Adding New Data Formats And Converters Texmacs Manual.en

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GNU TEXMACS user manual

Table of contents
1. Getting started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
1.1. Conventions for this manual
Menu entries . . . .
Keyboard modiers
Keyboard shortcuts
Special keys . . . .
1.2. Conguring TEXMACS . . . .
1.3. Creating, saving and loading
1.4. Printing documents . . . . .

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13
13
13
13
14
14
14
15

2. Writing simple documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
2.1. Generalities for typing text . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2. Typing structured text . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.3. Content-based tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.4. Lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5. Environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.6. Layout issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.7. The font selection system . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.8. Mastering the keyboard . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.8.1. General prex rules . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.8.2. Keyboard shortcuts for text mode . . . .
2.8.3. Hybrid commands and LATEX simulation
2.8.4. Dynamic objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.8.5. Various useful keyboard shortcuts . . . .

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17
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25

3. Mathematical formulas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
3.1. Incorporating mathematical formulas into documents
3.2. Typing mathematical symbols . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.3. Main mathematical constructs . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.4. Typing large delimiters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.5. Typing big operators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.6. Wide mathematical accents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.7. Semantic editing facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.8. Common errors and syntax correction . . . . . . . . .
3.9. Semantics of mathematical symbols . . . . . . . . . . .
3.10. Customized mathematical semantics . . . . . . . . . .
4. Tabular material
4.1.
4.2.
4.3.
4.4.
4.5.

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27
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34
35

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

Creating tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The formatting mode . . . . . . . . . . .
Specifying the cell and table alignment
Specifying the cell and table size . . . .
Borders, padding and background color
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37
38
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39

6

Table of contents

4.6. Advanced table features

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

5. Links and automatically generated content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
5.1.
5.2.
5.3.
5.4.
5.5.
5.6.
5.7.
5.8.

Creating labels, links and references . . . . . . . . .
Inserting images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Generating a table of contents . . . . . . . . . . . .
Compiling a bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Editing les with bibliographic entries . . . . . .
Inserting citations and compiling bibliographies
Generating an index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Compiling a glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Multiple extractions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Books and multile documents . . . . . . . . . . . .

6. Creating technical pictures
6.1.
6.2.
6.3.
6.4.

Starting a new picture . . . . .
Inserting new objects . . . . . .
Editing objects . . . . . . . . . .
Specication of style properties
Color . . . . . . . . . . .
Fill color . . . . . . . .
Opacity . . . . . . . . .
Point style . . . . . . .
Line width . . . . . . .
Line dashes . . . . . . .
Line arrows . . . . . . .
Text alignment . . . .
6.5. Editing groups of objects . . . .

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41
41
42
42
42
43
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45

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
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47
47
48
49
49
49
50
50
50
50
50
51
51

7. Advanced layout features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
7.1. Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
7.2. Floating objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
7.3. Page breaking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
8. Editing tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
8.1.
8.2.
8.3.
8.4.
8.5.
8.6.

Cut and paste . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Search and replace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Spell checking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Undo and redo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Structured editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Structured cursor movement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Structured traversal of the document . . . . . . . . . .
Traversal of tags that are similar to the innermost tag
Movements inside the innermost tag . . . . . . . . . . .
8.7. Structured variants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.8. Positioning and resizing objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8.9. Versioning tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Comparing two versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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61

Table of contents

7

Visualization of the dierences . . . . . . . . . . .
Retaining a specic version . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Grain control and reactualizing the dierences .
Using external programs such as Subversion for
9. Laptop presentations
9.1.
9.2.
9.3.
9.4.
9.5.
9.6.

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61
61
62
62

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65

Beamer styles . . . . . . . . . . .
Traversal of a presentation . . .
Overlays . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Decorations . . . . . . . . . . . .
Animations . . . . . . . . . . . .
Exporting beamer presentations

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10. Using GNU TEXMACS as an interface
10.1. Creating sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.2. Editing sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.3. Selecting the input method . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.4. Plug-ins as scripting languages . . . . . . . . . .
10.5. Spreadsheets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.6. Remote plug-ins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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65
65
66
67
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68

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
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11. Writing TEXMACS style files . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.1. Writing a simple style package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.2. Rendering of style les and packages . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.2.1. ASCII-based or tree-based editing: an intricate choice
11.2.2. Global presentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.2.3. Local customization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3. The style-sheet language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3.1. Assignments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3.2. Macro expansion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3.3. Formatting primitives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3.4. Evaluation control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3.5. Flow control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.3.6. Computational markup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.4. Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles . . . . . . . . . .
11.4.1. Organization of style les and packages . . . . . . . .
11.4.2. General principles for customization . . . . . . . . . .
11.4.3. Customizing the general layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.4.4. Customizing list environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.4.5. Customizing numbered textual environments . . . . .
Dening new environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Customization of the rendering . . . . . . . . . . . .
Customization of the numbering . . . . . . . . . . .
11.4.6. Customizing sectional tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.4.7. Customizing the treatment of title information . . . .
11.5. Further notes and tips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.5.1. Customizing arbitrary tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11.5.2. Standard utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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71
71
72
73
74
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77
79
79
80
83
84
84
84
85
87
88
89
89
90
91
91
92
93
94
94
95
95
97
98
98
99

12. Customizing TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101

8

12.1.
12.2.
12.3.
12.4.
12.5.

Table of contents

Introduction to the Guile extension language
Writing your own initialization les . . . . . .
Creating your own dynamic menus . . . . . . .
Creating your own keyboard shortcuts . . . .
Other interesting les . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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13. The TEXMACS plug-in system . . . . . . . . .
13.1. Installing and using a plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13.2. Writing your own plug-ins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13.3. Example of a plug-in with Scheme code . . . . . .
The world plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
How it works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13.4. Example of a plug-in with C++ code . . . . . . . .
The minimal plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
How it works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13.5. Summary of the conguration options for plug-ins

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101
101
102
103
104

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14. The TEXMACS format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.1. TEXMACS trees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Internal nodes of TEXMACS trees . . . . . . . .
Leafs of TEXMACS trees . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Serialization and preferred syntax for editing
14.2. TEXMACS documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.3. Default serialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Main serialization principle . . . . . . . . . . .
Formatting and whitespace . . . . . . . . . . .
Raw data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.4. XML serialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The encoding for strings . . . . . . . . . . . .
XML representation of regular tags . . . . .
Special tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.5. Scheme serialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.6. The typesetting process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
14.7. Data relation descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The rationale behind D.R.D.s . . . . . . . . .
Current D.R.D. properties and applications
Determination of the D.R.D. of a document
14.8. TEXMACS lengths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Absolute length units . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Rigid font-dependent length units . . . . . .
Stretchable font-dependent length units . . .
Box lengths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other length units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dierent ways to specify lengths . . . . . . .

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105
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107
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111
111
111
112
112
113
113
114
115
115
115
115
115
116
117
118
118
118
119
119
120
120
120
121
121
121

15. Built-in environment variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
15.1. General environment variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
15.2. Specifying the current font . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126

Table of contents

9

15.3. Typesetting mathematics . . . . . . . .
15.4. Paragraph layout . . . . . . . . . . . . .
15.5. Page layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Paper specic variables . . . .
Screen specic variables . . . .
Specifying the margins . . . .
Page decorations . . . . . . . .
15.6. Table layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Layout of the table as a whole
Layout of the individual cells
15.7. Editing source trees . . . . . . . . . . .
15.8. Miscellaneous environment variables .

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16. Built-in TEXMACS primitives
16.1. Fundamental primitives . . . . . . .
16.2. Formatting primitives . . . . . . . .
16.2.1. White space primitives . . . .
16.2.2. Line breaking primitives . . .
16.2.3. Indentation primitives . . . .
16.2.4. Page breaking primitives . . .
16.2.5. Box operation primitives . . .
16.3. Mathematical primitives . . . . . .
16.4. Table primitives . . . . . . . . . . . .
16.5. Linking primitives . . . . . . . . . .
16.6. Miscellaneous physical markup . .

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128
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141
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144
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154

17. Primitives for writing style files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
17.1. Environment primitives . . . . . . .
17.2. Macro primitives . . . . . . . . . . .
17.3. Flow control primitives . . . . . . .
17.4. Evaluation control primitives . . .
17.5. Functional operators . . . . . . . . .
17.5.1. Operations on text . . . . . . .
17.5.2. Arithmetic operations . . . . .
17.5.3. Boolean operations . . . . . .
17.5.4. Operations on tuples . . . . .
17.6. Transient markup . . . . . . . . . . .
17.7. Miscellaneous style-sheet primitives
17.8. Internal primitives . . . . . . . . . .

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18. The standard TEXMACS styles
18.1. General organization . . . . . . . . . . .
18.1.1. Standard TEXMACS styles . . . . .
18.1.2. Standard TEXMACS packages . . .
18.2. The common base for most styles . . .
18.2.1. Standard markup . . . . . . . . .
18.2.2. Standard symbols . . . . . . . . .
18.2.3. Standard mathematical markup
18.2.4. Standard lists . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.4.1. Using list environments . .

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10

Table of contents

18.2.4.2. Customization of list environments . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.5. Automatic content generation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.5.1. Bibliographies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.5.2. Tables of contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.5.3. Indexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.5.4. Glossaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.6. Utilities for writing style les . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.7. Counters and counter groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.8. Special markup for programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.2.9. Special markup for sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3. Standard environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3.1. Dening new environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3.2. Mathematical environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3.3. Theorem-like environments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3.3.1. Using the theorem-like environments . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3.3.2. Customization of the theorem-like environments . . .
18.3.4. Environments for oating objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.3.4.1. Using the environments for oating objects . . . . . . .
18.3.4.2. Customization of the environments for oating objects
18.4. Headers and footers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.4.1. Standard titles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.4.1.1. Entering titles and abstracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.4.1.2. Customizing the global rendering of titles . . . . . . . .
18.4.1.3. Customizing the rendering of title elds . . . . . . . . .
18.4.2. Standard headers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.5. LATEX style sections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.5.1. Using sectional tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.5.2. Customization of the sectional tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
18.5.3. Helper macros for rendering section titles . . . . . . . . . . .

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19. Compatibility with other formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
19.1. Converters for LATEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
19.1.1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
19.1.2. Conversion from TEXMACS to LATEX . . . . . . . . .
19.1.3. Conversion from LATEX to TEXMACS . . . . . . . . .
19.1.4. Limitations of the current LATEX converters . . . .
Limitations of the TEXMACS to LATEX converter
Limitations of the LATEX to TEXMACS converter
19.2. Converters for Html and MathML . . . . . . . . . . . .
Html generation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Customized Html generation . . . . . . . . . . .
Html importation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Declaring new formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Declaring new converters . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Appendix A. Configuration of TEXMACS
A.1. User preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
A.2. Keyboard conguration . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Standard conformance . . . . . . . . . .
Potential conicts . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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System-wide shortcuts which may
User-dened shortcuts . . . . . . .
A.3. Notes for users of Cyrillic languages . . .
A.4. Notes for users of oriental languages . . .

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Appendix B. About GNU TEXMACS-1.99.9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.1. Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Disclaimers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.2. The philosophy behind TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.2.1. A short description of GNU TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.2.2. Why freedom is important for scientists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3. The authors of TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.1. Developers of TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.2. Authors and maintainers of plugins for TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.3. Administration of TEXMACS and material support . . . . . . . . .
B.3.4. Porting TEXMACS to other platforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.5. Contributors to TEXMACS packages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.6. Internationalization of TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.7. Other contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.3.8. Contacting us . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4. Important changes in TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.1. Improved spacing inside formulas (1.0.7.10) . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.2. Auto-matching brackets (1.0.7.9) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.3. More context dependent interface (1.0.7.8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.4. Default look and feel (1.0.7.7) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.5. Linking tool (1.0.6.3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.6. Type 1 fonts become the default (1.0.5.10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.7. New multi-part document mechanism (1.0.5.6  1.0.5.7) . . . . .
B.4.8. Improved scheme interface (1.0.5.1  1.0.5.6) . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.9. Improved titles (1.0.4.1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.10. Improved style sheets and source editing mode (1.0.3.5) . . . . .
B.4.11. Renaming of tags and environment variables (1.0.2.7  1.0.2.8)
B.4.12. Macro expansion (1.0.2.3  1.0.2.7) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.13. Formatting tags (1.0.2  1.0.2.1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.14. Keyboard (1.0.0.11  1.0.1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.15. Menus (1.0.0.7  1.0.1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.16. Style les (1.0.0.4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.17. Tabular material (0.3.5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.4.18. Document format (0.3.4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Appendix C. Contributing to GNU TEXMACS . . . . . . . . .
C.1. Use TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.2. Making donations to the TEXMACS project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Making donations to TeXmacs through the SPI organization
Details on how to donate money . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Important notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3. Contribute to the GNU TEXMACS documentation . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.1. Introduction on how to contribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.2. Using SVN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.3. Conventions for the names of les . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Table of contents

C.3.4. Specifying meta information for documentation les . . . . . . .
C.3.5. Traversing the TEXMACS documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.6. Using the tmdoc style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.6.1. Explanations of macros, environment variables, and so on
C.3.6.2. Graphical user interface related markup . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.6.3. Common annotations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.3.6.4. Miscellaneous markup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.4. Internationalization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.5. Writing data converters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.6. Porting TEXMACS to other platforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.7. Interfacing TEXMACS with other systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.8. TEXMACS over the network and over the web . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C.9. Become a TEXMACS developer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Appendix D. Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs
D.1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.2. Basic input/output using pipes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.3. Formatted and structured output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The formula plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The markup plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.4. Output channels, prompts and default input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The prompt plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.5. Sending commands to TEXMACS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The menus plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.6. Background evaluations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The substitute plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The secure plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.7. Mathematical and customized input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The input plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.8. Tab-completion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The complete plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.9. Dynamic libraries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
The dynlink plug-in . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.10. Miscellaneous features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Testing whether the input is complete . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.11. Writing documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D.12. Plans for the future . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Index

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Chapter 1
Getting started
1.1. Conventions for this manual
Menu entries.
Throughout the TEXMACS manual, menu entries will be typeset using a sans serif font, like
in Document, File!Load or Format!Font shape!Italic.
Keyboard modiers.
TEXMACS makes use of the following keyboard modiers:
⇧.

For shift key combinations.

⌃.

For control key combinations.

⌥.

For alternate key combinations.

⌘.

For meta key combinations.

For instance, ⌘⇧X stands for the action which consists of simultaneously pressing the three
keys ⌘ , ⇧ and X .
The actual keyboard modier keys depend on your system as indicated in the following
table

⌃

Windows or Linux/Unix
with Windows keyboard
Apple
fallback combination

Ctrl
⌘

Command

⎋⎋⎋

⌥

left

Alt

⌥ Option
⎋⎋

⌘

(y)
(y)

(y)
Ctrl

⎋

Table 1.1. Actual modier keys on common platforms.
y Some modier key combinations are preempted by the operating
system. The behavior may be dierent for the right and left modier
key.

Keyboard shortcuts.
Keyboard shortcuts are obtained by pressing several keys or modied keys in succession.
For instance, the shortcut - > corresponds on rst pressing the - key and then the key > .
Inside mathematical formulas, this shortcut inserts the arrow !. Similarly, the shortcut
⌃X ⌃F consists of rst pressing the keys ⌃ and X together, and next pressing the keys ⌃ and
F again together. In the Emacs look and feel, this shortcut enables you to open a new le.
13

14

Getting started

Some common keyboard prexes are detailed in the section on general keyboard rules. In
cases when TEXMACS keyboard shortcuts are superseded by shortcuts from the operating
system, equivalents for the keyboard modiers can be obtained using the ⎋ key. For
instance, ⎋ is equivalent to ⌘ and ⎋ ⎋ is equivalent to ⌥ .
Notice that the TEXMACS menus and keyboard behavior are contextual , i.e. they depend on
the current mode (i.e. text mode or math mode), the current language and the position
of the cursor inside your document. For instance, inside math mode, you have special
keyboard shortcuts which are handy for typing mathematical formulas, but which are
useless in text mode.
Special keys.
On some platforms, some special keys such as the Return key are depicted by short glyphs.
Below follows the table with all such special keys and there meaning.
Key Meaning
⇧
Shift modier
⇪
Caps lock
⌃
Control modier
⌥
Alternate modier
⌘
Meta modier
↩
Return
⌦
Forward delete
⌫
Backspace
⎋
Escape
⇥
Tab

Key Meaning
←
Cursor left
→
Cursor right
↑
Cursor up
↓
Cursor down
↖
Home
↘
End
⇞
Page up
⇟
Page down
␣
Space

Table 1.2. Special keys.

1.2. Configuring TEXMACS
When starting TEXMACS for the rst time, the program automatically congures itself in
a way which it thinks to be most suitable for you. For instance, TEXMACS will attempt
to determine your systems settings for the language and the paper type of your printer.
However, the automatic conguration may sometimes fail or you may want to use an
alternative conguration. In that case, you should go to the Edit!Preferences menu and
specify your preferences.
In particular, we recommend you to congure the desired look and feel of TEXMACS. By
default, we use a native look and feel, which will ensure that keyboard shortcuts and menu
layout are similar to other applications on your system. But we also provide an Emacs
look and feel, which ensures a limited compatibility of the TEXMACS keyboard shortcuts
with those of Emacs.

1.3. Creating, saving and loading documents
When launching TEXMACS without any command line options, the editor automatically
creates a new document for you. You may also create a new document yourself using
File!New. Newly created documents do not yet carry a name. In order to give them a
name, you should click on File!Save as. We recommend you to give documents a name
immediately after their creation; this will avoid you to loose documents.

1.4 Printing documents

15

It is also recommended to specify the global settings for your document when necessary.
First of all, you may specify a document style like article, book or seminar using Document!Style. If you write documents in several languages, then you may want to specify
the language of your document using Document!Language. Similarly, you may specify a
paper type using Document!Page!Size.
For newly started documents, the style and page size can also be specied in the Focus menu
or buttons on the focus toolbar . In general, the focus menu and toolbar are useful for editing
structured documents, and their contents will be highly dependent on the current context.

After modifying your document, you may save it using File!Save. Old documents can be
retrieved using File!Load. Notice that you can edit several documents in the same window
using TEXMACS; you can switch between dierent buers using Go.

1.4. Printing documents
You can print the current le using File!Print!Print all. By default, TEXMACS assumes
that you have a 600dpi printer for a4 paper. These default settings can be changed in
Edit!Preferences!Printer. You can also print to a postscript le using File!Print!Print
all to le (in which case the default printer settings are used for creating the output) or
File!Export!Postscript (in which case the printer settings are ignored).
You may export to PDF using File!Export!Pdf. Notice that you should set Edit!Preferences!Printer!Font type!Type 1 if you want the produced Postscript or PDF le to use
Type 1 fonts. However, only the CM fonts admit Type 1 versions. These CM fonts are of
a slightly inferior quality to the EC fonts, mainly for accented characters. Consequently,
you might prefer to use the EC fonts as long as you do not need a PDF le which looks
nice in Acrobat Reader.
When adequately conguring TEXMACS, the editor is guaranteed to be wysiwyg: the result
after printing out is exactly what you see on your screen. In order to obtain full wysiwygness, you should in particular select Document!Page!Type!Paper and Document!Page!
Screen layout!Margins as on paper. You should also make sure that the characters on your
screen use the same number of dots per inch as your printer. This rendering precision of
the characters may be changed using Document!Font!Dpi. Currently, minor typesetting
changes may occur when changing the dpi, which may globally aect the document through
line and page breaking. In a future release this drawback should be removed.

Chapter 2
Writing simple documents
2.1. Generalities for typing text
The usual English characters and punctuation symbols can easily be obtained on most
keyboards. Most modern system also implement standard shortcuts in order to obtain
accented characters and other special symbols. If necessary, accented characters can also
be obtained using the ⌘ prex. For instance, é is obtained by typing ⌘' E . Similarly, we
obtain à via ⌘` A and so on.
Long words at borders of successive lines are automatically hyphenated. In order to
hyphenate foreign languages correctly, you should specify the language of the document
in the menu Document!Language.

At the left hand side of the footer, you see the document style, the text properties at the
current cursor position. Initially, it displays generic text roman 10, which means that you
type in text mode using a 10 point roman font and the generic document style. You can
change the text properties (font, font size, color, language) in the Format menu. You can
also change the text properties of the text you have already typed by selecting a region
and then using the Format menu. Some text properties can also be changed for all the
document with the Document menu.
At the right hand side of the footer, the character or object (like a change in the text
properties) just before the cursor is displayed. We also display all environments which are
active at the cursor position. This information should help you to orient yourself in the
document.

