while\n" \ ++" <m> moves towards the end. A single argument (N) may\n" \ ++" specify the amount of movement in pages. However, (N)\n" \ ++" will NOT become the default value. The argument is (*), \n" \ ++" the page-moving-mode is toggled. See above. \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Example: \n" \ ++" (1)<i> selects the previous page <m> selects the next\n" \ ++" page\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<g> Select a page with respect to TeX counters. \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" A list of ten arguments (COUNT0; COUNT1; ... COUNT9)\n" \ ++" specifies the page to be selected. <*> may be used as\n" \ ++" wildcard. If there are more than one but less than ten\n" \ ++" arguments given, the others will be taken as <*>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Example: \n" \ ++" (26)<g> selects the first page after the current page\n" \ ++" with a value of 26 in \\count0.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"MOVING AROUND ON CURRENT PAGE ******************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<u>/<n>/<h>/<j> Scrolling the visible area\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" A single argument (PP) may be used to specify the\n" \ ++" amount of scrolling in percent of the\n" \ ++" screen-width. <u>/<n> resp. <up>/down> both accept\n" \ ++" the argument (*) to toggle between: 1. stay on the\n" \ ++" current page; 2. scroll over pages. When scrolling\n" \ ++" over pages, you may view the whole document while\n" \ ++" using only the single key <n>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Example:\n" \ ++" (20)<h> scrolls 1/5 to the left. \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<f>/<c> Make scrolling finer/coarser\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" These commands change the default argument for the\n" \ ++" above scrolling- commands. So <f> and <c> don't move\n" \ ++" the visible area at all, but they change the way the\n" \ ++" scrolling-commands act.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<z> Center the visible area\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Without any argument <z> centers horizontally only,\n" \ ++" while <z><z> centers in both directions.\n" \ ++" When two arguments (X,Y) are given, they describe\n" \ ++" the point on the page, which will become the middle\n" \ ++" of the visible area. When the argument (*) is given,\n" \ ++" the current position is taken as centered. When the\n" \ ++" screenmark is shown (see below <l>), and the\n" \ ++" argument (*) is given, the position of the\n" \ ++" screenmark becomes the center. This does move the\n" \ ++" visible area, but it does not move the screenmark.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"ZOOMING ****************************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<v> Set the zoom-factor\n" \ ++" \n" \ ++" This command requires one argument (F) which must be\n" \ ++" between 0.05 and 2. F will become the zoom-factor\n" \ ++" and the visible-area will be redrawn. Use (*)<v> to \n" \ ++" adjust the zoom-factor such that the page horizontaly \n" \ ++" fits the visible-area.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" If the zoom-factor is 1, the pixels found in pk-files \n" \ ++" are just copied one by one to the screen. Since the\n" \ ++" resolution of our days screens seems to be less than\n" \ ++" that of our days printers, and since you may still\n" \ ++" want to use the same pk-files for printing and\n" \ ++" viewing, F=1 usually results in a magnification. So\n" \ ++" when you're just reading some text in some DVIfile\n" \ ++" you will set F to something like 0.3, depending on\n" \ ++" the involved resolutions. When the screenmark is\n" \ ++" visible (see <l>) the position of the screenmark is\n" \ ++" taken as the origin of zooming, i.e. it is fixed. \n" \ ++" When the screenmark is not visible, the middle of the \n" \ ++" screen is fixed. The current zoom-factor is displayed \n" \ ++" in the optional statusline, see <x>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" There are two zooming modi. The integer modus \n" \ ++" requieres 1/f to be an integer. This modus is quite \n" \ ++" fast, so good values are F=0.5, 0.333, 0.25, 0.2, \n" \ ++" 0.167 etc. The good thing about the slow modus is, \n" \ ++" that it allows you to choose the zoom-factor \n" \ ++" arbitrary (between 0.05 and 2). So poor students with \n" \ ++" small screens might find some optimum to make the \n" \ ++" text fit and still be readable. The bad thing about \n" \ ++" the slow modus is that it is slow. But since once \n" \ ++" zoomed glyphs are kept in memory, this slowness only \n" \ ++" hurts the first few pages after changing the\n" \ ++" zoom-factor. Modus selection is done by the display \n" \ ++" options <o>. \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<+>/<-> Zoom in/out\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Increase/decrease the zoom-factor. When in the fast\n" \ ++" modus, step through the fast values only (see\n" \ ++" above). When an argument (PP) is given, it is taken\n" \ ++" as the amount of increasing/decreasing in percent of\n" \ ++" the current zoom-factor. This is likely to result in\n" \ ++" the slow modus.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"BOOKMARKS **************************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"A bookmark remembers what is seen on the screen. That is\n" \ ++"the DVIfile, the page within that file, the position of the\n" \ ++"visable area and the zoom-factor. There are three kind of\n" \ ++"bookmarks ...\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"file-bookmarks:\n" \ ++"Each file visited has a file-bookmark, containing the above\n" \ ++"information about what was seen on the screen when visited\n" \ ++"the last time, plus some information on the file, that is\n" \ ++"the paper-offset and -position, the location of the\n" \ ++"printable-area. file-bookmarks are generated automaticly.\n" \ ++"This results in easy re-visiting a DVIfile: you'll find it\n" \ ++"as left. A file-bookmark is removed by killing the DVIfile\n" \ ++"with <d><k>, see <d> below.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"back-bookmarks:\n" \ ++"When searching a text-string, following a href or moving to\n" \ ++"a bookmark, the position within the DVIfile might be\n" \ ++"changed to somewhere far far away. To simplify recovering\n" \ ++"fromsuch excursions, a back-bookmark will be generated\n" \ ++"automaticly. To prevent getting fed up with thousands of\n" \ ++"back-bookmarks, the total number of theese is limited. See\n" \ ++"<^> below.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"manual-bookmarks:\n" \ ++"After all you may install your own bookmarks, marking often\n" \ ++"visited places, say in some manuals. manual-bookmarks are\n" \ ++"named by a number. This number has to be unique whithin\n" \ ++"the DVIfile they belong to. To define a manual-bookmark\n" \ ++"use <b>. Since manual-bookmarks belong to the DVIfile they\n" \ ++"are defined on, they get lost, when that DVIfile is killed\n" \ ++"by <d><k>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"All kind of bookmarks are kept in a ring-buffer. There is a\n" \ ++"so called current bookmark of each type. Visiting the\n" \ ++"bookmarks along the ring-buffer is done by <w> for file-\n" \ ++"and manual-bookmarks, while <^> acts on back-bookmarks.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<b> Define/undefine manual-bookmark. \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" When the current position is not already defined as\n" \ ++" a manual-bookmark, <b> defines one. When an single\n" \ ++" numeric argument (NUM) is given, NUM will be the\n" \ ++" name of the newly defined bookmark. With no\n" \ ++" argument, a name will be generated automaticly. See\n" \ ++" <w> below, for how to visit manual-bookmarks. When\n" \ ++" the current position is already defined as a\n" \ ++" manual-bookmark, <b> undefines that manual-bookmark.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<w> Move to bookmark.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" When a single numeric argument (NUM) is given, <w>\n" \ ++" moves to the manual-bookmark named NUM, if\n" \ ++" any. Since manual bookmarks are bound to DVIfiles,\n" \ ++" the current DVIfile will never change in that\n" \ ++" case. If no argument is given, <w> goes moves the\n" \ ++" postion either thrue the ring-buffer of\n" \ ++" file-bookmarks or thrue the one of\n" \ ++" manual-bookmarks. To toggle between theese two modi,\n" \ ++" use the magic argument <*>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<^> Move back\n" \ ++" \n" \ ++" Move to the latest back-bookmark, if any. When a\n" \ ++" single numeric argument (TOTAL) is given, keep the\n" \ ++" TOTAL latest back-bookmarks and discard all the\n" \ ++" others.