2.2. Typing structured text
Usually, long documents have a structure: they are organized in chapters, sections and
subsections, they contain dierent types of text, such as regular text, citations, footnotes,
theorems, etc. After selecting a document style in Document!Style, TEXMACS takes care of
specic layout issues, such as numbering of sections, pages, theorems, typesetting citations
and footnotes in a nice way and so on.
Currently, several standard document styles have been implemented: generic, article,
book, letter, exam, beamer, seminar, source. For instance, the article style can be used
for writing articles. Besides, there are styles for common journals and special purposes,
such as the TEXMACS documentation.
As soon as you have selected a document style, you can organize your text into sections
(see Insert!Section) and use specic environments (also called tags). Examples of environments are theorem, proposition, remark and so on (see Insert!Enunciation). Other examples
are lists of items (see Insert!Itemize) or numbered lists (see Insert!Enumerate). Further
examples of frequently used tags are strong (for writing important text), name (for writing
names of persons), etc.
17

18

Writing simple documents

When you get more acquainted with TEXMACS, it is possible to add your own new environments in your own style le. Assume for instance that you often make citations and
that you want those to appear in italic, with left and right margins of 1cm. Instead of
manually changing the text and paragraph properties each time you make a citation, it is
better to create a citation environment. Not only it will be faster to create a new citation
when doing so, but it is also possible to systematically change the layout of your citations
throughout the document just by changing the denition of the citation environment. The
latter situation occurs for instance if you discover a posteriori that you prefer the citations
to appear in a smaller font.
There are a few general editing principles which make it easy to manipulate structured
documents using TEXMACS. One major concept is the current focus, which is best illustrated
on an example. Assume that we are in the process of entering a classical theorem:
The following theorem is due to Euler:
Theorem 2.1. epi = ¡1j.
At the position of the cursor, the grey and cyan boxes indicate the active tags: in this case,
the cursor is both inside a theorem and a formula. The innermost active tag (the formula
epi = ¡1 in our example) is surrounded by a cyan box and called the current focus.

The contents of the Focus menu and focus toolbar (the lowest toolbar) are highly context
dependent and determined as a function of the current focus. In our example, the focus
toolbar contains a popup menu button Formula; when selecting Equation in this menu, the
text will change into
The following theorem is due to Euler:
Theorem 2.2.
epi = ¡1j:
Similarly, the arrow buttons on the left hand side of the focus toolbar allow you to jump to
similar tags. In this case, they will allow you to quickly traverse all formulas and equations
in your document. For more information on structured editing operations we refer to the
chapter on editing tools.
A second important concept is the current editing mode. Currently, there are ve major
modes: text mode, mathematics mode, program mode, graphics mode and source mode.
In principle, the current mode can be determined from the current focus, but the mode
is likely to change less often than the focus. The mode dependent toolbar above the focus
toolbar contains several buttons which are useful in the current mode. The contents of the
Insert and Format menus are also mode dependent.

2.3. Content-based tags
The simplest examples of structure in a text are content-based tags. In Insert!content
tags you see a list of them. Content based tags indicate that a given portion of text is of a
particular kind or that it serves a specic purpose. For instance, important text should be
marked using the strong tag. Its default rendering uses a bold type face, like in this strong
text. However, strong text might be rendered in a dierent way according to the document
style. For instance, strong text may be rendered in a dierent color on transparencies for
presentations. Here follows a short list of the most common content-based tags and their
purpose:

2.4 Lists

19

Tag
strong
em
dfn
samp
name
person
cite*
abbr
acronym
verbatim
kbd
code*
var

Example
this is important
the real thing
A gnu is a horny beast
the ae ligature æ
the Linux system
I am Joris
Melville's Moby Dick
I work at the C.N.R.S.
the HTML format
the program said hello
Please type return
cout << 1+1; yields 2
cp src-file dest-file

Purpose
Indicate an important region of text
Emphasize a region of text
Denition of some concept
A sequence of literal characters
The name of a particular thing
The name of a person
A bibliographic citation
An abbreviation
An acronym
Verbatim text like computer program output
Text which should be entered on a keyboard
Code of a computer program
Variables in a computer program

Table 2.1. Some of the most common content-based tags.

2.4. Lists
Using Insert!Itemize you may start an unnumbered list. You may either select a particular
tag like  (bullets), ¡ (dashes) or ! (arrows) to indicate entries in the list or the default
tag. Lists may be nested inside other tags, like in the following list:


First item.



Now comes the sublist:





A subitem.



Another one.

A nal item.

The default tag is rendered in a dierent way depending on the level of nesting. At the
outermost level, we used the  tag, at the second level , and so on. When you are inside
a list, notice that pressing ↩ automatically starts a new item. If you need items which are
several paragraphs long, then you may always use ⇧↩ in order to start a new paragraph.
Enumerate environments, which are started using Insert!Enumerate, behave in a similar
way as itemize, except that the items are numbered. Here follows an example of an enumeration which was started using Insert!Enumerate!Roman:
I. A rst item.
II. A second one.
III. And a last one.
The last type of lists are descriptive lists. They are started using Insert!Description and
allow you to describe a list of concepts:
Gnu. A hairy but gentle beast.

20

Writing simple documents

Gnat. Only lives in a zoo.

2.5. Environments
In a similar way as content-based tags, environments are used to mark portions of text
with a special meaning. However, while content-based tags usually enclose small portions
of text, environments often enclose portions that are several paragraphs long. Frequently
used environments in mathematics are theorem and proof, like in the example below:
Theorem 2.3. There exist no positive integers a, b, c and n with n > 3, such that an + bn =
c n.
Proof. I do not have room here to write the proof down.



You may enter environments using Insert!Environment. Other environments with a similar
rendering as theorems are proposition, lemma, corollary, axiom, denition. You may use the
dueto macro (entered using \ D U E T O ↩ ) in order to specify the person(s) to which the
theorem is due, like in
Theorem 2.4. (Pythagoras) Under nice circumstances, we have a2 + b2 = c2.
Other frequently used environments with a similar rendering as theorems, but which do
not emphasize the enclosed text, are remark, note, example, warning, exercise and problem.
The remaining environments verbatim, code, quote, quotation and verse can be used in order
to enter multiparagraph text or code, quotations or poetry.

2.6. Layout issues
As a general rule, TEXMACS takes care of the layout of your text. Therefore, although we
did not want to forbid this possibility, we do not encourage you to typeset your document
visually. For instance, you should not insert spaces or blank lines as substitutes for horizontal and vertical spaces between words and lines; instead, additional space should be
inserted explicitly using Insert!Space. This will make your text more robust in the sense
that you will not have to reconsider the layout when performing some minor changes, which
aect line or page breaking, or major changes, such as changing the document style.
Several types of explicit spacing commands have been implemented. First of all, you can
insert rigid spaces of given widths and heights. Horizontal spaces do not have a height
and are either stretchable or not. The length of a stretchable spaces depends on the way
a paragraph is hyphenated. Furthermore, it is possible to insert tabular spaces. Vertical
spaces may be inserted either at the start or the end of a paragraph: the additional vertical
space between two paragraphs is the maximum of the vertical space after the rst one and
the vertical space before the second one (contrary to TEX, this prevents from superuous
space between two consecutive theorems).
As to the paragraph layout, the user may specify the paragraph style (justied, left ragged,
centered or right ragged), the paragraph margins and the left (resp. right) indentation
of the rst (resp. last) line of a paragraph. The user also controls the spaces between
paragraphs and successive lines in paragraphs.

2.7 The font selection system

21

You can specify the page layout in the Document!Page menu. First of all, you can specify
the way pages are displayed on the screen: when selecting paper as page type in Document!Page!Type, you explicitly see the page breaks. By default, the page type is
papyrus, which avoids page breaking during the preparation of your document. The
automatic page type assumes that your paper size is exactly the size of your window.
The page margins and text width are specied in Document!Page!Layout. Often, it
is convenient to reduce the page margins for usage on the screen; this can be done in
Document!Page!Screen layout.

2.7. The font selection system
In TEXMACS, the global document font can be specied using Document!Font. It is also possible to locally use another font using Format!Font. Both Document!Font and Format!
Font open the TEXMACS font browser. Fonts have three main characteristics:
Family. Fonts are grouped together into families with a similar design.
Shape. Inside the same font family, individual fonts have dierent shapes, such as
bold, italic, small capitals, etc.
Size. The font size in points.
The user may directly specify these three characteristics in the font browser, which also
displays some sample text for the selected font.
The font browser also provides a way to quickly select fonts based on desirable font properties. For instance, by ltering on a bold weight and sans serif, one may nd a bold
sans serif font which mixes as well as possible with the main font. TEXMACS allows you to
lter on the following criteria:
Weight. The font weight corresponds to the thickness of the font:
Thin Light Medium Bold Black
Slant. The font slant determines the angle of the font:
Normal Italic Oblique
Stretch. This property determines the horizontal width for a xed vertical height:
Condensed Unextended Wide
Case. This property determines how lowercase letters are capitalized:
Mixed Small capitals
Serif. This feature corresponds to the projecting features called serifs at the end of
strokes:
Serif Sans Serif
Spacing. This feature corresponds to the horizontal spacing between characters:

22

Writing simple documents

Proportional Monospaced
Device. This property can be used to imitate specic writing devices:
Print Typewriter

Digital

Pen

Art pen

Chalk Marker

Category. Various other font features:
Ancient
Distorted

Miscellaneous

Attached Calligraphic
Gothic

Outline

Handwritten

Retro

Comic

Decorative

Initials Medieval
Sci
Title

Each of the above properties really constitutes a hint on how the kind of font which should
be used. If no suitable font can be found on your particular system, then setting these
properties may have no eect. Whenever you apply one or more lters, the font browser
indicates which fonts match the selected properties. It also indicates the closest match
for the current font in use. When pressing the Ok button without selecting any particular
matching font, then the selected font properties will be inserted as TEXMACS markup and
used as rendering hints. In that case, the rendering may change when selecting another
global document font (for instance).
It should be noticed that TEXMACS comes with a limited number of preinstalled fonts,
such as the Stix fonts and several fonts prexed by TeXmacs. Documents which only
use these fonts will be rendered the same on dierent systems (assuming the same version
of TEXMACS). When your documents contain other fonts as well, then these fonts may
be replaced by closest matches when opening your document under a dierent operating
system.

2.8. Mastering the keyboard
We recall that the section on general conventions contains explanations on the way keyboard shortcuts are printed in this manual. It may also be useful to take a look at the
section on keyboard conguration.

2.8.1. General prex rules
Since there are many keyboard shortcuts, it is important to have some ways of classifying
them in several categories, in order to make it easier to memorize them. As a general rule,
keyboard shortcuts which fall in the same category are identied by a common prex. The
active prexes heavily depend on the selected look and feel in Edit!Preferences. In the
current look and feel of your TEXMACS system, the main common prexes are as follows:
⌃.

Standard shortcuts, which are similar to shortcuts used by other applications (for
the selected look and feel). For instance, ⌃Y can be used for pasting text on your
system.

⌥.

TEXMACS shortcuts, which often rely on the current editing mode. For instance, ⌥S
p
produces strong text in text mode and a square root
in math mode.

2.8 Mastering the keyboard

23

⌘.

Compound TEXMACS shortcuts. Usually, these shortcuts rst indicate the kind of
markup to which the command will apply and then specify the specic command.
For instance, the ⌘E prex is used for inserting executable markup, which is useful
for writing style les. One example is the shortcut ⌘E + for the insertion of an
addition.

⌘.

This prex is used in combination with arrow keys and certain other special keys
for positioning and resizing objects

⌘⌥ .

This prex is used in combination with arrow keys and some other special keys for
structured cursor movements.

⌘⌃ .

This prex is occasionally used in combination with letters and punctuation symbols for creating some additional easy to remind shortcuts.

⇧F5 .

This prex can be used in combination with normal letters for the insertion of
special symbols. For instance, ⇧F5 S yields ÿ and ⇧F5 A yields q. The ⇧F5 prex
is also used for the insertion of literal characters. For instance, ⇧F5 \ will always
produce the \ character, whereas the \ key is used for entering hybrid commands.

Unfortunately, ⌘ -based shortcuts are superseded by system shortcuts on several systems.
For instance, accented characters and common special symbols are entered using this prex
under Mac OS. In that case, you may use the ⎋ key as an equivalent for ⌘ . For more
information, we refer to the section on keyboard conguration.

2.8.2. Keyboard shortcuts for text mode
To write a text in an european language with a keyboard which does have the appropriate
special keys, you can use the following shortcuts to create accented characters. Note that
they are active regardless of the current language setting.

⌘'
⌘^
⌘~
⌘⇧U
⌘⇧O
⌘⇧H

Shortcut
Acute 
Hat 
Tilde 
Breve 
Above ring 
Hungarian 

Example
Shortcut
⌘' E é ⌘` Grave `
⌘^ E ê ⌘" Umlaut 
⌘~ A ã ⌘⇧C Cedilla
⌘⇧U G § ⌘⇧V Check 
⌘⇧O A å ⌘. Above dot
⌘⇧H O ®

Example
⌘` E è
⌘" E ë
⌘⇧C C ç
⌘⇧V S ²
⌘. Z »

Table 2.2. Typing accented characters.

Special characters can also be created in any language context:
Shortcuts
⇧F5 A æ ⇧F5 ⇧A Æ ⇧F5 A E æ ⇧F5 ⇧A ⇧E Æ
⇧F5 O ø ⇧F5 ⇧O Ø ⇧F5 O E ÷ ⇧F5 ⇧O ⇧E ×
⇧F5 S ÿ ⇧F5 ⇧S ß
⇧F5 ! ½ ⇧F5 ?
¾ ⇧F5 P
Ÿ ⇧F5 ⇧P
¿
Table 2.3. Typing special characters.

24

Writing simple documents

When you press the " key, an appropriate quote will be inserted. The quote character is
chosen according to the current language and the surrounding text. If the chosen quoting
style is not appropriate, you can change it in Edit!Preferences!Keyboard!Automatic
quotes. You can also insert raw quotes:
Shortcuts
" ,, 
 >⇥ 
 >> 

⇧F5 "
<⇥
<<

Table 2.4. Typing raw quotes.

English quotes are considered ligatures of two successive backticks or apostrophes. They
can be created with ` ` and ' ' but these are not actual keyboard commands: the result
is two characters displayed specially, not a special single character.
Some shortcuts are available in specic language contexts. You can set the text language
for the whole document with Document!Language or only locally with Format!Language
(see generalities for typing text).
Hungarian
⇧F5 O
®
⇧F5 ⇧O Ž
⇧F5 U
¶
⇧F5 ⇧U –

Spanish
!⇥
½
?⇥
¾
!`
½
?`
¾

⇧F5 A
⇧F5 ⇧A
⇧F5 C
⇧F5 ⇧C
⇧F5 E
⇧F5 ⇧E
⇧F5 L
⇧F5 ⇧L
⇧F5 N
⇧F5 ⇧N

Polish
¡ ⇧F5 O
 ⇧F5 ⇧O
¢ ⇧F5 S
‚ ⇧F5 ⇧S
¦ ⇧F5 X
† ⇧F5 ⇧X
ª ⇧F5 Z
Š ⇧F5 ⇧Z
« ⇧F5 Z ⇥
‹ ⇧F5 ⇧Z ⇥

ó
Ó
±
‘
¹
™
»
›
¹
™

Table 2.5. Language-specic text shorthands.

Language-specic shortcuts override generic shortcuts; for example, you cannot easily type
ø in hungarian context.

2.8.3. Hybrid commands and LATEX simulation
TEXMACS allows you to enter LATEX commands directly from the keyboard as follows. You
rst hit the \ -key in order to enter the hybrid LATEX/TEXMACS command mode. Next you
type the command you wish to execute. As soon as you nished typing your command,
the left footer displays something like
: action to be undertaken
When you hit the ↩ -key at this stage, your command will be executed. For instance, in
math-mode, you may create a fraction by typing \ F R A C ↩ .

2.8 Mastering the keyboard

25

If the command you have typed is not a (recognized) LATEX command, then we rst look
whether the command is an existing TEXMACS macro, function or environment (provided by
the style le). If so, the corresponding macro expansion, function application or environment application is created (with the right number of arguments). Otherwise, it is assumed
that your command corresponds to an environment variable and we ask for its value. The
\ -key is always equivalent to one of the commands ⌘I L , ⌘I E , ⌘I A , ⌘I # or ⌘I V .
To insert a literal \ (backslash) character, you can use the ⇧F5 \ sequence.

2.8.4. Dynamic objects
Certain more complex objects can have several states during the editing process. Examples
of such dynamic objects are labels and references, because the appearance of the reference
depends on a dynamically determined number. Many other examples of dynamic markup
can be found in the documentation about writing style les.
When entering a dynamic object like a label using ⌘! , the default state is inactive. This
inactive state enables you to type the information which is relevant to the dynamic object,
such as the name of the label in our case. Certain dynamic objects take an arbitrary number
of parameters, and new ones can be inserted using ⇥ .
hlabeljpythagorasi

Figure 2.1. Inactive label

When you nished typing the relevant information for your dynamic object, you may type
↩ in order to activate the object. An active dynamic object may be deactivated by placing
your cursor just behind the object and hitting ⌫ .

2.8.5. Various useful keyboard shortcuts
Some assorted shortcuts which are often useful are displayed in table 2.6. Notice that
spaces inserted using ␣ ⇥ ⇥ , ⌘␣ and ⌘⇧␣ can be resized a posteriori using the shortcuts ⌘←
and ⌘→ . This kind of resizing actually works for more general horizontal and vertical spaces
inserted from the menu Format!Space, as well as several other objects, such as images.
Shortcut Action
⌃⌫
Remove the containing object or environment.
␣⇥
Insert a non breaking space.
␣⇥⇥
Insert a quad space.
⌘␣
Insert a small space.
⌘⇧␣
Insert a small negative space.
?
Insert a tab
⌘<
Go to the start of the document.
⌘>
Go to the end of the document.
⌘:
Insert a line break.
⌘⇧R
Insert a rigid piece of text, which cannot be line-broken.
Table 2.6. Various useful keyboard shortcuts

Chapter 3
Mathematical formulas
One of the main purposes of TEXMACS is to edit mathematical formulas. If the cursor
is inside a formula (i.e. inside math mode), then the mode sensitive menus and toolbars provide buttons for entering common mathematical constructs. Similarly, as will be
detailed in this section, the bahaviour of the keyboard changes so as to allow for the rapid
typing of mathematical symbols. For instance, typing - > inserts the arrow !.

Starting with version 1.0.7.10, TEXMACS also incorporates several features for the semantic
editing of mathematical formulas, which will be described at the end of this section. When
used appropriately, this allows you to write documents in which all formulas are at least
correct from a syntactical point of view. A syntax corrector is included to assist you with
this task. Documents with more semantics are for instance useful when using formulas
as inputs for a computer algebra system. Such documents are also less likely to contain
typos. Other interesting features, such as semantic search and replace, should be developed in the future.

3.1. Incorporating mathematical formulas into documents
TEXMACS provides three main ways in order to enter a mathematical formulas into the main
text:
Insert!Mathematics!Inline formula or $ .

This entry corresponds to small inline formulas like a2 + b2 = c2 inside a textual
paragraph. Note that formulas are typeset specially so they do not take too much
vertical space. For example, limits are always displayed on the right. Limits can
be displayed below in formulas with Format!Display style!on. In formulas, display
style is o by default.

Insert!Mathematics!Displayed formula or ⌥$ .

This entry is used for entering bigger displayed equations, like
x n + y n = z n;
which are typeset in a paragraph of their own. You may use the shortcut ⌃# in order
to give the equation a number (or to remove the number of an equation). Also, ⌃⇥
allows you to switch between inline formulas and displayed equations.

Insert!Mathematics!Several equations or ⌥& .

27

28

Mathematical formulas

This entry allows you to create an eqnarray*, a three columns wide table-like environment (see creating tables). This environment is typically used for lists of multiple
relations like
x+0
x + (¡x)
x+ y
(x + y) + z

=
=
=
=

x
0
y+x
x + (y + z)

The rst column is centered to the right, the second one at the middle and the last
one at the left. Another typical use of the eqnarray* environment is a step by step
computation
(esinx + sin ex) 0 = (esinx) 0 + (sin ex) 0
= (sin x) 0 esinx + (ex) 0 cos ex
= esinx cos x + ex cos ex;
in which many entries of the left column are left open.