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"CHOOSING WHAT'S ON THE DISPLAY *****************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<o> Display options\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" This command collects a number of general options \n" \ ++" on how the things get on the screen. Use the cursor\n" \ ++" keys (or <u>/<n>/<h>/<h>) to navigate.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" > Greyscales. When the zoom-factor is less than 1, \n" \ ++" the glyphs may be displayed using grey-levels, making \n" \ ++" them more smooth. This takes some memory, so you are \n" \ ++" allowed to switch it off. On high-res displays there \n" \ ++" is no need for greyscaling anyway.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" > Eps-rendering. There is limited support for \n" \ ++" rendering eps-files by running ghostscript. However, \n" \ ++" this sometimes is quite slow and memory intensive, so \n" \ ++" you may turn it off. If rendering is enabled the \n" \ ++" results are buffered. Hence, if the eps-files are \n" \ ++" updated by some graphics program, you need to do a \n" \ ++" <*><r> to force rerendering. To disable certain \n" \ ++" eps-files individually, abort the rendering process \n" \ ++" by <esc>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" > Double-page. There is also limited support for \n" \ ++" viewing two pages beside each other. Again their\n" \ ++" is some memory required to keep it all buffered.\n" \ ++" You may disable double paged viewing entirely. You\n" \ ++" may let tmview deceide on basis of the zoom-factor.\n" \ ++" Or you may permanently enable this feature.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" > Zooming. There is a fast zooming mode allowing\n" \ ++" only zomming by 1/f where f is required to be an\n" \ ++" integer. And there is an arbitrary mode to be\n" \ ++" selected.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<x> Toggle statusline-information\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" While the standard statusline shows you the\n" \ ++" page-number of the current page and the arguments\n" \ ++" you are about to enter, you may select optional\n" \ ++" information for measuring out distances and so. See\n" \ ++" below.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<t> Set unit of measurement\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Whenever you specify arguments which are to describe\n" \ ++" a point on the page, this is done w.r.t. a unit of\n" \ ++" measurement, i.e. cm, mm, a.s.o.. This unit is also\n" \ ++" used, when the position of a mark is displayed in\n" \ ++" the statusline.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"MEASURING **************************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"To allow you to measure distances on the page, there are\n" \ ++"two marks, the screenmark, which is fixed on the physical\n" \ ++"screen you're looking at, and the pagemark, which is fixed\n" \ ++"on the DVIfiles page. When you move the visible-area, the\n" \ ++"screenmark acts as drawn with edding on your monitor. The\n" \ ++"pagemark acts as drawn on the page. The optional statusline\n" \ ++"tells the position of the pagemark relative to the corner\n" \ ++"of the sheet of paper you're viewing. It also tells the\n" \ ++"position of the screenmark relative to the pagemark. To\n" \ ++"measure distances you first may switch this marks on, using\n" \ ++"<l>. When the marks are shown, the scrolling commands don't\n" \ ++"act on the visible area anymore, but move the screenmark. \n" \ ++"For that case only moving the screenmark at the boarder of\n" \ ++"the screen results in scrolling. To move the pagemark just\n" \ ++"move the screenmark at the desired position and use <y> to\n" \ ++"make the pagemark follow.\n" \ ++" \n" \ ++"<l> Show/hide screenmark and pagemark\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" This commands takes the two arguments\n" \ ++" (PM_X;PM_Y). The pagemark is put at position PM_X\n" \ ++" PM_Y w.r.t. the upper left corner of the page. The\n" \ ++" Screenmark may be moved with the scrolling-commands.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<y> Set pagemark at the position of the screenmark\n" \ ++" \n" \ ++"Beside of these marks there are three rectangles for\n" \ ++"measurement. First there is the boarder of the paper setup\n" \ ++"by the command-line options -h,-v and -p. Then there is\n" \ ++"the printable area, setup with the -k command-line option.\n" \ ++"Third the so called marked rectangle used.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<a> Show/hide marked rectangle\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" The four arguments (LEFT,TOP,WIDTH,HIGHT) specify\n" \ ++" the position on page an the size of the marked\n" \ ++" rectangle. When pagemark and screenmark are shown,\n" \ ++" their positions are used as default. When they are\n" \ ++" hidden, the last position of the marked rectangle is\n" \ ++" used as default.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<p> Show/hide printable area \n" \ ++" \n" \ ++" The four arguments (LEFT,RIGHT,TOP,BOTTOM) specify\n" \ ++" the margins of the printable area, w.r.t. the\n" \ ++" boarder of the page. When pagemark and screenmark\n" \ ++" are shown, the argument (*) sets the printable area\n" \ ++" to the rectangle described by screenmark and\n" \ ++" pagemark. When they are hidden, (*) takes the\n" \ ++" command-line-options resp. defaults -k of the\n" \ ++" printable area.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<e> Set paper-offset and -size \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" The four arguments (HOFF;VOFF;WIDTH;HEIGHT) specify\n" \ ++" the boarder of the page. Have the top-left corner of\n" \ ++" a sheet of paper in mind. Then (HOFF,VOFF) is the\n" \ ++" offset of the DVIfile's origin to the left boarder\n" \ ++" of the paper. Standard values are\n" \ ++" HOFF=VOFF=2.54cm. WIDTH and HEIGHT are the width and\n" \ ++" the height of the sheet of paper. The sheet of paper\n" \ ++" is represented only by a frame on the screen. It\n" \ ++" does not affect the drawing of the DVIfile.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" When pagemark and screenmark are shown, the argument\n" \ ++" (*) sets the boarder of the page to the rectangle\n" \ ++" described by screenmark and pagemark. When they are\n" \ ++" hidden, (*) takes the command-line-options\n" \ ++" resp. defaults -h,-v and -p.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"HALF-HYPER *************************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"tmview does some of the fancy hyper-tex things. I talk\n" \ ++"about HALF-hyper-tex, because tmview follows only links\n" \ ++"which point to somewhere within the currently visited\n" \ ++"dvi-file. So there is no connection to the net or so. But\n" \ ++"you might find it usefull (when editing a major project) to\n" \ ++"view an equation number this-and-that by clicking on\n" \ ++"this-and-that whereever the text refers to that equation.\n" \ ++"For information about hyper-tex, related macropackages and\n" \ ++"fully compatible viewer scan the net ...\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<k> Show/hide half-hyper-mark\n" \ ++"<TAB> Goto next href\n" \ ++"<RET> Follow current href, if any \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"MISC *******************************************************\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<s> Search for text\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" You will be asked for the text-string to be searched.\n" \ ++" You may enter a regular expression describing that\n" \ ++" string, that includes especially just to enter the\n" \ ++" string as it is.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" tmview will take the entire DVIfile as one huge\n" \ ++" text-string and then search for the next substring,\n" \ ++" fitting the regular expression you've enterd. Thereby\n" \ ++" \"next\" is ment with respect to the current page.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" So far this sounds quite easy, but there are some ugly\n" \ ++" details, based on the fact, that a DVIfile contains\n" \ ++" information on how to draw a bitmap representing your\n" \ ++" text. It does not contain information about from what\n" \ ++" characters in which order your text is made up. Even\n" \ ++" the PKfiles used to draw your text consist only of\n" \ ++" lots of glyphs but no character-codes, like ASCII or\n" \ ++" so. Building a huge text-string from a DVIfile is some\n" \ ++" kind of guessing.