3.2. Typing mathematical symbols
The Greek characters are obtained in TEXMACS using the ⇧F7 -key. For instance, ⇧F7 A
yields and ⇧F7 ⇧G yields ¡. Similarly, F6 , F7 , F8 and ⇧F6 can be used in order to type
bold, calligraphic, fraktur and blackboard bold characters. For instance, F8 M yields m,
⇧F6 ⇧R yields R and F6 F7 ⇧Z yields Z.

Greek characters can also be obtained as variants of Latin characters using the ⇥ -key.
For instance, P ⇥ yields . The ⇥ -key is also used for obtaining variants of the Greek letters
themselves. For instance, both ⇧F7 P ⇥ and P ⇥ ⇥ yield $. An alternative way to enter
blackboard bold characters is to type the same capital twice. For instance, ⇧Z ⇧Z yields Z.
Some symbols admit many variants. For instance, < yields <, < ⇥ yields 2, < ⇥ ⇥ yields
, < ⇥ ⇥ ⇥ yields , and so on. You may cycle back among the variants using ⇧⇥ . For
instance, < ⇥ ⇥ ⇧⇥ is equivalent to < ⇥ .
Many other mathematical symbols are obtained by natural key-combinations. For instance,
- > yields !, - - > yields ¡! and > = yields >. Similarly, | ⇥ - yields `, | - > yields 7! and
- > < - yields . The following general rules hold in order to enter mathematical symbols:
⇥.

is the main key for obtaining variants. For instance, > = yields >, but > = ⇥ yields .
Similarly, < ⇥ ⇥ yields , < ⇥ ⇥ = yields  and < ⇥ ⇥ = ⇥ yields j. Also, ⇧P ⇥ yields }
and E ⇥ yields the constant e = exp(1).

@.

is used for putting symbols into circles or boxes. For instance, @ + yields  and @ X
yields . Similarly, @ ⇥ + yields .

/.

is used for negations. For instance, = / yields =
/ and < = / yields 6. Notice that
< = ⇥ ⇥ / yields , while < = ⇥ ⇥ / ⇥ yields .

!.

is used after arrows in order to force scripts to be placed above or below the arrow.
x
For instance, - - > ^ X yields ¡!x , but - - > ! ^ X yields ¡!.

The logical relations ^ and _ are obtained using & and % . The operators \ and [ are
natural variants & ⇥ and % ⇥ . Various miscellaneous symbols can be obtained using the ⇧F5
prex.

3.4 Typing large delimiters

29

Notice that certain symbols with a dierent mathematical meaning are sometimes denoted
in a similar way; such symbols are called homoglyphs. For instance, the vertical bar j can
be used as a separator for dening sets R> = fx 2 Rjx > 0g, but also as the binary relation
divides 11 j 1001. Often, but not always, homoglyphs admit a dierent spacing. The most
annoying ambiguity is between invisible multiplication x y and function application sin x,
which are entered using the shortcuts * resp. ␣ .
In order to facilitate certain automated treatments of your documents, such as mathematical syntax checking, we incite authors to pay attention to the homoglyph problem when
entering formulas. For more information on this issue and how TEXMACS can assist you to
use the appropriate notations, we refer to our section on the semantics of mathematical
symbols.

3.3. Main mathematical constructs
The main mathematical objects are created using the ⌥ prex as follows:
Shortcut Purpose
⌥$
Text
⌥F
Fractions
⌥S

Square roots

⌥⇧S

n-th Roots

⌥N

Negations

Example
L = fxjx is suciently largeg
a
b+c

p
x+ y
p
3
x3 + y 3
a
b+c

Table 3.1. Creation of major mathematical markup.

Primes, subscripts and superscripts are created as follows:
Shortcut Purpose
'
Primes
`
Back-primes
_
Subscripts
^
Superscripts
⌥L _
Left subscripts
⌥L ^
Left superscripts

Example
f 0 or (g + h) 000
8f
xn or xi3
x
x2, x2n or ee
2x
x or He



Table 3.2. Creation of primes, subscripts and superscripts

Some important mathematical constructs are actually tabular constructs and are documented separately.

3.4. Typing large delimiters
Brackets inside mathematical formulas should always match: as soon as you enter an
opening bracket (, TEXMACS will automatically insert the matching closing bracket ).
You may disable this feature using Edit!Preferences!Keyboard!Automatic brackets!Disable. Attention (see also below): brackets in old documents will be automatically upgraded
to matching brackets.

30

Mathematical formulas

Sometimes, you do not want the closing bracket, or you may want to replace it by another
closing bracket. No problem: if your cursor is just before the closing bracket inside (a; bj),
then pressing ] will turn the expression into (a; b]j. Alternatively, deletion of a bracket will
actually turn it into an invisible bracket, after which you can replace it by an arbitrary
opening or closing bracket.
By default, the sizes of the brackets are adjusted to the expression between the brackets.
Small delimiters, which are created using the ⌥ -prex, keep their sizes independently of
the enclosed expression. Alternatively, you may use ⌃* in order to toggle between large
and small delimiters.
For some delimiters, such as j, the opening and closing delimiters coincide. For instance,
entering a vertical bar | will produce an absolute value. The (small) bar-separator j is
obtained using F5 | , or as a variant using | ⇥ . The big bar-separator is entered using ⌥M | .
In TEX and LATEX, such large separators do not exist; they are used for producing the
vertical bars in formulas like


a
p
a
:
b+c q+r b+c
There may be as many middle delimiters between a left and a right delimiter as one wishes.
Notice that there are still another number of variants of vertical bars. For instance, the
binary relation divides is entered using F5 | ⇥ ⇥ or | ⇥ ⇥ ⇥ ⇥ .
In TEXMACS, large delimiters may either be left delimiters, right delimiters or middle
delimiters. By default, (; [; f and h are left delimiters, );];g and i are right delimiters. But
there status can be changed using the ⌥L , ⌥R and ⌥M key combinations. For instance, ⌥L )
produces ), considered as a large left delimiter.
Sometimes you may want large delimiters of a particular size, instead of self-adjusting ones.
This can be achieved by resizing the expression in between the brackets using the items in
Format!Adjust.

Notice that it is possible to insert a pair of invisible brackets using ? . This is for instance
useful in computational contexts, in which formulas should admit a precise, not merely
visual semantics. Alternatively, one may put the formula inside a rigid box using ⌘⇧R ,
which additionally prevents the formula from being hyphenated.

3.5. Typing big operators
The following key-combinations are used in order to create big symbols:
Shortcut Result Shortcut Result
Z
I
⇧F5 ⇧I
⇧F5 ⇧P
⇧F5 ⇧S
⇧F5 @ X
⇧F5 ⇧U
⇧F5 ⇧V

⇧F5 ⇧O

Y

X

O
[
_

⇧F5 ⇧A

⇧F5 @ +
⇧F5 @ .
⇧F5 ⇧N
⇧F5 ⇧W

a

M
K
\
^

Table 3.3. Big mathematical operators.

3.7 Semantic editing facilities

31

The scopes of big operators are indicated visually, through the light cyan boxes around
the tags which contain the cursor.
The big integral signs admit two variants, depending on where you want to place subscripts
and superscripts. By default, the scripts are placed as follows:
Z

1
0

dx
:
1 + x2

The alternative rendering with limits
Z1

dx
:
1 + x2

0

is obtained using ⇧F5 ⇧L ⇧I . Similarly, you may type ⇧F5 ⇧L ⇧O in order to obtain
limits.

H

with

3.6. Wide mathematical accents
The table below shows how to type mathematical accents above symbols or entire formulas.
Indeed, some of these accents automatically become as wide as the formulas below them.
Shortcut Example Wide variant Shortcut Result
⌥~
⌥'
x~
xg
+y
x
xd
+y

⌥^

x^

⌥`

x

⌥⇧B

x

x+ y

⌥.

x_

⌥⇧V

~x

AB

⌥"

x

⌥⇧C

x

x+ y

⌥⇧U

x

x+ y

Table 3.4. Keyboard shortcuts for wide mathematical accents.

The same accents may be inserted below the expressions using the ⌥U prex. For instance,
⌥U ⇧B X + Y can be used in order to enter x + y.

3.7. Semantic editing facilities
Starting with version 1.0.7.10, TEXMACS incorporates several features for the semantic
editing of mathematical formulas. When used appropriately, this allows you to write documents in which all formulas are at least correct from a syntactical point of view. For
instance, in the formulas a + b, the computer will understand that + is an operator which
applies to the arguments a and b. Notice that our semantics does not go any further:
TEXMACS is unaware of the mathematical nature of addition.

32

Mathematical formulas

Semantic editing does require additional eorts from the user, at least a little adaptation.
For instance, it is the user's job to enter multiplications using the shortcut * and function
applications using ␣ . Indeed, from the graphical point of view, these operations cannot be
distinguished, since they are both printed as invisible whitespace. However, the semantics
of these operations is clearly very dierent.
Although semantically correct documents are usually not very dierent from informal
presentation-oriented documents as far as typesetting is concerned, the additional user
eort may pay o for several reasons:


Documents with more semantics are for instance useful when using formulas as
inputs for a computer algebra system.



Syntactically correct documents are less likely to contain typos or more intricate
mathematical errors.



For certain editing operations, such as cut and paste, one may directly select subformulas which are meaningful from the syntactical point of view.



It reduces the risk of using non standard notations, which will be dicult to understand for potential readers of your work.

Furthermore, other semantic facilities might be integrated in the future, such as semantic
search and replace, or semantic search on the web.
In order to activate the semantic editing facilities, please toggle Edit!Preferences!Mathematics!Semantic editing. In the semantic editing mode, several of the structured editing
features of TEXMACS apply to the syntactic structure of the formula, rather than the visual
structure of the document. For instance, the semantic focus is usually a subformula of the
current focus. Similarly, only syntactically meaningful subformulas can be selected when
making a selection.
The semantic focus is useful for several reasons. First of all, it is displayed in green if the
formula is syntactically correct and in red if you made an error. This allows to quickly notice
any typos while entering a formula. Secondly, if you have any doubt on the precedence of
a mathematical operator or relation, then the semantic focus will inform you on the default
interpretation: by putting your cursor right next to your operator, the subexpression to
which the operator applies will be highlighted. In the case of an addition, or a more general
associative operator, all summands are highlighted.

3.8. Common errors and syntax correction
By default, the semantic editing mode understands most classical mathematical notations. This is achieved through the use of a carefully designed grammar for mainstream
mathematics. Obviously, the use of a xed grammar may cause the following problems:


Mathematical formulas frequently contain ad hoc notations. For instance, the formulas might contain some text or meaningful whitespace. Another example of an ad
hoc notation is the sign sequence ++¡+¡+. In such cases, the user should explicitly
annotate the appropriate parts of the formula in order to make them semantically
meaningful.

3.8 Common errors and syntax correction



33

The TEXMACS grammar used for the interpretation of mathematical formulas may
be incomplete or inadequate for certain situations. It is possible to customize or
extend the grammar using the standard TEXMACS macro mechanism. Notations for
specic areas may be grouped together in dedicated style packages.

Besides these intrinsically hard to avoid problems, the following common and easy-tomake mistakes are a further source of trouble for associating semantics to mathematical
formulas:


Since TEXMACS is a wysiwyg editor, some of the structure of the document is invisible
for the user. For instance, the presence of a mathematical formula x + y is indicated
through the use of an italic slant and special spacing. However, in the formula f (x)
it is easy to type the closing bracket outside the formula, with no visual dierence.



Various mathematical notations are visually ambiguous. For instance, a (b + c)
would usually be understood as a  (b + c), whereas f (x + y) rather corresponds
to a function application. In the semantic editing mode, the user is expected to
resolve this ambiguity by hand by entering multiplications using * and spaces using
␣ . The multiply/apply ambiguity is one of the main sources of syntax errors, since
many users do not pay attention to invisible dierences. Similarly, the ^ glyph
could be the logical and or the wedge product. This homoglyph issue will be
addressed in more detail in the section on the semantics of mathematical symbols.



It could be that a text was originally written in LATEX or an old version of TEXMACS.
In that case, the document contains no special indication on matching brackets or
the scopes of big operators. For instance, in the formula [x; y[, should we interpret
the second bracket as a closing bracket? This is indeed the standard french notation for an interval with an open right end. More generally, all problems that we
have mentioned so far tend to be present simultaneously when trying to associate
semantics to existing documents.

After activation of the semantic editing mode, you may check whether a formula is correct
by positioning your cursor inside it and looking at the color of the bounding box of the
semantic focus: a green color corresponds to a correct formula and a red color indicates an
error in the formula. Alternatively, assuming that the focus is on a mathematical formula,
you may select Focus!Preferences!Highlight incorrect formulas, in which all incorrect formulas are highlighted inside red boxes.
For the second kind of easy-to-make errors, TEXMACS includes an automatic syntax corrector. Assuming that your cursor is inside a formula, you may use Edit!Correct!Correct
all for the correction of all formulas in your document, or the correction of the current selection. If the versioning tool is activated, then you may use Edit!Correct!Correct manually
to show the dierences between the original and the corrected versions. You may then use
the versioning tool to go through these dierences and select the preferred versions.
The precise algorithms which are used for the correction may be enabled or disabled from
Edit!Preferences!Mathematics!Manual correction:
Remove superuous invisible operators. This algorithm is used in order to remove any
superuous function applications or multiplications. For instance, users who are
accustomed to editing ASCII les often type spaces around binary inxes such as
addition. Such function applications will be removed by this algorithm.

34

Mathematical formulas

Insert missing invisible operators. In LATEX, multiplications and function applications
are never entered explicitly. When importing a LATEX document, it is therefore
important to detect and insert missing multiplications and function applications.
Homoglyph substitutions. This algorithm may perform some other useful substitutions
of symbols by visually similar, but semantically distinct symbols. For instance, the
backslash symbol n is replaced by the binary set dierences inx (as in X n Y ),
whenever appropriate.

From the Edit!Preferences!Mathematics!Automatic correction, you may also select those
corrections algorithms which should be applied automatically whenever you open a le.
The various corrections are always carried out when importing a LATEX le.
After syntax correction, the remaining errors indicate genuine typos at worst or non standard or non supported notations at best. We also notice that correct formulas do not
necessarily have the intended meaning. In order to check whether the operators indeed
apply to the intended arguments, you should keep an eye on the current focus while typing
your formulas.

3.9. Semantics of mathematical symbols
The mathematical symbols in TEXMACS all come with a certain number of properties which
correspond to their intended meaning. For instance, TEXMACS is aware that + is an inx
operator, whereas ! is rather a postx, and , a separator.
TEXMACS has special symbols e = 2.71828, p = 3.14159 and i for important mathematical
constants, which display dierently from the mere characters e,  and i, and which can
be entered using the shortcuts E ⇥ ⇥ , P ⇥ ⇥ and I ⇥ ⇥ . We recommend to systematically use
these shortcuts.
Inversely, semantically distinct symbols may display in a similar way. For instance, the
comma separator, as in f (x; y), is dierent from the decimal comma, as in 3,14159.
Notice that the two symbols admit dierent spacing rules. Semantically distinct symbols
which are rendered by the same glyph are called homoglyphs. Notice that our semantics is
purely syntactic: for instance, the + inx is commonly used for addition, but sometimes also
for the concatenation of strings. Nevertheless, these two uses do not dier from a syntactical
point of view, since the + symbol remains a binary inx with the same precedence with
respect to other symbols.
The most confusing homoglyphs are the various invisible symbols supported by TEXMACS:


The multiplication, entered by * . Example: a b.



Function application, entered by ␣ . Example: sin x.



An invisible separator, entered by , ⇥ ⇥ . Example: the matrix A = (aij ).



An invisible addition, entered by + ⇥ ⇥ ⇥ ⇥ . Example: 17 3/8.



An invisible symbol, entered by . ⇥ ⇥ ⇥ . Example: the increment + 1.



An invisible bracket (mainly for internal use). A matching pair of invisible brackets
is entered using ( ⇥ .

3.10 Customized mathematical semantics

35

Again it is recommended that authors carefully enter these various invisible symbols when
appropriate. It is particularly important to distinguish between multiplication and function
application, since there is no 100% safe automatic way to make this distinction (we already
mentioned the formulas a(b + c) and f (x + y) before).
TEXMACS supports two quite general schemes for entering homoglyphs. On the one hand, we
often rely on the standard variant system. For instance,  and  are obtained using * ⇥ and
* ⇥ ⇥ . In table 3.5 we have given the complete list of homoglyphs supported by TEXMACS.
Shortcut Glyph Example
*
ab
␣
sin x
,⇥⇥
aij = aji
+⇥⇥⇥⇥
17 3/8
.⇥⇥⇥
+1
(⇥
  8x; P (x)
|
j
j¡xj = jxj
|⇥
j
fx 2 Rjx > 0g
|⇥⇥
j
ha2i jaj2i
|⇥⇥⇥⇥
j
11 j 1001
,
,
f (x; y)
,⇥
,
123,456
.
.
123.456
.⇥
.
lx. x2
*⇥⇥⇥

vw
.⇥⇥

+1
:
:
fx 2 E: P (x)g
:⇥
:
x : Int
/⇥
:
121 : 11 = 11
\⇥
n
nx
\⇥⇥
n
N> = N n f0g
&
^
1=1^2=2
*&
^
dx ^ dy

Semantics
Multiplication
Function application
Invisible separator
Invisible addition
Invisible symbol
Invisible bracket(s)
Absolute value
Separating bar
Extensible middle bar
Divides relation
Comma separator
Decimal comma
Decimal point
Dot connector
Dot multiplication
Dummy wildcard
Separator
Type satisfaction
Division
Backslash
Set minus
Logical and
Wedge product

Table 3.5. Homoglyphs supported by TEXMACS .

3.10. Customized mathematical semantics
We have done our best to support most of the classical mathematical notations. Nevertheless, the user may sometimes want to dene notations with a non standard semantics.
Certain areas may also require special notations which are not supported by default.
TEXMACS provides a very simple syntax primitive, which allows the user to manually override the default syntactical semantics of a formula. Assuming that semantic editing was
activated, you may insert the syntax primitive using ⌥X X or Insert!Semantics!Other. The
rst argument contains the formula as it should be displayed, whereas the second argument
contains the formula as it should be interpreted.

36

Mathematical formulas

For instance, if we enter R as the rst argument and < as the second one, then the R will
be interpreted as a binary relation, exactly in the same way as <. Moreover, the spacing
around R will be adapted, so as to mimic the spacing around <. In this particular example,
we might have obtained the same result by using the math-relation primitive, which is
equivalent to syntax with < as its second argument. Most standard operator types are
available from Insert!Semantics, or using the ⌥X keyboard prex. In particular, you may
use ⌥X ␣ to simply ignore a formula and ⌥X O in order to make the formula behave as an
ordinary symbol (such as the letter o).
The syntax primitive is especially powerful when used in combination
with the TEXMACS
H
macro language. For instance, consider the formula C = 1/2 p i f (z) dz. It is likely that
the intended interpretation of 1/2 p i is 1/(2 p i) and not (1/2) p i. Therefore, if we often
use the constant 2 p i, then we might want to dene a macro twopii by
hassignjtwopiijhmacrojhsyntaxj2  ij(2  i)iii
Such macros may be grouped together into a style package with the user's favourite
notations. Future versions of TEXMACS might also provide style packages with notations
dedicated to specic areas.
Let us nally notice that there are usually several ways for redening the semantics of a
formula. For instance, an alternative way to dene the macro twopii is using
hassignjtwopiijhmacroj2 p iii
where we inserted a pair of invisible brackets around 2 p i. Similarly, in the formula
p

p
p
log x +e
x +e

e

log log x +  +log log log x

+log log x

+logx

;

we may either select the whole formula and give it the semantics of an ordinary symbol,
by pressing ⌥X O . However, a nicer solution is to only select the subformula , and
give it the semantics of an ordinary symbol. Yet another example is the sign sequence
++¡+¡+ mentioned earlier. This sequence can be interpreted correctly by inserting
invisible separators between the dierent signs using the , ␣ shortcut.

Chapter 4
Tabular material
Tables oer a general way to align markup in complex manners. They can be useful for
the presentation of data, but also for typesetting computer programs or the design of web
sites. TEXMACS provides a wide variety of parameters to control the precise layout of tables
and its cells.

4.1. Creating tables
In order to create a table, you may either use Insert!Table or one of the following keyboard
shorthands:
⌘T ⇧N T .
⌘T ⇧N ⇧T .
⌘T ⇧N B .
⌘T ⇧N ⇧B .

Create a plain table.
Create a table whose cells are centered.
Create a block, whose cells all have a small border.
Create a block whose cells are centered.

In math mode, a few other table-like structures are provided:
⌘T ⇧N M .

Create a matrix.

⌘T ⇧N D .

Create a determinant.