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Fisrt: What kind of huge-string is build from the DVIfile?\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" This string will consists of the letters <A> ... <Z>,\n" \ ++" <a> ... <z>, the accent <\"> and the digits <0>\n" \ ++" ... <9>. It does NOT contain anything else, like\n" \ ++" <space>, <ret> or <->:\n" \ ++" Whenbeingprinteditwouldlooklikethisnotreadableatall. \n" \ ++" Taking the DVIfile as huge string allows you to find\n" \ ++" all locations of a sub-string, say\n" \ ++" \"commandlineoptions\", even those that are seperarted\n" \ ++" by linebreaks (and hyphens) or pagebreaks. In turn,\n" \ ++" there is no chance to find all those locations, where\n" \ ++" \"commandlineoptions\" is seperated by a hypenation. To\n" \ ++" keep tmview from being confused by headings, there is\n" \ ++" another rule for building up the huge text-string: any\n" \ ++" glyph outside the printable area (see <p>) is\n" \ ++" ignored. So you may setup the printable area to ignore\n" \ ++" headings when searching.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Second: How is the huge-string build up?\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" To translate the list of glyphs found in the DVIfile\n" \ ++" to a text-string, the tfm-files are asked for the\n" \ ++" encoding-scheme. This does work with dc-fonts and\n" \ ++" cm-fonts, since the following encoding-scheme names\n" \ ++" are accepted: \"ASCII\", \"TeX text\", \"TeX math italic\",\n" \ ++" \"TeX math symbols\", \"TeX typewriter text\", \"Extended\n" \ ++" TeX Font Encoding - Latin\", \"Adobe StandardEncoding\".\n" \ ++" The alphanumerics <A>...<Z>, <a>...<z>, <0> ... <9>\n" \ ++" are copied one by one to the huge text-string. Glyphs\n" \ ++" that \"look like\" a simple alphanumeric will be taken\n" \ ++" as that one it looks like. So the Tex input '\\c o',\n" \ ++" producing an 'o'-with-an-cedilla-accent, will be\n" \ ++" represented as a simple (o) in the text-string. This\n" \ ++" rule also works for all kind of ligatures. The TeX\n" \ ++" input 'ffl\\AE' will be represented by (fflAE). Any\n" \ ++" accent ON TOP of a glyph will be translated to a (\"),\n" \ ++" preceding whatever the glyph without that accent would\n" \ ++" be translated to. The TeX input '\\\"a' producing the\n" \ ++" german umlaut 'a'-with-two-dots-on-top, will be found\n" \ ++" as (\"a) in the generated text-string. The TeX input\n" \ ++" '\\aa' producing the scandinavian\n" \ ++" 'a'-with-circle-on-top will be found as (\"a) too. Any\n" \ ++" other glyphs are ignored.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Third: In what does the above result?\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Visiting english documents, say manuals to some\n" \ ++" computer related stuff like elisp.dvi, searching for\n" \ ++" keywords works fine. Searching in documents in which\n" \ ++" extensive use of accents and funny characters is made\n" \ ++" works too, but requires some luck or/and experiance in\n" \ ++" how TeX acts on such things.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Example: \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Take the file story.tex from the TeXbook, chapter 6, \n" \ ++" page 24. It contains the line\n" \ ++" galaxy called \\\"O\\\"o\\c c,\n" \ ++" The text-string build from the corresponding story.dvi\n" \ ++" will therfore contain\n" \ ++" galaxycalled\"O\"oc\n" \ ++" You may search for ... getting as result ...\n" \ ++" galaxy found\n" \ ++" galaxycalled found\n" \ ++" galaxy called not found\n" \ ++" d\" found\n" \ ++" galaxy.*\"O\"oc found\n" \ ++" Ooc not found\n" \ ++" \n" \ ++" \n" \ ++"<r> Re-read current DVIfile and re-draw screen.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Note: <r> will not re-initialize the fontdatabase,\n" \ ++" nor the buffer for rendered eps-figures. To force\n" \ ++" everything beeing re-read, use (*)<r>.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<d> Load/kill DVIfile\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" After typing <d> you may select between <l> to load a \n" \ ++" DVIfile and <k> to kill a DVIfile. \n" \ ++" \n" \ ++" Loading a DVIFile: \n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" tmview will look for a file-bookmark belonging to that\n" \ ++" file. If there is one, it becomes the current\n" \ ++" file-bookmark. The DVIfile will be shown as left, and\n" \ ++" any defined manual-bookmarks are accessable by\n" \ ++" <w>. When loading a DVIfile for the first time, a new\n" \ ++" file-bookmark will be generated. This will be setup\n" \ ++" with default values from the command-line options and\n" \ ++" won't contain any manual-bookmarks.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++" Killing a DVIfile:\n" \ ++" To kill a DVIfile means to kill its file-bookmark and\n" \ ++" any related manual-bookmark. Killing a DVIfile won't\n" \ ++" hurt the file itself. You don't have to kill a\n" \ ++" DVIfile just to load another one.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"<q> Quit tmview \n" \ ++" \n" \ ++" When quitting, a startup-file will be written. When\n" \ ++" running tmview next time, you will find almost\n" \ ++" everything as you left it.\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"\n" \ ++"**********************************************************\n" \ ++"End of help***********************************************\n" \ ++"\n\n\n" + + char helpstr[]=HELPSTR; + +--- tmview-01.03.orig/src/readpk.c ++++ tmview-01.03/src/readpk.c +@@ -752,10 +752,10 @@ + theChar->bmp2.h = CEIL(theChar->bmp.h / fshrink) +2; + + if(firstrows<=0 || firstcols<=0) +- pfprot("IMPORTANT DEBUGINFORMATION +-break with fro %d fco %d +-fshr %f hof %d vof %d hof2 %d vof2 %d\n",firstrows,firstcols, +- fshrink,theChar->hof,theChar->vof,theChar->hof2,theChar->vof2); ++ pfprot("IMPORTANT DEBUG INFORMATION\n" ++ "break with fro %d fco %d\n" ++ "fshr %f hof %d vof %d hof2 %d vof2 %d\n",firstrows,firstcols, ++ fshrink,theChar->hof,theChar->vof,theChar->hof2,theChar->vof2); + + + theChar->bmp2.type=GREYSCALE; +@@ -877,8 +877,8 @@ + exit(1); + } + +-/*pfprot("DEBUG +-fshr %f hof %d vof %d hof2 %d vof2 %d\n", ++/*pfprot("DEBUG\n" ++ "fshr %f hof %d vof %d hof2 %d vof2 %d\n", + fshrink, theChar->hof,theChar->vof,theChar->hof2,theChar->vof2); + pfprot("srcw %d srch %d destw %d desth %d \n", + theChar->bmp.w,theChar->bmp.h,theChar->bmp2.w,theChar->bmp2.h); */ +@@ -902,8 +902,8 @@ + topweight=1-(CEIL(fi)-fi); + botweight=1-((fi-frows)-FLOOR(fi-frows)); + +- /* pfprot("\nrow info at fi %f +-fr %f tw %f bw %f oy %d oh %d iy %d ih %d\n", ++ /* pfprot("\nrow info at fi %f\n" ++ "fr %f tw %f bw %f oy %d oh %d iy %d ih %d\n", + fi,frows,topweight,botweight,oy,oh,iy,ih); */ + + m= BITS_PER_BMUNIT -GREYSCALE; +@@ -919,8 +919,8 @@ + ix=MIN(CEIL(fj)+theChar->hof,theChar->bmp.w); + iw=MAX(0,MIN(FLOOR(fj+fcols)-CEIL(fj),theChar->bmp.w-ix)); + +- /*pfprot(" col info at fj %f +- fc %f ox %d ow %d ix %d iw %d\n",fj,fcols,ox,ow,ix,iw);*/ ++ /*pfprot(" col info at fj %f\n" ++ "fc %f ox %d ow %d ix %d iw %d\n",fj,fcols,ox,ow,ix,iw);*/ + + leftweight=1-(fj-FLOOR(fj)); + rightweight=1-(CEIL(fj+fcols)-fj-fcols); +@@ -1039,10 +1039,10 @@ + theChar->bmp2.h = CEIL(theChar->bmp.h / fshrink) +2; + + if(firstrows<=0 || firstcols<=0) +- pfprot("IMPORTANT DEBUGINFORMATION +-break with fro %d fco %d +-fshr %f hof %d vof %d hof2 %d vof2 %d\n",firstrows,firstcols, +- fshrink, theChar->hof,theChar->vof,theChar->hof2,theChar->vof2); ++ pfprot("IMPORTANT DEBUG INFORMATION\n" ++ "break with fro %d fco %d\n" ++ "fshr %f hof %d vof %d hof2 %d vof2 %d\n",firstrows,firstcols, ++ fshrink, theChar->hof,theChar->vof,theChar->hof2,theChar->vof2); + + + theChar->bmp2.w = CEIL(theChar->bmp.w / fshrink) +2; +--- tmview-01.03.orig/lX/writelx.c ++++ tmview-01.03/lX/writelx.c +@@ -129,9 +129,9 @@ + if(ibytes_per_pixel == 3) ibytes_per_pixel =4; + + if(ibytes_per_pixel != IBYTES_PER_PIXEL) { +- pfprot("\n +-warning: display: found %d-bit depth while optimized for %d-bit. +- Recompile for better performance.\n", offimage->depth, IBYTES_PER_PIXEL*8); ++ pfprot("\n" ++ "warning: display: found %d-bit depth while optimized for %d-bit.\n" ++ "Recompile for better performance.\n", offimage->depth, IBYTES_PER_PIXEL*8); + setvar(); + } else { + pfverb("writelx: using built in %d-bit pixmap functions on a %d-bit display\n", |