⌘T ⇧N C .

Create a choice list.

Examples of a plain table, a centered block and a matrix are shown below. Notice that
the environments with the explanatory text below the tables were created using Insert!
Table!Small table. The use of small tables allows you to put several tables besides each
other on the same line. For a single large table, one may use Insert!Table!Big table.
boom
tree
hallo
hello
wiskunde mathematics

boom
tree
hallo
hello
wiskunde mathematics

Table 4.1. A plain table.

Table 4.2. A centered block.



a b
c d



Table 4.3. A matrix.

There are several other table-like environments and new ones may be created by the user.
For instance, using Insert!Mathematics!Equations or ⌥& , you may insert an eqnarray*
environment, which allows mathematically oriented users to align a list of equations which
span over entire lines. An example of such a list of equations is
sin (f (x) g(x)) 0 = (f (x) g(x)) 0 cos (f (x) g(x))
= (f 0(x) g(x) + f (x) g 0(x)) cos (f (x) g(x))
37

38

Tabular material

When starting a new table, its size is minimal (usually 1  1) and its cells are empty. New
rows and columns are inserted using the ⌥← , ⌥→ , ⌥↑ and ⌥↓ shorthands. For instance, ⌥→
creates a new column at the right of the current cursor position, as illustrated in the gure
below. You may also start a new row below the current cursor position by hitting ↩ .


aj b
c d



¡!



a j b
c d



Figure 4.1. Example of the insertion of a new column in a matrix. Assuming that the cursor is
at the position indicated in the left-hand matrix, insertion of a new column using ⌥→ results in
the right-hand matrix.

4.2. The formatting mode
In TEXMACS, arbitrary blocks of cells in the table may be formatted in particular ways.
For instance, you may give individual cells a background color, but you may also decide
an entire column to be horizontally centered. By default, formatting commands operate
on individual cells, but this may be changed via Table!Cell operation mode. The following
operation modes are available:
⌘T M C .

Operate on individual cells.

⌘T M H .

Operate on rows.

⌘T M V .

Operate on columns.

⌘T M T .

Operate on the entire table.

It is also possible to select a block of cells using the mouse and perform a single operation
on that rectangle.

4.3. Specifying the cell and table alignment
The most frequent formatting operation is the horizontal or vertical alignment of a block
of cells. You may use the ? , ? , ? and ? keystrokes to quickly align more to the left, right,
top or bottom.
A specic alignment can also be selected in the Table!Horizontal cell alignment and Table!
Vertical cell alignment menus. Alternatively, you may use keyboard shorthands of the types
⌘T H x and ⌘T V x for horizontal resp. vertical alignment.
Similarly, you may specify how the table itself should be aligned with respect to the
surrounding text. This is either done via the Table!Horizontal table alignment and Table!
Vertical table alignment submenus, or using keyboard shorthands of the form ⌘T ⇧H x or
⌘T ⇧V x . Here x represents L for left, C for centered, R for right, B for bottom and T
for top.

4.6 Advanced table features

39

4.4. Specifying the cell and table size
Using Table!Cell width!Set width resp. Table!Cell height!Set height you may specify the
width or height of a cell. In fact, the specied width (or height) may be taken into account
in three dierent ways:
Minimum mode. The actual width of the cell will be the minimum of the specied
width and the width of the box inside the cell.
Exact mode. The width of the cell will be precisely the specied one.
Maximum mode. The actual width of the cell will be the maximum of the specied
width and the width of the box inside the cell.
The border width and the cell padding (to be explained below) are taken into account in
the size of the box inside the cell.
You may also specify the width and the height of the entire table in Table!Special table
properties. In particular, you may specify the table to run over the entire width of a
paragraph. When specifying a width (or height) for the entire table, you may specify how
the unused space is distributed over the cells using Table!Special cell properties!Distribute
unused space. By default, the unused space is equally distributed.

4.5. Borders, padding and background color
You may specify the border widths and padding spaces of a cell in all possible four directions: on the left, on the right, at the bottom and at the top (see Table!Cell border). You
have keyboard shorthands of the forms ⌘T B x and ⌘T P x in order to specify border widths
and cell padding.
The default border width for cells in the block environment is 1ln, i.e. the standard line
width in the current font (like the width of a fraction bar). This width occurs at the right
and the bottom of each cell (except when the cell is on the rst row or column). The default
horizontal cell padding is 1spc: the width of a white space in the current font. The default
vertical cell padding is 1sep: the standard minimal separation between two close boxes.
Cells may be given a background color via Table!Cell background color.

The entire table may also be given a border and a table padding in Table!Special table
properties!Border. In this case, the padding occurs outside the border.

4.6. Advanced table features
In the menus, you also nd some other more special features for tables. Very briey, these
include the following:


Change the span of a cell and let it run over its neighbouring cells on its right and
below.



Creation of entire subtables inside cells.



Correction of the depth and height of text, in order to let the baselines match.

40

Tabular material



Horizontal hyphenation of cell contents and vertical hyphenation of the entire table.



Gluing several rows and/or columns together, so that the glued cells become part
of the borders of the remaining cells.



Deactivation of the table, in order to see its source code.



Setting the extension center of a table. From now on, the formatting properties
of this cell will be used for new cells created around this center.



Specication of the minimal and maximum size of a table, which will be respected
during further editing. (this is mainly useful when creating table macros).

Currently, all tables come inside an environment like tabular, block, matrix, etc. When
creating your own table macros, you may use Table!Special table properties!Extract format
to extract the format from a given table.

Chapter 5
Links and automatically generated content
5.1. Creating labels, links and references
You may create a new inactive label using ⌘! or Insert!Link!Label and a reference to this
label using ⌘? or Insert!Link!Reference. After typing the name of the label or reference,
remember to hit ↩ in order to activate it. You may also type the rst characters of the
name of a reference and use the ⇥ key in order to automatically complete it.
You should be careful to put the label at a point where its number will be correct. When
labeling sections, the recommended place is just after the sectional tag. When labeling
single equations (created using Insert!Mathematics!Equation), the recommended place is
at the start inside the equation. When labeling multiple equations (created using Insert!
Mathematics!Equations), you must put the labels just behind the equation numbers. Recall
that you may use ⌃# in order to transform an unnumbered environment or equation into
a numbered one, and vice versa.
It is possible to create hyperlinks to other documents using ⌘I > or Insert!Link!Hyperlink.
The rst eld of the hyperlink is the associated text, which is displayed in blue when
activated. The second eld contains the name of a document, which may be on the web. As
is usual for hyperlinks, a link of the form #label points to a label in the same document
and a link of the form url #label points to a label in the document located at url.
In a similar fashion, an action may be associated to a piece of text or graphics using ⌘I *
or Insert!Link!Action. The second eld now contains a Guile/Scheme script command,
which is executed whenever you double click on the text, after its activation. For security
reasons, such scripts are not always accepted. By default, you are prompted for acceptation;
this default behaviour may be changed in Options!Security. Notice that the Guile/Scheme
command
(system "shell-command")
evaluates shell-command as a shell command.
Finally, you may directly include other documents inside a given document using ⌘I I or
Insert!Link!Include. This allows you for instance to include the listing of a program in
your text in such a way that your modications in your program are automatically reected
in your text.

5.2. Inserting images
You can include images in the text using the menu Insert!Image. Currently, TEXMACS
recognizes the ps, eps, tif, pdf, pdm, gif, ppm, xpm and fig le formats. Here, gs (i.e.
Ghostscript) is used to render postscript images. If Ghostscript has not yet been
installed on your system, you can download this package from
www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/index.html
41

42

Links and automatically generated content

Currently, the other file formats are converted into postscript files using the scripts tiff2ps,
pdf2ps, pnmtops, giftopnm, ppmtogif, xpmtoppm. If these scripts are not available on
your system, please contact your system administrator.

By default, images are displayed at their design sizes and aligned at their bottom lines.
Alternative widths, heights and alignment osets may be specied in the image chooser
dialogue window.


When specifying a new width, but no height at the prompt (or vice versa), the
image is resized so as to preserve the aspect ration. For instance, entering a width
of 1par will make the image span over the entire paragraph width and adjust the
height proportionally.
You may use w and h as special lengths for the default width and height of the
image. For instance, specifying 2w and 2h for the width and the height, the image
will be displayed at twice its default size.



When specifying an alternative alignment, you may use the w and h lengths for the
displayed width and height (i.e. w and h no longer stand for the default width and
height). For instance, using -0.5h for the y-oset will vertically align the image at
its center.

We also included a script to convert Xfig pictures, with optional LATEX formulas in it,
into encapsulated postscript. In order to include a LATEX formula in an xfig picture, we
recall you should enter the formula as text, while selecting a LATEX font and setting the
special ag in the text ags.

5.3. Generating a table of contents
It is very easy to generate a table of contents for your document. Just put your cursor at
the place where you want your table of contents and click on Insert!Automatic!Table of
contents.
In order to generate the table of contents, you should be in a mode where page breaks
are visible (select paper in Document!Page!Type), so that the appropriate references
to page numbers can be computed. Next, use Document!Update!Table of contents or
Document!Update!All to generate the table of contents. You may have to do this several
times, until the document does not change anymore. Indeed, the page numbers may change
as a result of modications in the table of contents!

5.4. Compiling a bibliography
Editing les with bibliographic entries
TEXMACS uses the BibTEX model for its bibliographies. Manuals about BibTEX can easily
be found at various places on the web. BibTEX les can either be entered and edited using
TEXMACS itself or using an external tool. Some external tools oer possibilities to search
and retrieve bibliographic entries on the web, which can be a reason to prefer such tools
from time to time. TEXMACS implements good converters for BibTEX les, so several editors
can easily be used in conjunction.

5.5 Generating an index

43

The built-in editor for BibTEX les is automatically used for les with the .bib extension.
New items can easily be added using Insert!Database entry. When creating a new entry,
required elds appear in dark blue, alternative elds in dark green and optional elds in
light blue. The special eld inside the header of your entry is the name of your entry,
which will be used later for references to this entry. When editing a eld, you may use ↩
to conrm it and jump to the next one (blank optional elds will automatically be removed
when doing this). When the cursor is inside a bibliographic entry, additional elds may
also be added using Focus!Insert above and Focus!Insert below.
BibTEX contains a few unnatural conventions for entering names of authors and managing
capitalization inside titles. When editing BibTEX les using TEXMACS, these conventions
are replaced by the following more user friendly conventions:


When entering authors (inside Author or Editor elds), use the name tag for
specifying last names (using Insert!Last name or ⇧F6 ) For instance, Albert Einstein should be entered as Albert Einstein or as A. Einstein. Special particles
such as von can be entered using Insert!Particle. Title suces such as Jr. can
be entered similarly using Insert!Title sux.



When entering titles, do not capitalize, except for the rst character and names or
concepts that always must be. For instance, use Riemannian geometry instead
of Riemannian Geometry and Dierential Galois theory instead of Dierential
Galois Theory.

Inserting citations and compiling bibliographies
Assuming that you have created a .bib le with your bibliographic references, the mechanism to automatically compile a bibliography is the following:


Use Insert!Link!Citation and Insert!Link!Invisible citation to insert citations, which
correspond to entries in your .bib le.



At the place where your bibliography should be compiled, click on Insert!Automatic!Bibliography. At the prompt, you should enter a bibtex style (such as plain,
alpha, abbrv, etc.) and your .bib le.



Use Document!Update!Bibliography in order to compile your bibliography.

Notice that additional BiBTEX styles should be put in the directory ~/.TeXmacs/system/
bib.

5.5. Generating an index
For the generation of an index, you rst have to put index entries in your document using
Insert!Link!Index entry. At a second stage, you must put your cursor at the place where
you want your index to be generated and click on Insert!Automatic!Index. The index is
than generated in a similar way as the table of contents.

44

Links and automatically generated content

In the Insert!Link!Index entry menu, you nd several types of index entries. The simplest
are main, sub, subsub, which are macros with one, two and three arguments respectively. Entries of the form sub and subsub may be used to subordinate index entries
with respect to other ones.
A complex index entry takes four arguments. The rst one is a key how the entry has to
be sorted and it must be a tuple (created using ⌘I < ) whose rst component is the main
category, the second a subcategory, etc. The second argument of a complex index entry
is either blank or strong, in which case the page number of your entry will appear in a
bold typeface. The third argument is usually blank, but if you create two index entries
with the same non-blank third argument, then this will create a range of page numbers.
The fourth argument, which is again a tuple, is the entry itself.
It is also possible to create an index line without a page number using interject in
Insert!Link!Index entry. The rst argument of this macro is a key for how to sort the
index line. The second argument contains the actual text. This construct may be useful
for creating dierent sections A, B, etc. in your index.

5.6. Compiling a glossary
Glossaries are compiled in a similar way as indexes, but the entries are not sorted. A
regular glossary entry just contains some text and a page number will be generated for
it. An explained glossary entry contains a second argument, which explains the notation.
A duplicate entry may be used to create a page number for the second occurrence of an
entry. A glossary line creates an entry without a page number.

5.7. Multiple extractions
TEXMACS allows users to create multiple bibliographies, tables of contents, indexes, etc.
inside the same document. Let us explain how to do this for bibliographies; the procedure
is similar for other types of automatically generated content.
First of all, every separate bibliography is identied by a name. The default name of the
bibliography is bib. Using Insert!Link!Alternate!Bibliography, it is possible to specify a
dierent bibliography (than the default one) for a certain region of text.
For instance, to specify that a given citation should appear in a second bibliography with
name bib2, you should proceed as follows:


Click on Insert!Link!Alternate!Bibliography and enter bib2 on the prompt. This
will insert an empty with-bib tag into your document, with the cursor inside.



Inside this with-bib tag, enter your citation, using Insert!Link!Citation.

If needed, the with-bib tag can be made to span over a large portion of text. All citations
inside this span will be be put into the bibliography with name bib2.
The bibliography bib2 itself should be created in a similar way: rst click on Insert!Link!
Alternate!Bibliography and enter bib2 on the prompt. Next insert the bibliography as
usual, via Insert!Automatic!Bibliography. Now do Document!Update!All as many times
as need in order to generate the bibliography and get all links right.

5.8 Books and multifile documents

45

5.8. Books and multifile documents
When a document gets really large, you may want to subdivide it into smaller pieces. This
both makes the individual pieces more easily reusable in other works and it improves the
editor's responsiveness. An entire le can be inserted into another one using Insert!Link!
Include. In order to speed up the treatment of included documents, they are being buered.
In order to update all included documents, you should use Tools!Update!Inclusions.

When writing a book, one usually puts the individual chapters in les c1.tm, c2.tm until
cn.tm. One next creates one le book.tm for the whole book, in which the les c1.tm, c2.tm
until cn.tm are included using the above mechanism. The table of contents, bibliography,
etc. are usually put into book.tm.
In order to see cross references to other chapters when editing a particular chapter ci.tm,
one may specify book.tm as a master le for the les c1.tm to cn.tm using Tools!
Project!Attach master.... Currently, the chapter numbers themselves are not dealt with by
this mechanism, so you may want to manually assign the environment variable chapter-nr
at the start of each chapter le in order to get the numbering right when editing.

Chapter 6
Creating technical pictures
Besides the possibility to include pictures which were created using other programs,
TEXMACS includes a rudimentary tool for creating your own drawings. Although this tool
has less features than several most special purpose graphical editors, it does have the
advantage that it is fully integrated with TEXMACS. In particular, it is easy to insert
text, mathematics and hyperlinks inside your pictures. Moreover, pictures which are created in this way often look nicer, because they use the same fonts and default line width
as the surrounding text.

6.1. Starting a new picture
You may start drawing a new picture using Insert!Image!Draw image. In some cases, you
may also want to draw something on top of an existing image (or other kinds of content).
This can be done by selecting the image or content on top of which you want to draw, and
then click on Insert!Image!Draw over selection.
By default, the inserted image spans over the whole paragraph. You may adjust its size
using the keyboard shortcuts ⌥← , ⌥→ , ⌥↑ , ⌥↓ (to adjust the size a bit faster, you may use
⌥⇧← , ⌥⇧→ , ⌥⇧↑ , ⌥⇧↓ ). You may also specify an explicit size using Insert!Geometry!Size.
After completion of your drawing, you may automatically crop the size of your picture to
its actual size (plus some additional padding), using Insert!Geometry!Crop.
For technical pictures, it is often useful to display a grid while you are drawing. This can
be done using Insert!Grid!Type!Cartesian. In the menu Insert!Grid it is also possible to
adjust the colors of the axes and the grid-lines, as well as the number of subunit grid-lines
per unit grid-line. By default, grids will also be printed; you need to remove them after
completing your drawing if you do not want this.
By default, TEXMACS places the origin of the grid at the center of the screen and uses a
1cm unit. You may scroll the picture using the arrow keys ← , → , ↑ , ↓ (or ⇧← , ⇧→ , ⇧↑ , ⇧↓ if
you want to move fast). You may specify a dierent unit using the Insert!Geometry!Unit
menu. You may also zoom in and out using + and - , or from the Insert!Geometry!Zoom
menu.

6.2. Inserting new objects
After insertion of a new picture or clicking inside an existing picture, the second mode
dependent toolbar shows a list of icons which are useful in graphics mode. In particular,
the second group of icons , , , , , , , , on this toolbar allows you to select
the kind of objects that you want to insert. TEXMACS currently implements the following
primitive graphical objects:
Points. When selecting point mode using
points with the left mouse button.

or Insert!Point, you may insert simple

Lines and polygons. When selecting line mode using
or Insert!Line, you may
insert a new broken line with the left mouse button: at every new click a new point
is inserted and the last point is inserted using a double click. Polygon mode ( or
Insert!Polygon) is a variant of line mode, with this dierence that an additional
segment is inserted between the rst and the last points.
47

48

Creating technical pictures

Splines and closed splines. Spline mode is selected using
or Insert!Spline. This
mode is similar to line mode, except that we now draw a smooth curve through
the specied points. Again, this mode admits a closed variant ( or Insert!Closed
spline).
Arcs and circles. Arc mode is selected using or Insert!Arc. In this mode, you may
insert arcs going through three points specied through left mouse clicks. Similarly,
you may use circle mode ( or Insert!Circle) for drawing circles.
Text and mathematics. When selecting text mode ( or Insert!Text) or mathematics mode ( or Insert!Mathematics), you may enter text (or mathematics) at
an arbitrary position in the picture, again using the left mouse button.
Typical examples of these basic objects are shown in the gures below:

Figure 6.1. Points.

Figure 6.2. Lines.

Figure 6.3. Polygons.

Figure 6.4. Splines.

Figure 6.5. Closed splines.

Figure 6.6. Arcs.

Hello
epi = ¡1
Figure 6.7. Circles.

Figure 6.8. Text.

Figure 6.9. Mathematics.

6.3. Editing objects
Any of the modes which allows for the insertion of new objects (points, lines, polygons,
etc.) also allows you to directly edit existing objects. More precisely, as soon as you go
over an existing object with your mouse, then the control points for that object will be
highlighted automatically. Several editing operations are supported:
Moving control points. When your mouse is suciently close to a control point,
then it will be possible to drag and drop the control point to somewhere else using
the left mouse button.

6.4 Specification of style properties

49

Inserting new control points. For objects with an arbitrary number of control
points, such as broken lines, polygons, splines and closed splines, it is possible
to insert new points on existing edges. In order to do so, move the mouse pointer
on the edge where you want to insert a new point; the two neighbouring control points should be highlighted. Then insert a new point drag and move it around
using drag and drop for the rst mouse button.
Removing control points. Using the middle mouse button, it is possible to remove
control points (and eventually the object itself).
Removing the entire object. Using the middle mouse button while simultaneously
pressing the shift key ⇧ removes the entire object which is currently highlighted.
While editing, it should also be noticed that TEXMACS attempts to automatically snap
the mouse pointer to control points or edges of existing objects, as well as to intersection
points of two curves and points on the grid. This makes it possible to quickly draw complex
pictures which are exact, and not merely exact up to one or more pixels (and ugly when
magnied or printed). Around boxes with text or mathematical formulas, there are also
eight invisible control points to which TEXMACS will attempt to snap the mouse pointer.
This makes it easier to draw diagrams as in gure 6.10 below.
Graphical objects are drawn in a specic stacking order which has the eect that certain
objects may be hidden by other objects. Using ⌃⇞ and ⌃⇟ , you may move the currently
highlighted object closer to or farther away from the eye for this stacking order. In a similar
vein, certain control points may become unaccessible, because hidden by closer control
points. In that case, you may use ⇥ to cycle through all possibilities for the current cursor
position.

A

B

X

C

D

Y

Figure 6.10. Example of a diagram which was drawn by using snapping to the eight control
points around each box with a mathematical formula. Notice also that we cropped the graphics
to its actual size.

6.4. Specification of style properties
Each of the fundamental types of graphical objects also admits a certain number of style
properties which aect the rendering. The following style properties exist:
Color. This property applies to any of the graphical object types and species the color.
Fill color. This property applies to all graphical object types except text and mathematics. It species a ll color for the object.

Figure 6.11. Examples of a few closed splines with dierent colors and ll colors.

50

Creating technical pictures

Opacity. This property also applies to any of the graphical object types and species
an opacity between 0% and 100%. The default is 100% and lower opacities will make the
object more transparent.

Figure 6.12. Examples of the same object with increasing opacities on top of another object.

Point style. A few dierent point styles are supported for displaying points: solid disks,
round circles and squares.
Disk

Round

Square

Figure 6.13. The dierent point styles for black color and red ll color.

Line width. The line width property applies to all curves (that is, to broken lines,
polygons, splines, closed splines, arcs and circles). By default it is 1ln, the width of the
fraction bar in mathematical formulas, but any TEXMACS length unit can be used instead.
0.5ln
1ln
2ln
5ln
Figure 6.14. The same curve using dierent line widths.

Line dashes. Various dash styles are available for curves in Focus!Line dashes.

Figure 6.15. The same curve using dierent dashing styles.

Line arrows. Various arrows at the ends of curves are supported in Focus!Line arrows.

6.5 Editing groups of objects

51

Figure 6.16. The same segment using dierent types of arrows at the extremities.

Text alignment. For textual and mathematical boxes, its is possible to specify the
horizontal and vertical alignment properties, as indicated in the gure below:

Left
Center

Bottom y Base y

Axis y Center y Top y

Right

Figure 6.17. Illustration of horizontal and vertical alignment of text boxes.

6.5. Editing groups of objects
The rightmost series of icons on the second mode dependent toolbar is used for editing
groups of graphical objects. In group editing mode, you may select or unselect objects
using right mouse clicks. You may also select all objects in a rectangle by dragging using
the right mouse button. When pressing the left mouse button, the current group operation
is performed jointly on all selected objects.
The following kinds of group operations are supported:
Changing properties. Selected using
or Insert!Set properties. The current properties (as indicated in the focus bar) are applied to the selected objects.
Move objects. Selected using
or Insert!Move objects. The selected objects are
moved until you press the left mouse button a second time.
Resize objects. Selected using
or Insert!Resize objects. The selected objects are
resized until you press the left mouse button a second time.
Rotate objects. Selected using
or Insert!Rotate objects. The selected objects are
rotated until you press the left mouse button a second time.
Group or ungroup objects. Selected using or Insert!Group/ungroup. The selected
objects are grouped together into a single object. If you selected one grouped object,
then this object will be ungrouped.
In the group editing mode, it is also possible to copy and paste groups of objects.

Chapter 7
Advanced layout features
7.1. Flows
Complex documents often contain footnotes or oating objects, which appear dierently on
pages as the main text. In fact, the content of such complex documents use several ows,
one for the main text, one for the footnotes, one for oats, and still another one for two
column text. The dierent ows are broken across pages in a quite independent way.
In order to insert a footnote, you may use Format!Page insertion!Footnote. The number
of columns of the text may be changed in Paragraph!Number of columns.

7.2. Floating objects
Floating objects are allowed to move on the page independently from the main text.
Usually they contain gures or tables which are too large to nicely t into the main text.
A oating object may be inserted using Insert!Note!Floating object.

You may also create a oating object and directly insert a gure or table inside it using
Insert!Note!Floating gure resp. Insert!Note!Floating table. However, sometimes you
might want to insert several smaller gures or tables inside one oating object. You may
do this using Insert!Image!Small gure resp. Insert!Table!Small table.
After creating a oating object, you may control its position using Focus!Allowed positions
(when inside the oat). You may specify whether you allow the oating object to appear
at the top of the page, at the bottom, directly in the text, or on the next page. By default,
the oat may appear everywhere. However, a oating object will never appear inside the
main text at less than three lines from the bottom or the top of a page.

7.3. Page breaking
The page breaking may be controlled very precisely by the user inside Document!Page!
Breaking. In the submenu Algorithm, you may specify the algorithm being used. Professional
page breaking is best in print, but may slow down the editing when being used interactively
in paper mode. Sloppy page breaking is fastest and medium is professional except for
multicolumn material, for which the professional algorithm is signicantly slower.
You may also allow the page breaking algorithm to enlarge or reduce the length of pages
in exceptional cases in the submenu Limits. The stretchability of vertical space between
paragraphs and so may be specied in Flexibility. The factor 1 is default; a smaller factor
enforces a more rigid spacing, but the quality of the breaks may decrease.

53

Chapter 8
Editing tools
In this chapter, we discuss some of the general editing facilities that are implemented in
TEXMACS. Of course, this includes basic operations that can also be found in other editors:
cut and paste, search and replace, etc. But, more interestingly, some of these facilities
take advantage of the additional structure of TEXMACS documents. Typical examples of
structured editing features are structured cursor movement and structured variants.
Traditional operations such as search and replace also attempt to exploit the document
structure. For instance, when searching x in math mode, you will only nd matches that
are also in math mode.

8.1. Cut and paste
You can select text and formulas by maintaining the left mouse button. In order to delete
the selected region, use Edit!Cut or ⌃W . In order to copy the selected region, rst click
on Edit!Copy or hit ⌘W . Next, paste it as many times as you want to the location of your
cursor, using Edit!Paste or ⌃Y . Alternatively, you may copy a selected region using the
middle mouse button.
It is also possible to change the text properties of a selected region. For instance, in order
to transform some black text in red, you select it using the left mouse button and click
on Format!Color! . Similarly, if you select a formula and you click on Insert!Fraction,
then the formula becomes the numerator of the newly created fraction.
When using the copy and paste mechanism to communicate with other applications, text
is copied and pasted using the TEXMACS data format. You may specify other import and
export formats using Tools!Miscellaneous!Import selections as resp. Tools!Miscellaneous!
Export selections as. Alternatively, you may directly copy to or paste from an external
format using the rst group of entries in the Edit!Copy to and Edit!Paste from submenus.
For instance, a LATEX formula can be pasted inside a TEXMACS formula using Edit!Paste
from!LaTeX.

By default, copying and pasting uses the primary clipboard. Using the remaining entries
in the Edit!Copy to and Edit!Paste from menus, you may specify as many other clipboards
as you like. This allows you to keep multiple selections in memory, ready to be pasted.
There are two ways to make selections using the keyboard. When using the cursor keys ← ,
→ , etc. while holding down the ⇧ button, you may select text while moving around the
cursor. Alternatively, you may press ⌃␣ once to x a starting position. When moving
around using the cursor keys, the text between the starting position and the current
position keeps being selected. The selection gets cleared by pressing ⌃G .
Notice that the ⌃␣ shortcut also allows you to make structured selections. You may select
the current word you are in by pressing ⌃␣ twice. Each additional time you press ⌃␣ results
in the selection of the smallest structure that englobes the current selection. Ultimately,
when the entire document gets selected, pressing ⌃␣ once more clears the selection.
55

56

Editing tools

8.2. Search and replace
You can start searching text by pressing ⌃S or Edit!Search. Doing this, a new special
search toolbar will appear below the main text, just above the footer. When typing text
in the search eld of the toolbar, all occurrences of this text will be highlighted in the main
document. Moreover, one principal occurrence will be highlighted in red and you may
navigate through all occurrences using ⇞ and ⇟ (or ↑ and ↓ , or ↩ ). Using ↖ and ↘ , you may
jump to the rst and last occurrences respectively. As soon as you press the escape key ⌘ ,
the search toolbar will be closed, searching stops and focus returns to the main document.
During a search, TEXMACS only looks for text in the same mode and language as at the
position where you started your search. In other words, when searching an x in mathmode, you will not nd any x's in the ordinary text. As a current limitation, the search
string on the search toolbar can only contain ordinary text and no math-symbols or more
complicated structured text. More complex searches will be discussed below.
In order to replace text, you should use Edit!Replace or press ⌃= . This will cause a special
replace toolbar to appear below the main text, just above the footer. You are prompted
for the string that is to be replaced and the string by which to replace. Again, you may
use the ⇞ and ⇟ keys in order to navigate through the occurrences of the search string.
When pressing ⇥ or ↩ in the search eld, focus will be moved to the replace eld. You
may still use the ⇞ and ⇟ keys in order to navigate through the occurrences of the search
string. In addition, pressing ↩ will replace the principal occurrence of the search string
by the replace string. Using ⇧↩ , you may undo the last replacement. You may replace
all remaining occurrences by pressing ⌃↩ . Like in the case of searching, the query-replace
command is mode and language sensitive.
The search and replace toolbars are quite rudimentary in the sense that they only allow
for searching and replacing plain text. By pressing the icon on either of these toolbars,
you may expand the toolbar into a full blown widget with larger search and replace elds
that may contain arbitrary markup. Searching and replacing can be done using more or
less the same keyboard shortcuts as in the case of the toolbars, but you may now search
and replace arbitrary content.
When searching non textual content, the conditions for having a hit are somewhat released.
For instance, assume that you are just starting a new search with an empty search eld.
Then typing F6 inserts the strong tag with no text inside yet. Instead of looking only for
strong empty strings, TEXMACS will rather look for all strong markup in your document.
If you next enter the letter a, then TEXMACS will look for all strong text that contains the
x
letter a. In a similar way, when searching for the formula , TEXMACS will highlight all
fractions in which the numerator contains the variable x. Yet another example: a search for
p will highlight all formulas in which the denominator contains a square root that contains
x
the variable x. For instance, the fraction

a+b
p
c+ x+ y

will be highlighted, but not

p
x+ y
p .
a+ y

When using the structured text and replace widgets, TEXMACS also implements a few
additional special tags for enhancing structured searching. First of all, it can happen that
you would like to search for certain content inside a special context. For instance, you might
want to search for all occurrences of the letter a inside a strong tag. When searching for
a, as above, TEXMACS will highlight all strong tags that contain the letter a. In order to
highlight the letters a themselves, you should rst enter the strong tag inside an empty
search eld using F6 . You next enter a special select-region tag using ⌃? , and nally insert
the letter a inside this tag. Other special markup that can be used inside search elds
are the wildcards x, y and z, which are entered using ⌃1 , ⌃2 and ⌃3 .

8.4 Undo and redo

57

As soon as you start using the structured text and replace widgets instead of the toolbars,
this will be remembered as a user preference: any subsequent searches or replacements will
again use the widgets. In order to switch back to the less intrusive toolbar methods for
searching and replacing, you should press the
icon.

8.3. Spell checking
If the program ispell has been installed on your system, then you may use it to check
your text for misspelled words by pressing ? or Edit!Spell. Notice that you might have to
verify that the dictionaries corresponding to the languages in which your texts have been
written have been installed on your system; this is usually the case for English.
When you launch the spell checker (either on the whole text or on a selected region), you
will be prompted at each misspelled word and the footer displays the available options:
a). Accepts the misspelled word and all its future occurrences in the text.
r). Replace the misspelled word by a correction that you have to enter.
i). Indicate that the misspelled word is actually correct and that it has to be inserted
in your personal dictionary.
1-9). Several suggested corrections for your misspelled word.
Notice that ispell just checks for misspelled words. No grammatical faults will be detected.

When starting the spell checker, it will use the dictionary of the language that is active at
the current cursor position (or the start of a selection). Only text in that language will be
checked. If your document contains text in several languages, then you will have to launch
the spell checker once for each language being used.

8.4. Undo and redo
It is possible to gradually undo the changes you made in a document from the moment
that you launched TEXMACS. This can be done via Edit!Undo or using the keystroke ⌘[ .
Undone changes can be redone using Edit!Redo or ⌘] . TEXMACS maintains the entire
history tree of all your edits. Sometimes, after multiple undo and redo actions, this means
that there can be several ways to redo some modication; in that case, Edit!Redo becomes
a menu in which you can select the appropriate branch.
We notice that only changes in the document itself are taken into account by the undo
system. In particular, modications of most of the global document properties can not be
undone. This includes modications of the document style, the page size, the main font,
etc. The same remark applies to any modications outside TEXMACS that were triggered by
your actions. For instance, in a computer algebra session, you can undo your edits inside
TEXMACS, but not the computations in the external computer algebra system.

58

Editing tools

8.5. Structured editing
As a general rule, the behaviour of most structured editing operations is conditioned by
the current focus. By default, the focus is on the innermost tag that contains the cursor.
Whenever some selection is active, the focus is rather on the innermost tag that contains
the selection. During structured operations, such as navigating among similar tags, the
focus may temporarily be set to something else. The current focus is visually indicated by
the innermost cyan box around the cursor.
For instance, the structured insertion commands ⌥← , ⌥→ , ⌥↑ and ⌥↓ have a particular
meaning both inside tables and trees. Inside tables, they allow you to insert new rows and
columns (see gure 8.1). Inside trees, they correspond to the insertion of new nodes (see
gure 8.2). If you are inside a tree inside a table, then the innermost tag is a tree, and
node insertions will take precedence over the insertion of new rows and columns.
For most editing operations, a default particular behaviour has been dened. This behaviour may potentially be overridden for a few exceptional tags. In our example of structured
insertion, the default behaviour of ⌥← and ⌥→ is to insert a new argument to the tag at the
left or at the right of the cursor (when allowed). Inside tables, this behaviour is overridden
so as to insert entire columns.


a bj c
d e f





a b j c
d e f





a j b c
d e f

0

1
a b c
@
A
j
d e f



0

1
j
@ a b c A
d e f

Figure 8.1. Assume that the cursor is at the position of | inside the left-most matrix. Then the
four other matrices respectively correspond to the insertion of a new column at the left ( ⌥←) or
right ( ⌥→), resp. a new row above ( ⌥↑ ) or below ( ⌥↓).

a

a

a

a

a

b c| d

b | c d

b c | d

b | d

b c d

c

|

Figure 8.2. Assume that the cursor is at the position of | inside the left-most tree. Then the
four other trees respectively correspond to the insertion of a new node at the left ( ⌥← ), at the
right ( ⌥→), above ( ⌥↑) or below ( ⌥↓ ).

Similarly, still in the case of matrices, the keys ⌥↖ , ⌥↘ , ⌥⇞ and ⌥⇟ can be used for inserting
a new rst or last column, resp. a new rst or last row. The keys ⌥⌫ and ⌥⌦ are mapped
to the commands for backward resp. forward structured deletion. For matrices, this will
result in the removal of the column before or after the cursor (see gure 8.3). In order to
remove the enclosing environment you may use ⌃⌫ or ⌃⌫ .


a bj c
d e f





bj c
e f





a jc
d f



bj

Figure 8.3. Assume that the cursor is at the position of |inside the left-most matrix. Then pressing
the keys ⌥⌫ and ⌥⌦ respectively result in the next two matrices. Pressing either ⌃⌫ or ⌃⌫ replaces
the matrix by the content of the cell in which you are, leaving you with the b at the right-hand side.

8.7 Structured variants

59

8.6. Structured cursor movement
TEXMACS implements the three main mechanisms for structured cursor movement:
1. Traversal of the entire structure of the document.
2. Traversal of tags that are similar to the innermost tag.
3. Movements inside the innermost tag.
Most keyboard shortcuts for structured cursor movements can be used in combination with
the ⇧ -key so as to simultaneously select text while moving around.
Structured traversal of the document.
The ⌃← , ⌃→ , ⌃↑ and ⌃↓ keys are used for the structured traversal of the entire document.
Inside plain text, ⌃← and ⌃→ allow you to move in a word-by-word manner, whereas ⌃↑
and ⌃↓ correspond to paragraph-by-paragraph motion.
In the presence of other markup, the ⌃← and ⌃→ keys allow you to visit all accessible
cursor positions in the document, except that we keep moving in a word-by-word manner
inside plain text. The behaviour of the ⌃↑ and ⌃↓ keys is more context-dependent. Inside
matrices, they typically allow you to move one row up or down.
Traversal of tags that are similar to the innermost tag.
This type of cursor movement allows you to quickly visit all other tags in the document
that are similar to the innermost tag. The ⌃⇞ and ⌃⇟ keys allow you move to the previous
or next similar tags, whereas ⌃↖ and ⌃↘ directly jump to the rst or last similar tags.
For instance, if you are inside a section title, then you may move to the previous sectional
title using ⌃⇞ . Subsection and chapter titles are in particular understood to be similar
to section titles. Notice that you may use ⌃§ to jump to the previous section title.
Movements inside the innermost tag.
It is also possible to quickly move inside the innermost tag without quitting it. The shortcuts ⌘⌥← , ⌘⌥→ , ⌘⌥↖ and ⌘⌥↘ provide a way to move to the previous, next, rst or last
argument of the innermost tag. Furthermore, the shortcuts ⌘⌥⌫ and ⌘⌥⌦ may be used to
exit the innermost tag on the left or on the right.
This default behaviour may be overridden in special contexts. For instance, inside tables or
trees, they rather correspond to cell-by-cell or node-by-node cursor movement. In addition,
these cases associate vertical cursor movements to ⌘⌥↑ , ⌘⌥↓ , ⌘⌥⇞ and ⌘⌥⇟ .

8.7. Structured variants
When creating an environment like a theorem, an equation or a list, it frequently happens
that one would like to change the environment a posteriori. The keyboard shortcuts ⌃⇥
and ⌃⇧⇥ allow you to cycle through the list of structured variants of the innermost tag, in
forward or backward direction, respectively.
For instance, assuming that you are inside a theorem, pressing ⌃⇥ several times will change
the theorem into a proposition, a lemma, a corollary, a conjecture, and nally back into a
theorem. The ⌃⇧⇥ key allows you to cycle in the reverse direction: theorem ! conjecture !
corollary ! lemma ! proposition ! theorem.

60

Editing tools

In the case of mathematical formulas, the ⌃⇥ shortcut allows you to change an inline
formula such as a2 + b2 = c 2 into the displayed formula
a2 + b 2 = c 2
while taking care of potential trailing spaces and punctuation signs.
TEXMACS also provides the ⌃# shortcut for turning numbered environments into unnumbered
environments and vice versa. This works for most common environments like theorems,
remarks, tables, equations, etc. Notice that ⌃# also turns an unnumbered itemize environment into an enumeration and vice versa, whereas ⌃⇥ allows you to cycle between
the available kinds of list items (bullets, dashes, arrows, etc.).

Folding and unfolding provides yet another example of an interesting way to toggle between
several environments. Inside a computer algebra session such as
Pari] factor (x^15 - 1)
0
x¡1
B
2
x +x+1
B
%1 = B
4
@
x + x3 + x2 + x + 1
x8 ¡ x7 + x5 ¡ x4 + x3 ¡ x + 1

1
1
1
1

1
C
C
C
A

you may click on Pari] in order to fold the output (only the input remains visible) and
click once again in order to unfold back to the original state. The ⌃* shortcut achieves
the same eect. There various other foldable environments, most of which are available
through Insert!Fold.

8.8. Positioning and resizing objects
The ⌘ prex may be used for positioning and resizing objects. For instance, inside a cell
of a table, you may use ⌘→ to align the cell more to the right. Behind a space introduced
via Format!Space, the same key allows you to increase the width of space. More generally,
the following shortcuts are implemented:
⌘← .

Decrease the horizontal size of an object, or align more to the left.

⌘→ .

Increase the horizontal size of an object, or align more to the right.

⌘↓ .

Decrease/increase the vertical size of an object, or align more to the bottom.

⌘↑ .

Increase/decrease the vertical size of an object, or align more to the top.

⌘↖ .

Decrease the horizontal oset of an object, or left align.

⌘↘ .

Increase the horizontal oset of an object, or right align.

⌘⇟ .

Decrease the vertical oset of an object, or align at the bottom.

⌘⇞ .

Increase the vertical oset of an object, or align at the top.

⌘⌫ .

Revert the geometry (size, position, alignment) to the defaults.

⌘⌃⇥ , ⌘⌃⇧⇥ .

Circulate among the available length units for specifying the geometry.

8.9 Versioning tools
⌘⌃[ , ⌘⌃] .

61

Decrease or increase the step size when positioning or resizing.

Particular tags to which the shortcuts apply are the following:
Spaces. Both horizontal and vertical spaces from the Format!Space menu. You should
put the cursor just after the space tag for the shortcuts to apply.
Box modiers. The tags move, shift, resize, extend, clipped, smashed, swell from the
Format!Adjust menu.
Animations. The durations of animations can be modied using ⌘← and ⌘→ .
Images. The size and alignment of images can be changed.

8.9. Versioning tools
When writing documents in collaboration with other authors, it frequently arises that
one wants to go through changes made by the other authors, and either accept, discard
or further correct them. After enabling the versioning tool through Edit!Preferences!
Utilities!Versioning tool, a special menu Version appears in the main menu bar, which makes
this process automatic. Below, we will describe in more detail how this tool works.
In addition, there exist many stand-alone programs for maintaining several versions of
a same le, such as Subversion, Git, Darcs, GNU Arch, just to mention a few of
them. TEXMACS currently provides a rudimentary support for Subversion and Git, but
interfaces for the other systems could easily be added.
Comparing two versions.
Assume that we have two versions old.tm and new.tm of the same document. In order to
see the changes, rst load the newer version new.tm, then click on Version!Compare!With
older version and select the older version old.tm. The buer will still be named new.tm,
and the changes between both versions will be indicated by special markup. If there are
any changes, then the cursor will be positioned at the rst dierence. In a similar way, you
may compare the current buer with a newer version on disk using Version!Compare!With
newer version.
It is possible to go through all the dierences between the old and new versions either from
the items in the submenu Version!Move, or using the keyboard shortcuts ⌃↑ and ⌃↓ . One
may also use the more general structured navigation shortcuts ⌃↖ , ⌃↘ , ⌃⇞ and ⌃⇟ .
Visualization of the dierences.
Dierences between the two versions can be displayed in three ways: by showing only the
old version, only the new version, or both versions simultaneously. In all cases, the old
version is displayed in dark red and the new version in dark green.
The visualization style can be specied individually for each individual change, via Version!Show or the keyboard shortcuts ⌃← (old version), ⌃→ (new version) and ⌃| (both
versions). One may also cycle through the dierent style using the structured variant key
⌃⇥ . If you selected some text, then the above actions will apply to the whole selection. In
particular, by selecting the entire le, you can visualize the older or the newer version, or
both versions.
Retaining a specic version.

62

Editing tools

It often occurs that we want to go through the changes between two versions and progressively retain either one or the other version for each individual dierence. Assuming
that the cursor is inside a given dierence, this can be done from entries in the submenu
Version!Retain. Alternatively, one may use the shortcuts ⌃1 , ⌃2 and ⌃↩ to retain the old,
new and currently displayed version, respectively. If both versions are displayed, then ⌃↩
retains the new version. After retaining one of the versions, we automatically jump to the
next dierence, which can then be processed.
If you selected some text, then any of the above action will retain the appropriate version
for each of the dierences in the selection. This applies in particular to the case when you
select the entire document. A convenient alternative way to process all dierences is to use
⌃↑ and ⌃↓ to go through the dierences, use ⌃← and ⌃→ to select the preferred version. As
soon as all dierences have been processed, you select the entire document and click on
Version!Retain!Current version.
Grain control and reactualizing the dierences.

The entries in the submenu Version!Grain allow you to control the grain with which
dierences between versions are computed. By default, we use the nest grain Detailed.
It is also possible to compute dierences on a paragraph-based level, using Block. In that
case, the entire paragraphs in which a change occurs will be highlighted. The roughest
grain Rough will highlight the entire text, if a change occurs somewhere inside.
The grain is used when comparing two documents using Version!File!Compare, but it is
also possible to change the grain for a selected portion of text: simply select the text and
choose the new grain in the submenu Version!Grain. This can in particular be applied on
the entire buer. Similarly, if you change the grain inside a dierence, then the dierence
will be recomputed using the new grain.
Notice that you may also change the grain to the current grain. This has the eect of
reactualizing the dierences of a selected portion or of the current dierence at the cursor
position. This may be useful, if you made some changes to one of the versions. For instance,
assume that the old version contained a theorem and that we changed it into a lemma in
the new version and also modied part of its inside text. When visualizing the changes,
the whole theorem will be highlighted, since there is no appropriate markup to indicate
that we just changed from a theorem to a lemma. Nevertheless, if we want to compare the
inside texts, we may turn the old theorem into a lemma and then reactualize.
Using external programs such as Subversion for version control.
If the le you are editing belongs to a directory that is under version control (only Subversion and Git is currently supported, although other systems might follow), then the
rst part of the Version menu will contain some clickable entries.
First of all, if the current buer is under version control, then you may take a look at its
history using Version!History. The history contains a list of hyperlinks to older revisions,
together with short information about who changed what and when. Older revisions cannot
be saved, but you may compare them to the current user version (on disk or being edited)
using Version!Compare!With current user version.
After making some changes to a le under version control, the version inside the editor
or on disk no longer corresponds to the version in the repository. Using Version!Commit,
the current user's version can be committed to the repository. When doing so, you will
be prompted for a small explanatory message about the changes that you have made. A
le that is not yet under version control can be added to the version control system using
Version!Register. Registering a le does not commit it to the repository: you still have to
use Version!Commit in order to do so.

8.9 Versioning tools

63

If, while you were editing, changes to the le were made in the repository, then you may
merge the result with your current version using Version!Update. At the moment, no
conict resolution has been implemented yet, although this is planned for the future.

Chapter 9
Laptop presentations
TEXMACS features a presentation mode, for making presentations from a laptop. The
presentation mode is activated/deactivated using View!Presentation mode or ⌃F9 . In this
chapter, we describe several dedicated style packages and markup elements which can be
used for making slick presentations.
Several types of remote controllers are supported for laptop presentations. Some of them
(such as Apple infrared controllers) should work out of the box (at least for the Qt version).
Others map the buttons on the remote controller to certain keys on your keyboard, and you
will need to toggle View!Remote control in order to remap these keys to the right actions
during presentations. If necessary, the appropriate mappings may be specied in Edit!
Preferences!Keyboard!Remote control. By activating the debugging tool Tools!Debugging
tool and Debug!keyboard, you may nd out the particular mappings used by your remote
control.

9.1. Beamer styles
In order to start writing a laptop presentation, you should rst select the beamer style
using Document!Style!beamer. There are several main themes for presentations, such as
Bluish, Ice, Metal, Reddish, Ridged paper, which can be selected from the Document!Beamer
theme menu.
The presentation style includes the alt-colors style package, which features the use
of colors for mathematical formulas, enunciations, etc. Additional customizations of the
presentation style are available in the Focus!Preferences menus for the various tags to
which they apply. For instance, the rendering of slide titles and theorems can be further
customized.

9.2. Traversal of a presentation
One major family of markup tags for presentations concerns the traversal of the document
during a presentation. The keys F10 and F11 are used respectively for going back and
forth in the presentation. The keys F9 and F12 are used to go to the start resp. end of the
presentation. When using the beamer style or when enabling the presentation tool in the
Tools menu, a Dynamic menu and additional icons will appear, which can also be used for
the traversal of your presentation.
The most basic traversal tag is called a switch, and allows the user to show dierent pieces
of text in successive and mutually exclusive manner. The entire presentation itself usually
consists of a screens switch, where the pieces are the successive slides of the presentation.
After selection of the beamer style, this switch can be inserted using Focus!Screens or
Insert!Fold!Switch!Screens. You may jump from one screen to another one using ⇞ and
⇟.
65

66

Laptop presentations

Inside a switch, new branches can be inserted after or before the currently visible branch
using Focus!Insert argument after or Focus!Insert argument before. Besides the screens
switch, you may use Insert!Fold!Switch!Standard to insert paragraph-wide switches,
and Insert!Fold!Switch!Standard to insert inline switches (similarly to displayed and
inline formulas).
Another popular way to traverse is presentation is to progressively unroll content. This can
be done by inserting an unroll tag using Insert!Fold!Unroll. Using a hack this tag can be
combined with the itemize and enumerate tags: rst create the list environment, but remove
the rst (automatically inserted) item tag. Next insert the unroll tag. When pressing enter
inside the unroll tag, new items are created; you still have to use Focus!Insert argument
after for inserting new branches to the unroll structure (in particular, several items could
be unrolled at once).
A variant of unrolling is unfolding. This is basically an unroll tag with exactly two branches,
but dierent variants are available in Insert!Fold!Folded depending on the desired rendering. In particular, some of the renderings display a button which may be pushed in
order to fold or unfold some content. The input-output elds inside computer algebra
sessions are also foldable. Similarly, the tags in Insert!Fold!Summarize are switches with
two branches, again with dierent kinds of rendering.
When using TEXMACS in combination with an external plug-in, such as a computer algebra
system, you will notice that all input-output elds in sessions are foldable. In addition, you
can create so called executable switches using the items in the Insert!Fold!Executable
submenu. This allows you to switch back and forth between a given input to the system
and the corresponding output.
All markup for the traversal of presentations may be nested in a natural way. In the Insert!
Fold!Traversal menu, you may specify whether unrolled and folded structures should be
folded back after traversal.

9.3. Overlays
The standard fold, unroll and switch tags implement the most frequent kinds of traversal of a slideshow. However, there are cases in which more complex successions are
needed.
Elimination of x from
x sin y ¡ 3 x y =

yields

x=

sin y ¡ 3 y

:

Elimination of x from
x sin y ¡ 3 x y =

yields

x=

sin y ¡ 3 y

:

Figure 9.1. Example of highlighting a variable x when switching from one slide to a next one.

For instance, imagine that we are given a slide, and that we wish to highlight all occurrences
of some variable x in red on the next slide (see gure 9.1). This could be achieved by using
a switch tag: we just copy the whole slide both in the rst and in the second branch of the
switch, and next color all instances of x red in the second branch. However, this solution
has the disadvantage that any a posteriori modication on the slide has to be made both
in the rst and in the second branch.

9.4 Decorations

67

TEXMACS provides a so called overlay mechanism for this kind of more complex successions
of slides. You may insert a pile of overlays using Insert!Fold!Overlays!Standard. At the
start, the pile contains a unique overlay, but new overlays can then be added using the
standard keyboard shortcuts ⌥→ and ⌥← for structured insertion. When applied to overlays,
the standard keys F10 and F11 for traversing the presentation have the eect of going up
and down in the pile of overlays.
By default, all text which is typed by the user will be visible on all overlays. But, using
the lters in the menu Insert!Fold!Overlay, it is also possible to create text which is only
visible on specied overlays of the pile. There are four basic types of lters:
Visible from here on. Text that will be visible on this and all subsequent overlays.
Visible until here. Text that will be visible on this and all previous overlays.
Visible only here. Text that will be visible only on this overlay.
Visible except here. Text that will be visible on all but the current overlays.

In a similar way, TEXMACS provides tags for alternate views: depending on whether a
certain predicate is met, we show the main content on certain overlays and the alternate
content on the remaining overlays. We use the same four types of predicates:
Alternate from here on. The alternate text will be used on this and all subsequent
overlays.
Alternate until here. The alternate text will be used on this and all previous overlays.
Alternate only here. The alternate text will only be used on this overlay.
Alternate except here. The alternate text will be used on all but the current overlays.

TEXMACS nally provides a means of customizing the way that hidden and shown content
should be rendered: user determined coloring schemes can be used using the alter-colors tag
which can be inserted from Insert!Fold!Overlay!Specify color alternation. For instance, in
order to achieve the eect mentioned in the example from Figure 9.1, you may specify a
black to red color alternation, and then use a Visible from here on type of overlay.

9.4. Decorations
In order to decorate your laptop presentations, TEXMACS provides a few extra markup
elements: granite, manila-paper, metal, pine, ridged-paper and rough-paper. These tags will put
your content on a nice, natural background, as illustrated in the gure below. You may
also use the tit tag for giving individual slides a title.

Granite

Metal

Pine

a2 + b 2 = c 2

a2 + b 2 = c 2

a2 + b2 = c 2

Manila paper

Ridged paper

Rough paper

a2 + b 2 = c 2

a2 + b2 = c 2

a2 + b2 = c2

Figure 9.2. Some standard ornaments for decorating your presentations.

68

Laptop presentations

9.5. Animations
TEXMACS provides some rudimentary support for animations inside laptop presentations.
This support is likely to be further improved in future TEXMACS distributions.
The simplest animations are available from the menus Insert!Animation!Translate and
Insert!Animation!Progressive. Using the rst menu, it is possible to create moving content:
you rst specify a duration for the full animation and then enter the content which has to
be moved. The dierent kinds of moving content are illustrated in gure 9.3. Similarly,
using the second menu, it is possible to create content which only progressively appears
on the screen. The various kinds of progressive content are illustrated in gure 9.4. The
duration of the animations can be modied a posteriori by putting your cursor inside them
and using the shortcuts ⌘← and ⌘→ .

Hello world

Hello world

Hello world

Hello world

Rightwards

Leftwards

Upwards

Downwards

Figure 9.3. Moving content, as inserted from Insert!Animation!Translate.

Hello

Hello

Hello world

Hello

Hello

Rightwards

Leftwards

From center

Upwards

Downwards

Figure 9.4. Progressive content, as inserted from Insert!Animation!Progressive.

Other basic animations are animated gif pictures, which can be inserted from Insert!
Animation!Animation, and sounds, which can be inserted from Insert!Animation!Sound.
Support for movies should be added later.
It is also possible to combine animation, so as to form larger animations. For instance,
using Insert!Animation!Compose you can play several animations one after another. Often
the individual elements of a composed animations are xed animation of a given duration,
which can be inserted using Insert!Animation!Fixed. Of course, you may also use moving
or progressive content or even composed animations as building blocks. An animation
can be repeated indenitely using Insert!Animation!Repeat. This may for instance be
used to create a blinking eect. Some examples of the various possibilities can be found
in gure 9.5.

World

World

TeXmacs

Compose

Blinking

TEXMACS logo

Mathe
Magix animation

Figure 9.5. Dierent kinds of composed animations.

9.6. Exporting beamer presentations
Once you have created a le with the beamer style you may want to export it to PDF in
order to be able to give your presentation without using TEXMACS. There are two ways in
which this can be done: expanded and unexpanded.
1. Expanded means that folds of all kinds are attened out before they are exported.
This is useful if you intend the resulting PDF le to be distributed and printed,
since it will have exactly as many pages as slides your presentation.

9.6 Exporting beamer presentations

69

2. Unexpanded means that the PDF le will have as many pages as steps your presentation, which depending on your use of fold, switch, overlay, etc. will typically result
in many more pages.
You can select which of these methods will be used with Preferences!Converters!TeXmacs>Pdf/Postscript!Expand beamer slides.

Chapter 10
Using GNU TEXMACS as an interface
An important feature of TEXMACS is it's ability to communicate with extern systems. For
computer algebra systems or other scientic computation systems, this is typically done in
shell-like sessions, in which it is possible to evaluate commands and display the results in
a nice, graphical way. Some systems can also be used more in the background as scripting
languages.
See Help!Plug-ins for a list of existing plug-ins and more documentation on these systems.

10.1. Creating sessions
A session can be started from the Insert!Session menu. Since TEXMACS is based on the
Scheme language, it is always possible to start a Scheme session using Insert!Session!
Scheme. On Unix systems, it is usually also possible to start Bash shell sessions using
Insert!Session!Shell. The remainder of the items in the Insert!Session menu depend on
the plug-ins which are installed on your system.
A session consists of a sequence of input and output elds and possible text between
them. When pressing ↩ inside an input eld of a session, the text inside the environment
is evaluated and the result is displayed in an output eld.
When entering a command in a session, the application attempts to execute it. Several
commands may be launched concurrently in the same document, but the output will only
be active in the session where the cursor is and at the place of the cursor. Therefore, we
recommend to use dierent buers for parallel executions.
For each type of extern application, one may choose between sharing a single process by
dierent sessions, or launching a separate process for each dierent session. More precisely,
when inserting a session using Insert!Session!Other, you may specify both a session type
(Shell, Pari, Maxima, etc.) and a session name (the default name is default). Sessions
with dierent names correspond to dierent processes and sessions with the same name
share a common process.
In order to nish the process which underlies a given session, you may use Session!Close
session. When pressing ↩ in the input of a non-connected system, the system will be
restarted automatically. You may also use Session!Interrupt execution in order to interrupt
the execution of a command. However, several applications do not support this feature.
In order to evaluate all elds of e.g. a previously created session, you may use Session!
Evaluate!Evaluate all. Similarly, Session!Evaluate!Evaluate above and Session!Evaluate!
Evaluate below allow you to evaluate all eld above or below the current eld.

10.2. Editing sessions
Inside input elds of sessions, the cursor keys have a special meaning: when moving upwards
or downwards, you will move to previous or subsequent input elds. When moving to the
left or to the right, you will never leave the input eld; you should rather use the mouse
for this.
71

72

Using GNU TEXMACS as an interface

Some facilities for editing input, output and text elds are available in the Session!Field
menu. Keyboard shortcuts for inserting elds are ⌥↑ (insert above) and ⌥↓ . Keyboard
shortcuts for removing matching text/input/output elds are ⌥⌫ (remove backwards) and
⌥⌦ (remove current elds).
It is possible to create subsessions using Session!Session!Create subsession or ⌥→ . In that
case, the current input-output eld becomes the body of an unfolded subsession. Such a
subsession consists of an explanatory text together with the subsession body. Subsessions
can be folded and unfolded using ⇧F10 resp. ⇧F11 . Subsessions have a nice rendering on
the screen when using the framed-session package in Document!Use package!Program.
Notice that input/output elds and subsessions are foldable: when clicking on the prompt
with the mouse, you may fold or unfold the entry to hide or show the output. For laptop
presentations, this folding and unfolding process is done automatically when traversing
your presentation. It is also possible to fold or unfold all elds in a session using Session!
Session!Fold all elds and Session!Session!Unfold all elds.

Other useful editing operations are Session!Session!Clear all elds, which is useful for
creating a demo session which will be executed later on, and Session!Split session, which
can be used for splitting a session into parts for inclusion into a paper.
Example 10.1. A typical Maxima session is given below. If Maxima is present on your
system, then you may put your cursor in one of the inputs, perform some edits, and try
to reexecute it.
Maxima 5.25.1 http://maxima.sourceforge.net
using Lisp SBCL 1.0.51
Distributed under the GNU Public License. See the file COPYING.
Dedicated to the memory of William Schelter.
The function bug_report() provides bug reporting information.
(%i1) diff (x^x^x, x)
x

(%o1) xx (xx log (x) (log (x) + 1) + xx¡1)
(%i2) integrate (%o1, x)
(%o2) ee

xlog (x)

log(x)

(%i3) integrate (x^5 / (x^2 - x + 17), x)


2x¡1
p
1361
arctan
2
239 log (x ¡ x + 17)
3 x4 + 4 x3 ¡ 96 x2 ¡ 396 x
67
p
(%o3)
+
+
2
12
67

10.3. Selecting the input method
By default, TEXMACS will attempt to evaluate the input eld when pressing ↩ . Multiline
input can be created using ⇧↩ . Alternatively, when selecting the multiline input mode
using Session!Input mode!Multiline input, the ↩ key will behave as usual and ⇧↩ may be
used in order to evaluate the input eld. Notice nally that certain systems admit built-in
heuristics for testing whether the input has been completed; if not, then the ↩ may behave
as usual.

10.4 Plug-ins as scripting languages

73

Certain applications allow you to type the mathematical input in a graphical, two dimensional form. This feature can be used by selecting Session!Input mode!Mathematical input.
If this feature is available, then it is usually also possible to copy and paste output back
into the input. However, it depends on the particular application how well this works.
Keep in mind that some key combinations may be used by the Mathematical input mode: for
instance the key $ is usually redened inside math mode, so if you want to input it you'll
have to type ⇧F5 $ . You can read more about the prex key ⇧F5 in Keyboard shortcuts
for text mode.
Example 10.2. Below, you will nd the previous example session, but now using mathematical input:
Maxima 5.25.1 http://maxima.sourceforge.net
using Lisp SBCL 1.0.51
Distributed under the GNU Public License. See the file COPYING.
Dedicated to the memory of William Schelter.
The function bug_report() provides bug reporting information.
x

(%i1) di(xx ; x)
x

(%o1) xx (xx log (x) (log (x) + 1) + xx¡1)
Z
(%i2)
%o1 dx
xlog (x)

log(x)
(%o2) ee
Z
x5
(%i3)
dx
2
x ¡ x + 17



2x¡1
p
1361
arctan
239 log (x2 ¡ x + 17)
3 x4 + 4 x3 ¡ 96 x2 ¡ 396 x
67
p
(%o3)
+
+
2
12
67

10.4. Plug-ins as scripting languages
TEXMACS provides a few other kinds of additional interfaces to external systems in addition
to shell-like interfaces. First of all, it is possible to insert a so called executable switch
anywhere in the document using Insert!Fold!Executable.

For instance, if Maxima is installed on your system, then Insert!Fold!Executable!Maxima
should yield something like Maxima . You may enter a Maxima expression in the yellow
part of this markup, say Maxima diff(x^x,x) . Using ↩ , you may now switch back and
forth between the unevaluated input and the evaluated output xx (log (x) + 1). Using
⇧↩ , you enable multi-line input. This kind of executable switches are very useful for plugins such as DraTEX, Eukleides, Feynmf, etc., which are mainly used for the ecient computation and insertion of special graphics inside TEXMACS documents.
Some plug-ins such as Maxima can even be selected as a scripting language using Document!Scripts!Maxima. When doing so, a special Maxima menu will appear, which allows
for many useful operations directly on formulas. For instance, when putting the cursor
inside the formula 1 + 1 and pressing ? or Evaluate, the formula gets evaluated automatically
to yield 2.

74

Using GNU TEXMACS as an interface

If a plug-in can be used as a scripting language, then it is possible to create executable
switches with links between them. More precisely, assuming that you selected a scripting
language from Document!Scripts, you may insert a new executable input eld using \ !
or Insert!Link!Executable input eld. As before, when pressing ↩ , the current input is
evaluated and you will see the corresponding output; you may switch back to the input by
pressing ↩ once more.
Contrary to executable switches, you may attach an identier to the executable input eld
by deactivating the eld or by editing the Ref eld in the focus bar. Inside other executable
input elds, you may then refer to the value of the eld by inserting a eld reference
using \ ? or Insert!Link!Field reference. As a variant to executable input elds, you may
sometimes prefer to insert plain input elds using \ \ or Insert!Link!Input eld. These
elds can only be used as inputs and pressing ↩ inside such a eld will only recompute
those other elds which depend on it.
Example 10.3. The executable input elds may for instance be nice in pedagogic documents in which parts of the document may be modied and recomputed by the reader.
For instance, evaluation of the input fragment
The derivative of xx equals di(function,x).
The second derivative is given by di(derivative,x).
yields
The derivative of xx equals xx (log (x) + 1).
The second derivative is given by xx (log (x) + 1)2 + xx¡1.
Of course, if the reader changes the input function xx into something else and presses ↩ ,
then the rst and second derivatives will be updated automatically.

10.5. Spreadsheets
TEXMACS provides rudimentary spreadsheet-like facilities with the advantage that the computations can be carried out using any of the plug-ins that can be used as a scripting
language. In order to use the spreadsheet facilities, you should therefore start with the
selection of a scripting language in the menu Document!Scripts.

As soon as you have selecting a scripting language, such as Maxima, then you may enter
a new spreadsheet using Insert!Table!Textual spreadsheet or Insert!Table!Numeric spreadsheet. You may edit the spreadsheet as an ordinary table, except that the ↩ key will attempt
to reevaluate the cells of the table.
In addition, when preceding the contents of a cell by =, then cell will be considered as an
input-output switch. More precisely, the input is a formula which will be evaluated using
the current scripting language. After the evaluation, only the result of the evaluation is
shown in the cell. After pressing ↩ a second time in the cell, it will be possible switch back
and edit the input. In the formulas, one may refer to the others using names such as c5
for the third row and the fth column.
Example 10.4. On the left-hand side of the gure below, we have displayed a simple table
with formulas for evaluating the sums of the rst two items of each row. On the right-hand
side, we have shown the result after evaluation.

10.6 Remote plug-ins

75

1
100

10
1000

=a1+b1
=a2+b2

1
100

10
1000

11
1100

Figure 10.1. Evaluation of a simple spreadsheet.

Example 10.5. The cells may contain mathematical formulas and the spreadsheet may
take advantage of any of the capacities of the scripting language. For instance, the gure
below demonstrates another possible use of Maxima.
sin(x2)
=di(a1,x)
=di(a2,x)
=di(a3,x)

sin(x2)
2 x cos (x2)
2 cos (x2) ¡ 4 x2 sin (x2)
¡12 x sin (x2) ¡ 8 x3 cos (x2)

Figure 10.2. Computation of successive derivatives using Maxima.

TEXMACS supports a few special notations for applying operations on all cells in a subtable.
For instance, as in Excel, one may use the notation c3:d5 for indicating all cells c3, c4,
c5, d3, d4, d5 in the block from c3 to d5. An alternative notation ; :::; for : can be entered
by typing , , . In a similar way, one may enter the special notation + + by typing + + .
For instance, c3+ + d5 stands for the sum of all cells between c3 and d5.
Example 10.6. The gure below shows an example on how to use taking sums of cells.
Notice that empty cells count for zero.
15.10
15.10
30.20
100
125
75
28.50
14.25
12
16
20
=a1+ + a4
=b1+ + b4
=c1+ + c4

15.10
100
28.50
12
155.6

15.10
125
16
156.1

30.20
75
14.25
20
139.45

Figure 10.3. Evaluation of a simple spreadsheet.

Notice that copying and pasting of subtables works in the same way as for ordinary tables,
with the additional features that the names of the cells and references to cells in the
formulas are renumbered automatically. Similarly, automatic renumbering is used when
inserting new columns or rows, or when removing existing columns or rows.
We also notice that eld references can be used inside spreadsheet cells in order to refer to
some computational markup outside the table. Inversely, each spreadsheet also carries an
invisible Ref eld which can be edited by deactivating the spreadsheet or from the focus bar
(when selecting the entire spreadsheet). The Ref eld of the spreadsheet is used as a prex
for referring to the contents of cells outside the table or from within other spreadsheets.
For instance, if Ref equals sheet, then sheet-c4 will refer to the eld c4 inside the spreadsheet.

10.6. Remote plug-ins
It sometimes happens that certain plug-ins are only installed on a remote computer. In
many cases, it will still be possible to use such a plug-in inside TEXMACS over an SSH
connection.

76

Using GNU TEXMACS as an interface

In order to make this work, you rst have to make sure that SSH is installed on both
computers and that connecting by SSH to the remote machine can be done automatically,
without having to type a password. This can be done by copying your public identity
on the local server to the remote server into the le ~/.ssh/authorized_keys; see the
documentation on SSH for more information.
As the next step, you have to make sure that TEXMACS has been installed on both computers. The remote TEXMACS installation will mainly be used in order to detect which plugins can be used on the remote computer.
When everything has been set up correctly in this way, select Insert!Session!Remote in
order to open the remote plug-in selector. Add the name of the remote server by typing
its name or IP address and clicking on Add. After a small pause, the remote server should
appear in the list together with the remote plug-ins which are supported. You may now
simply select the plug-in you want to use from the list. Notice that remote plug-ins may
take a few seconds in order to boot. Please be patient while booting is in progress.
Servers which have been added to the list of remote plug-in servers will be remembered
at the next time when you start TEXMACS. You may use the buttons Remove and Update
in order to remove a server from the list and to redetermine the list of supported remote
plug-ins.

Chapter 11
Writing TEXMACS style files
One of the fundamental strengths of TEXMACS is the possibility to write your own style
les and packages. The purpose of style les is multiple:


They allow the abstraction of repetitive elements in texts, like sections, theorems,
enumerations, etc.



They form a mechanism which allow you to structure your text. For instance, you
may indicate that a given portion of your text is an abbreviation, a quotation or
important.



Standard document styles enable you to write professionally looking documents,
because the corresponding style les have been written with a lot of care by people
who know a lot about typography and aesthetics.

The user may select a major style from the Document!Style menu. The major style usually
reects the kind of document you want to produce (like a letter, an article or a book) or
a particular layout policy (like publishing an article in a given journal).
Style packages, which are selected from the Document!Style menu, are used for further
customization of the major style. For instance, the number-europe package enables European-style theorem numbering and the maxima package contains macros for customizing
the layout of sessions of the Maxima computer algebra system. Several packages may be
used together.
When you want to add your own markup to TEXMACS or personalize the layout, then you
have to choose between writing a principal style le or a style package. In most cases, you
will probably prefer to write a style package, since this will allow you to combine it arbitrary
other styles. However, in some cases you may prefer to create a new principal style, usually
by personalizing an existing style. This is usually the case if you want to mimic the layout
policy of some journal. In this chapter, we will both explain how to write your own style
packages and how to customize the standard styles.

11.1. Writing a simple style package
Let us explain on an example how to write a simple style package. First of all, you have to
create a new buer using File!New and select the source document style using Document!
Style!source. Now save your empty style package in your personal style package directory
$HOME/.TeXmacs/packages

Notice that the button Texts in the le browser corresponds to the directory
$HOME/.TeXmacs/texts
Consequently, you can go to the style package directory from there, by double clicking on
.. and next on packages. Similarly, the directory
77

78

Writing TEXMACS style files

$HOME/.TeXmacs/styles
contains your personal style les. After saving your empty style package, it should automatically appear in the Document!Package menu. Notice that style les must be saved
using the .ts le extension. If you save the style le in a subdirectory of $HOME/.TeXmacs/
packages, then it will automatically appear in the corresponding submenu of Document!
Package.
Let us now create a simple macro hi which displays Hello world. First type ⌘⌃= , so as to
create an assignment. You should see something like
hassignjji
Now enter hi as the rst argument and type ⌘⌃M inside the second argument in order to
create a macro. You should now see something like
hassignjhijhmacrojii
Finally, type the text Hello world in the body of the macro. Your document should now
consist of the following line:
hassignjhijhmacrojHello worldii
After saving your style package, opening a new document and selecting your package in the
Document!Use package menu, you may now use the macro hi in your document by typing
\ H I and hitting ↩ .
In a similar way, you may create macros with arguments. For instance, assume that we
started entering a macro hello in a similar way as above. Instead of typing Hello world,
we rst type ⌥← inside the macro body so as to create an additional argument on the left
hand side of the cursor. We next enter the name of the argument, say name. You should
now see something like below:
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejii
In the second argument of the body, we now type Hello , ⌘⌃# , name, → and , how are
you today?. After this you should see
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejHello name, how are you today?ii
The ⌘⌃# shortcut is used to retrieve the macro argument name. Instead of typing ⌘⌃# ,
name and → , you may also use the hybrid \ -key and type \ N A M E followed by ↩ . After
saving your style package, you may again use the macro in any document which uses your
package by typing \ H E L L O and hitting ↩ .
From the internal point of view, all macro denitions are stored in the environment of the
TEXMACS typesetter. Besides macros, the environment also contains normal environment
variables, such as section counters or the font size. The environment variables can either
be globally changed using the assign primitive, or locally, using the with primitive. For
instance, when including the line
hassignjsection-nr j-1i

11.2 Rendering of style files and packages

79

in your package, and using article as your major style, then the rst section will be
numbered 0. Similarly, the variant
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejHello hwithjfont-shapejsmall-capsjnamei!ii
of the hello macro displays the name of the person in Small Capitals. Notice that the
with primitive can also be used to locally redene a macro. This is for instance used in the
denitions of the standard list environments, where the macro which renders list icons is
changed inside the body of the list. Yet another variant of the hello macro relies on the
standard person macro:
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejHello hpersonjnamei!ii
In order to produce the macro application hperson j namei, you rst have to start a compound tag using ⌘⌃C , type the name person, insert an argument ⌥→ , and enter the
argument name as before. When you are done, you may press ↩ in order to change the
compound tag into a person tag. Alternatively, you may type \ , person, ⌥→ and name.
By combining the above constructs, an ordinary user should already be able to produce
style packages for all frequently used notations. An interesting technique for writing macros
which involve complex formulas with some subformulas which may change goes as follows:
1. Type the formula, say (a1; :::; an), in an ordinary document.
2. Create the skeleton of your macro in your style package:
hassignjn-tuplejhmacrojajii
3. Copy the formula and paste it into the body of your macro:
hassignjn-tuplejhmacrojaj(ahrsubj1i,:::,ahrsubjni)ii
4. Replace the subformulas you want to parameterize by macro arguments:
hassignjn-tuplejhmacrojaj(ahrsubj1i,:::,ahrsubjni)ii
5. You may now use the macro in documents which use your package:
(a1; :::; an) = (b1; :::; bn):

11.2. Rendering of style files and packages
11.2.1. ASCII-based or tree-based editing: an intricate choice
Most users are used to edit source code using a conventional editor like Emacs, while
presenting the source code in ASCII format. Since all TEXMACS documents are stored as
trees, an interesting but complicated question is which format is most suitable for editing
such documents. One option is to represent the tree using an ASCII-based format, such
as XML, Scheme, or the native format for storing les on a disk. The other option is to
edit the trees as such, making no fundamental distinction between source code and normal
documents.

80

Writing TEXMACS style files

In TEXMACS we have chosen to implement the second option. More precisely, any document
can be edited in source mode, which is merely a mode for rendering the document in a
way which makes its tree structure particularly apparent. It may be instructive to take
an arbitrary document of yours and to take a look at it in source mode by enabling
Document!Source!Edit source tree.

The choice between ASCII-based editing and tree-based editing is non-trivial, because
TEXMACS style les and packages have a double nature: they may be seen as programs which
specify how to render macros, but these programs naturally contain ordinary content.
There are several reasons why users often prefer to edit source code in an ASCII-based
format:
1. It is easy to manually format the code so as to make it more readable.
2. In particular, it is easy to add comments.
3. Standard editors like Emacs provide tools for automatic highlighting, indentation,
etc.
4. One is not constraint by any structure during the editing phase.
Our approach is to reproduce as much of the above advantages in a structured document environment. Although point 4 will obviously be hard to meet when following this
approach, we believe that the rst three advantages might actually become greater in a
structured environment. However, this requires a more profound understanding of how
users format and edit source code.
For instance, consider a piece of manually formatted code like
if (cond) hop
= 2;
else
holala= 3;
Clearly, the user had a particular formatting policy when writing this code. However,
this policy does not appear in the document: manual intervention will be necessary if the
variable cond is renamed c, or if the variable holala is renamed hola.
At the moment, TEXMACS provides no tools for dealing with the above example in an
automatic way, but a few tools are already provided. For instance, the user is given a great
amount of control on how to indent source code and reasonable defaults are provided as
a function of the structure. We also provide high level environments for comments and
structured highlighting. Further tools will be developed later and we are open for any
suggestions from our users.

11.2.2. Global presentation
In the Source tags group of the Document!Source menu, you nd several ways to customize
the rendering of source trees in your document. We recommend you to play around with the
dierent possibilities in a document of your own (after enabling Document!Source!Source
tree) or a standard style package in $TEXMACS_PATH/packages.
First of all, you may choose between the dierent major styles angular, scheme, functional and LATEX for rendering source trees, as illustrated in the gure below:

11.2 Rendering of style files and packages

81

Angular

Scheme

(assign quick-theorem
(macro body
(surround (no-indent)Theorem. 

(arg body ))))

hassignjquick-theoremj
hmacrojbody j
hsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. jj
bodyiii

LATEX

Functional

assignfquick-theorem gf
macrofbody gf
surroundfno-indentTheorem. gfg
f
bodyggg

assign (quick-theorem ,
macro (body ,
surround (no-indentTheorem. , ,
body)))

Figure 11.1. Dierent styles for rendering the same source tree.

Secondly, you may wish to reserve a special treatment to certain tags like concat and
document. In the menu Document!Source!Special you may specify to which extent you
want to treat such tags in a special way:
None. No tags receive a special treatment.
Formatting. Only the formatting tags concat and document are represented as usual.
Normal. In addition to the formatting tags, a few other tags like compound, value and
arg are represented in a special way.
Maximal. At the moment, this option is not yet implemented. The intention is to
allow the user to write his own customizations and to allow for special rendering of
basic operations like plus.
These dierent options are illustrated below:
None

hassignjquick-theoremj
hmacrojbody j
hdocumentj
hsurround jhconcat jhno-indentij
Theorem. ijj
hargjbody iiiii
Normal

hassignjquick-theoremj
hmacrojbody j
hsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. jj
bodyiii

Formatting

hassignjquick-theorem j
hmacrojbody j
hsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. jj
hargjbody iiii
Maximal

hassignjquick-theorem j
hmacrojbody j
hsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. jj
bodyiii

Figure 11.2. Dierent ways to render special tags.

Another thing which may be controlled by the user is whether the presentation of tags
should be compact or stretched out across several lines. Several levels of compactication
may be specied in the Document!Source!Compactication menu:
Minimal. The tags are all stretched out across several lines.

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Writing TEXMACS style files

Only inline tags. All non-inline tags are stretched out across several lines.
Normal. All inline arguments at the start of the tag are represented in a compact
way. As soon as we encounter a block argument, the remainder of the arguments
are stretched out across several lines.
Inline arguments. All inline arguments are represented in a compact way and only
block tags are stretched out across several lines.
Maximal. All source code is represented in a compact way.
The normal and inline arguments options rarely dier. The visual eect of the dierent
options is illustrated below:
Minimal

hassignj
quick-theoremj
hmacroj
bodyj
hsurroundj
hconcatj
hno-indentij
Theorem. ij
j
bodyiii

Only inline tags

hassignj
quick-theoremj
hmacroj
bodyj
hsurroundj
hno-indentiTheorem. j
j
bodyiii

Normal

Maximal

hassignjquick-theoremj
hmacrojbody j
hsurround j hno-indentiTheorem.
jj
bodyiii

hassign j quick-theorem j hmacro j body j hdocument j hsurround j hno-indentiTheorem. j j
body iiii

Figure 11.3. Dierent levels of compactication.

Finally, the user may specify the way closing tags should be rendered when the tag is
stretched out across several lines. The rendering may either be minimalistic, compact, long,
or recall the matching opening tag. The dierent options are illustrated below:
Minimal

assign quick-theorem
macro body
surround hno-indentiTheorem. j
body
Stretched

hassignjquick-theoremj
hmacrojbody j
hsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. jj
body
i
i
i

Compact

hassignjquick-theorem j
hmacrojbody j
hsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. jj
bodyiii
Repeat

hnassignjquick-theorem i
hnmacrojbody i
hnsurroundjhno-indentiTheorem. ji
body
h/surroundi
h/macroi
h/assigni

Figure 11.4. Dierent ways to render closing tags.

11.2 Rendering of style files and packages

83

11.2.3. Local customization
Even though TEXMACS tries hard to render source code in a nice way following the global
rendering options that you specied, the readability of the source code often needs to
be further enhanced locally. In source mode, this can be done using the menus Source!
Activation and Source!Presentation. Any local hints on how to render source code are
automatically removed from the document when it is being used as a style le or package.
First of all, for certain pieces of content the user may prefer to see them in their activated
form instead as dead source code. This may for instance be the case for embedded images,
or for mathematical symbols, like in
hassignjRjhmacrojRii
Such an active presentation may also be preferred for certain more complex macros:
0

hassignjdiagjhmacrojvar jdimjB
@

var1
0




0
vardim

1

C
Aii

A piece of code can be activated by selecting it and using Source!Activation!Activate
or ⌘+ . Similarly, a piece of content may be deactivated using ? (we used this in the
second example above for the rendering of the arguments var and dim). Activation and
deactivation either apply to the whole tree, or to the root only (e.g. Source!Activation!
Activate once).
Another way to customize the rendering is to override some of the global rendering options.
This is mainly interesting for controlling more precisely which tags have to be stretched
across several lines and which tags have to be represented in a compact fashion. For
instance, the concat tag can be used in order to concatenate content, as well as for specifying
a block of sequential statements, or a combination of both. For instance, in the piece of code
hassignjmy-sectionj
hmacrojtitlej
hconcatj
hheader-hookjtitleij
htoc-hookjtitleij
hmy-section-titlejtitleiiii
we have stretched the concat tag along several lines using Source!Presentation!Stretched
(notice that this implies the concat tag to appear explicitly, so as to avoid confusion with
the document tag). Similarly, if a part of the concatenation were to be displayed as usual,
then one may use Source!Presentation!Compact:
hassignjmy-sectionj
hmacrojtitlej
hconcatj
hheader-hookjtitleij
htoc-hookjtitleij
hwithjfont-seriesjboldjSection:i titleiii
At present, we did not implement a way to mark arguments as inline or block, but we
might do this later.
A nal way to customize the rendering of source code is to apply an arbitrary macro using
Source!Presentation!Apply macro or Source!Presentation!Apply macro once. This macro
will be automatically removed when you use your document as a style le or package.

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11.3. The style-sheet language
In the section about writing a simple style package we already gave you a rst impression
about the style-sheet language of TEXMACS. In this section, we will give a more complete
survey of the available features. For more detailed descriptions, we refer to the chapter
about the TEXMACS primitives.
The style-sheet primitives can be obtained from the Source menu when you are in source
mode. In all other modes, the Source menu becomes visible after enabling the Source macros
tool in the Tools menu. Alternatively, you may use the ⌥ and ⌘E keyboard prexes in source
mode and the ⌘I and ⌘E prexes otherwise. Furthermore, we recall that the hybrid \ key may be used for creating macro-applications or arguments, depending on the context.
Finally, the ⌥→ and ⌥← keys are used for inserting arguments.

11.3.1. Assignments
All user dened TEXMACS macros and style variables are stored in the current typesetting
environment. This environment associates a tree value to each string variable. Variables
whose values are macros correspond to new primitives. The others are ordinary environment variables. The primitives for operating on the environment are available from
Source!Dene.
You may permanently change the value of an environment variable using the assign primitive, as in the example
hassignjhijhmacrojHi there!ii
You may also locally change the values of one or several environment variables using the
with primitive:
hwithjfont-seriesjboldjcolor jredjBold red texti
The value of an environment variable may be retrieved using the value primitive. This may
for instance be used in order to increase a counter:
hassignjmy-counter jhplusjmy-counter j1ii
Finally, you may associate logical properties to environment variables using the drd-props
primitive. This is explained in more detail in the section about macro primitives.

11.3.2. Macro expansion
The main interest of the TEXMACS' style-sheet language is the possibility to dene macros.
These come in three avours: ordinary macros, macros which take an arbitrary number of
arguments and external macros, whose expansion is computed by Scheme or a plug-in.
The macro-related primitives are available from the Source!Macro menu. Below, we will
only describe the ordinary macros. For more details, we refer to the section about macro
primitives.
Ordinary macros are usually dened using
hassignjmy-macrojhmacrojx1 jjxnjbodyii

11.3 The style-sheet language

85

After such an assignment, my-macro becomes a new primitive with n arguments, which
may be called using
hmy-macrojy1jjyni
Inside the body of the macro, the arg primitive may be used to retrieve the values of the
arguments to the macro.
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejHello name, you look nice today!ii
It is possible to call a macro with less or more arguments than the expected number. Superuous arguments are simply ignored. Missing arguments take the nullary uninit primitive
as value:
hassignjheyj
hmacrojrstjsecondj
hifj
hequaljsecondj?ij
Hey rst, you look lonely today...j
Hey rst and second, you form a nice couple!iii
We nally notice that you are allowed to compute with macros, in a similar way as in
functional programming, except that our macros are not closures (yet). For instance:
hassignjmy-macro-copyjmy-macroi
The compound tag may be used to apply macros which are the result of a computation:
hassignjoverloaded-hij
hmacrojnamej
hcompoundj
hif jhnice-weather ijhappy-hijsad-hiij
nameiii

11.3.3. Formatting primitives
This section contains some important notes on formatting primitives which are not really
part of the style-sheet language, but nevertheless very related.
First of all, most TEXMACS presentation tags can be divided in two main categories: inline
tags and block tags. For instance, frac is a typical inline tag, whereas theorem is a typical
block tag. Some tags, like strong are inline if their argument is and block in the contrary
case. When writing macros, it is important to be aware of the inline or block nature of
tags, because block tags inside a horizontal concatenation are not rendered in an adequate
way. If you need to surround a block tag with some inline text, then you need the surround
primitive:
hassignjmy-theoremj
hmacrojbodyj
hsurroundjhno-indentihwithjfont-seriesjboldjTheorem. ijhright-ushij
bodyiii

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Writing TEXMACS style files

In this example, we surrounded the body of the theorem with the bold text Theorem.
at the left hand side and a right-ush at the right-hand side. Flushing to the right is
important in order to make the blue visual border hints look nice when you are inside the
environment.
In most cases, TEXMACS does a good job in determining which tags are inline and which
ones are not. However, you sometimes may wish to force a tag to be a block environment.
For instance, the tag very-important dened by
hassignjvery-importantjhmacrojbodyjhwithjfont-seriesjboldjcolor jredjbodyiii
may both be used as an inline tag and a block environment. When placing your cursor
just before the with-tag and hitting ↩ followed by ⌫ , you obtain
hassignjvery-importantj
hmacrojbodyj
hwithjfont-seriesjboldjcolor jredjbodyiii
Since the body of the macro is now a block, your tag very-important will automatically
become a block environment too. In the future, the drd-props primitive will give you even
more control over which tags and arguments are inline and which ones are block.
Another important property of tags is whether they contain normal textual content or
tabular content. For instance, consider the denition of the standard eqnarray* tag (with
a bit of presentation markup suppressed):
hassignjeqnarray* j
hmacrojbodyj
hwithjpar-modejcenterjmodejmathjmath-displayjtruejpar-sepj0.45fnj
hsurroundjhno-page-break*ihvspace*j0.5fnijhvspacej0.5fnihno-indent*ij
htformatj
htwithjtable-hyphenjyij
htwithjtable-widthj1parij
htwithjtable-min-colsj3ij
htwithjtable-max-colsj3ij
hcwithj1j-1j1j1jcell-hpartj1ij
hcwithj1j-1j-1j-1jcell-hpartj1ij
bodyiiiii
The use of surround indicates that eqnarray* is a block environment and the use of tformat
species that it is also a tabular environment. Moreover, the twith and cwith are used
to specify further formatting information: since we are a block environment, we enable
hyphenation and let the table span over the whole paragraph (unused space being equally
distributed over the rst and last columns). Furthermore, we have specied that the table
contains exactly three columns.
Finally, it is important to bear in mind that style-sheets do not merely specify the nal
presentation of a document, but that they may also contain information for the authoring
phase. Above, we have already mentioned the use of the right-ush tag in order to improve
the rendering of visual border hints. Similarly, visual hints on invisible arguments may
be given in the form of ags:

11.3 The style-sheet language

87

hassignjlabeled-theoremj
hmacrojidjbodyj
hsurroundj
hconcatj
hno-indentij
hagjId: idjbluejidij
hwithjfont-seriesjboldjTheorem. iij
hright-ushij
bodyiii
More generally, the specic tag with rst argument screen may be used to display visual
hints, which are removed when printing the document.

11.3.4. Evaluation control
The Source!Evaluation menu contains several primitives to control the way expressions in
the style-sheet language are evaluated. The most frequent use of these primitives is when
you want to write a meta-macro like new-theorem which is used for dening or computing
on other macros. For instance:
hassignjnew-theoremj
hmacrojnamejtextj
hquasij
hassignjhunquote jnameij
hmacrojbodyj
hsurroundjhno-indentihstrongjhunquotejtexti. ijhright-ushij
bodyiiiiii
When calling hnew-theoremjtheoremjTheoremi in this example, we rst evaluate all unquote
instructions inside the quasi primitive, which yields the expression
hassignjtheoremj
hmacrojbodyj
hsurroundjhno-indentihstrongjTheorem. ijhright-ushij
bodyiii
Next, this expression is evaluated, thereby dening a macro theorem.
It should be noticed that the TEXMACS conventions for evaluation are slightly dierent
then those from conventional functional languages like Scheme. The subtle dierences are
motivated by our objective to make it as easy as possible for the user to write macros for
typesetting purposes.
For instance, when TEXMACS calls a macro hmacrojx1 jjxnjbodyi with arguments y1 until
yn, the argument variables x1 until xn are bound to the unevaluated expressions y1 until
yn, and the body is evaluated with these bindings. The evaluation of yi takes place each
time we request for the argument xi . In particular, when applying the macro hmacro jx jx
and again x i to an expression y, the expression y is evaluated twice.

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Writing TEXMACS style files

In Scheme, the bodies of Scheme macros are evaluated twice, whereas the arguments of
functions are evaluated. On the other hand, when retrieving a variable (whether it is an
argument or an environment variable), the value is not evaluated. Consequently, a TEXMACS
macro
hassignjfoojhmacrojx jhblahjx jx iii
would correspond to a Scheme macro
(define-macro (foo x)
`(let ((x (lambda () ,x)))
(blah (x) (x)))
Conversely, the Scheme macro and function
(define-macro (foo x) (blah x x))
(define (fun x) (blah x x))
admit the following analogues in TEXMACS:
hassignjfoojhmacrojx jhevaljhblahjhquote-argjx ijhquote-argjx iiiii

hassignjfunjhmacrojx jhwithjx* jx jhblahjhquote-valuejx* ijhquote-valuejx* iiiii
Here the primitives quote-arg and quote-value are used to retrieve the value of an argument
resp. an environment variable. The TEXMACS primitives eval, quote, quasiquote and unquote
behave in the same way as their Scheme analogues. The quasi primitive is a shortcut for
quasi-quotation followed by evaluation.

11.3.5. Flow control
Besides sequences of instructions, which can be achieved using the concat primitive, and
the mechanism of macro expansion, the TEXMACS style-sheet language provides a few other
primitive for aecting the control ow: if, case, while and for-each. These primitives are
available from the Source!Flow control menu. However, we have to warn the user that
the conditional constructs are quite fragile: they only apply to inline content and the
accessibility of macro arguments should not to much depend on the conditions.
The most important primitive if, which can be entered using ⌘⌃? , allows for basic conditional typesetting:
hassignjappendix j
hmacrojtitlejbodyj
hcompoundj
hif jhlong-document ijchapter-appendix jsection-appendix ij
titlej
bodyiii
In this example, appendix is a block environment consisting of a title and a body, and which
is rendered as a chapter for long documents and as a section for short ones. Notice that
the following implementation would have been incorrect, since the if primitive currently
only works for inline content:

11.4 Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles

89

hassignjappendix j
hmacrojtitlejbodyj
hifj
hlong-documentij
hchapter-appendixjtitlejbodyij
hsection-appendixjtitlejbodyiiii
The if primitive may also be used in order to implement optional arguments:
hassignjheyj
hmacrojrstjsecondj
hifj
hequaljsecondj?ij
Hey rst, you look lonely today...j
Hey rst and second, you form a nice couple!iii
However, TEXMACS is not clever enough to detect which arguments are optional and which
arguments are accessible (i.e. which arguments can be edited by the user). Therefore, you
will have to manually give this information using the drd-props primitive. The case, while
and for-each primitives are explained in more detail in the corresponding section on the
TEXMACS primitives.

11.3.6. Computational markup
In the menus Source!Arithmetic, Source!Text, Source!Tuple and Source!Condition you
will nd dierent primitives for computing with integers, strings, tuples and boolean values.
For instance, in the following code, the new-important tag denes a new important tag as
well as a variant in red:
hassignjnew-importantj
hmacrojnamej
hquasij
hconcatj
hassignj
hunquote jnameij
hmacrojx jhwithjfont-seriesjboldjx iiij
hassignj
hunquote jhmerge jnamej-rediij
hmacrojx jhwithjfont-seriesjboldjcolor jredjx iiiiiii
Here we use the merge primitive in order to concatenate two strings. The dierent computational primitives are described in more detail in the corresponding section on the TEXMACS
primitives.

11.4. Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles
Whenever the standard TEXMACS style les are inadequate for a given purpose, it is possible
to write your own style les. However, designing your own style les from scratch may be
a complex task, so it is usually preferable to customize the existing styles. This requires
some understanding of the global architecture of the standard style les and a more precise
understanding of the parts you wish to customize. In this section, we will explain the
general principles. For more details, we refer to the chapter on the principal TEXMACS tags.

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Writing TEXMACS style files

11.4.1. Organization of style les and packages
Each standard TEXMACS style le or package is based on a potentially nite number of
subpackages. From an abstract point of view, this organization may be represented by a
labeled tree. For instance, the tree which corresponds to the article style is represented
below:
article
std

env

title-base

header-article section-article

std-markup
env-base title-generic
std-symbol
env-math
std-math
env-theorem
std-list
env-float
std-utils
std-counter
std-automatic
list
session

section-base

Figure 11.5. The tree with the packages from which the article style has been built up. In
order to save space, we have regrouped the numerous children of std and env in vertical lists.

Most of the style packages correspond to a d.t.d. (data type denition) which contains the
abstract interface of the package, i.e. the exported tags. For instance, the package stdmarkup corresponds to the d.t.d. std-markup. Sometimes however, several style packages
match the same d.t.d.. For instance, both header-article and header-book match the
d.t.d. header, since they merely implement dierent ways to render the same tags.
When building your own style les or packages, you may use the use-package primitive in
order to include other packages. For instance, the article style essentially consists of the
line
huse-packagejstdjenvjtitle-genericjheader-articlejsection-articlei
More precisely, the use-package package sequentially includes the style packages corresponding to its arguments. The packages should be in $TEXMACS_PACKAGE_PATH, which
contains ., ~/.TeXmacs/packages and $TEXMACS_PATH/packages by default. Furthermore
rendering information for the source code like style-with tags are discarded before evaluation
of the les.
Remark 11.1. We strongly recommend the user to take a look at some of the standard
style les and packages which can be found in
$TEXMACS_PATH/styles
$TEXMACS_PATH/packages
When loading using ⌃X ⌃F , these paths are in the standard load path. For instance, if you
want to take a look at the std-markup package, then it suces to type ⌃X ⌃F , followed by
the le name std-markup.ts and ↩ .

11.4 Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles

91

Remark 11.2. It is also possible to customize the presentation of the source code of the
style les and packages themselves, by using other packages in addition to source or by
using another major style le based on source. In that case, the extra markup provided
by such packages may be used for presentation purposes of the source code, but it is not
exported when using your package in another le.

11.4.2. General principles for customization
Style les and packages basically enrich the current typesetting environment with a combination of


Environment variables.



Tags for the end-user.



Customizable macros.

Furthermore, they may dene some tags for intern implementation purposes, which will
not be documented in this manual. They may also specify some logical properties of tags
using the drd-props primitive.
Environment variables are almost always attributes for controlling the rendering of content,
or counters for sections, equations, etc.. Although several simple tags for the end-user
like strong may be redened in your own style les, this practice is not recommended for
more complex tags like section. Indeed, the section tag involves many things like resetting
subcounters, entering the title into the table of contents and so on. Therefore, special
additional macros are provided the customization of such tags, like section-title, sectionclean and section-toc.

11.4.3. Customizing the general layout
The general layout of a document is mainly modied by setting the appropriate environment variables for page layout and paragraph layout. For instance, by including the
following lines in your style le, you can set the page size to letter and the left and right
margins to 2in:
hassignjpage-typejletteri
hassignjpage-oddj2ini
hassignjpage-evenj2ini
hassignjpage-rightj2ini
It should be noticed that the environment variables for page layout are quite dierent in
TEXMACS and TEX/LATEX. In order to make it easier to adapt LATEX style les to TEXMACS,
we have therefore provided the std-latex package, which emulates the environment variables from TEX/LATEX. Typically, this allows you determine the global layout by lines like
hassignjtex-odd-side-marginjhmacroj20ptii
hassignjtex-even-side-marginjhmacroj20ptii
hassignjtex-text-widthjhmacroj33pcii

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Writing TEXMACS style files

We notice that macros which return lengths are considered as lengths themselves. In the
case of the TEX/LATEX emulation package, we actually require all lengths to be macros.
The page headers and footers are usually not determined by global environment variables
or macros, since they may change when a new chapter or section is started. Instead,
TEXMACS provides the call-back macros header-title, header-author, header-primary and headersecondary. These macros are called when the document title or author are specied or when
a new primary or secondary section is started (primary sections are typically chapters in
books, or sections in articles). For instance, the following redenition makes the principal
section name appear on even pages, together with the current page number and a wide
underline.
hassignjheader-primaryj
hmacrojtitlejnr jtypej
hassignjpage-even-header j
hquasiquotej
hwide-std-underlinedj
hconcatj
hpage-the-pageij
hhtabj5mmij
hunquotejtitleiiiiiii

11.4.4. Customizing list environments
Lists are made up of two principal ingredients: the outer list environment and the inner
items. List environments may either be customized by customizing or redening the rendering macros for these environments, or dening additional list environments which match
the same abstract interface.
The rendering of the outer list environment is controlled by the render-list macro which
takes the body of the list as its argument. For instance, consider the following redenition
of render-list:
hassignjrender-listj
hmacrojbodyj
hsurroundj
hno-page-break*ihvspace*j0.5fnij
hright-ushihvspacej0.5fnihno-indent*ij
hwithjpar-leftjhplusjpar-leftj3fnijpar-rightjhplusjpar-rightj3fnijbodyiiii
This redenition aects the rendering of all list environments (itemize, enumerate, etc.) by
reducing the right margin with a length of 3fn:


This text, which has been made so long that it does not t on a single line,
is indented on the right hand side by 3fn.
1. This text is indented by an additional 3fn on the right hand
side, since it occurs inside a second list environment.



Once again: this text, which has been made so long that it does not t on a
single line, is indented on the right hand side by 3fn.

11.4 Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles

93

In a similar way, you may customize the rendering of list items by redening the macros
aligned-item and compact-item. These macros both take one argument with the text of the
item and render it either in a right-aligned way (such that subsequent text is left aligned)
or in a left-aligned way (such that subsequent text may not be aligned). For instance,
consider the following redenition of aligned-item:
hassignjaligned-itemj
hmacrojx j
hconcatj
hvspace*j0.5fnij
hwithjpar-rstj-3fnjhyes-indentiij
hresizejhwithjcolor jredjx ijhminusj1rj2.5fnijjhplusj1rj0.5fnijiiii
Then items inside all list environments with compact items will appear in red:


This list and aligned descriptions have red items.
C1. First condition.
C2. Second condition.



The items of compact description lists are rendered using compact-item.
Gnus and gnats. Nice beasts.
Micros and softies. Evil beings.

Remark 11.3. The macros aligned-item and compact-item are required to produce inline
content, so that they may be used in order to surround blocks. In particular, several other
internal macros (aligned-space-item, long-compact-strong-dot-item, etc.) are based on aligneditem and compact-item, and used for the rendering of the dierent types of lists (itemizearrow, description-long, etc.). In the future, we also plan to extend item and item* with a
compulsory body argument. When customizing the list environments, it is important to
keep that in mind, so as to make your style-sheets upward compatible.
The std-list d.t.d. also provides a macro new-list to dene new lists. Its syntax is hnew-listj
namejitem-render jitem-transformi, where name is the name of the new list environment,
item-render an (inline) macro for rendering the item and item-transform an additional
transformation which is applied on the item text. For instance, the enumerate-roman environment is dened by
hnew-listjenumerate-romanjaligned-dot-itemjhmacrojx jhnumberjx jromaniii

11.4.5. Customizing numbered textual environments
TEXMACS provides three standard types of numbered textual environments: theorem-like
environments, remark-like environments and exercise-like environments. The following
aspects of these environments can be easily customized:


Adding new environments.

94

Writing TEXMACS style files



Modifying the rendering of the environments.



Numbering the theorems in a dierent way.

Dening new environments.
First of all, new environments can be added using the meta-macros new-theorem, new-remark
and new-exercise. These environments take two arguments: the name of the environment
and the name which is used for its rendering. For instance, you may wish to dene the
environment experiment by
hnew-theoremjexperimentjExperimenti
When available in the TEXMACS dictionaries, the text Experiment will be automatically
translated when your document is written in a foreign language. In the section about how
to dene new environments, it is also explained how to dene other numbered textual
environments (besides theorems, remarks and exercises).
Customization of the rendering.
The principal rendering of the environments can be customized by redening the rendertheorem, render-remark and render-exercise macros. These macros take the name of the
environment (like Theorem 1.2) and its body as arguments. For instance, if you want
theorems to appear in a slightly indented way, with a slanted body, then you may redene
render-theorem as follows:
hassignjrender-theoremj
hmacrojwhichjbodyj
hpadded-normalj1fnj1fnj
hsurroundjhtheorem-namejwhichhtheorem-sepiijj
hwithjfont-shapejslantedjpar-leftjhplusjpar-leftj1.5fnijbodyiiiii
This redenition produces the following eect:
Theorem 11.4. This is a theorem which has been typeset in a slanted font.
By default, the theorems are rendered as remarks with the only dierence that their bodies
are typeset in an italic font. Hence, redening the render-remark macro will also aect the
rendering of theorems. The default render-proof macro is also based on render-remark.
Instead of redening the entire rendering, the user might just wish to customize the way
names of theorems are rendered or redene the separator between the name and the body.
As the user may have noticed by examining the above redenition of render-theorem, these
aspects are controlled by the macros theorem-name and theorem-sep. For instance, consider
the following redenitions:
hassignjtheorem-namejhmacrojnamejhwithjcolor jdark redjfont-seriesjboldjnameiii
hassignjtheorem-sepjhmacroj: ii
Then theorem-like environments will be rendered as follows:

11.4 Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles

95

Proposition 11.5: This proposition is rendered in is a fancy way.
Customization of the numbering.
In the sections about counters and counter groups, it is explained how to customize the
counters of numbered environments for particular purposes. For instance, by redening
inc-theorem, you may force theorems to reset the counter of corollaries:
hquasij
hassignj
inc-theoremj
hmacrojhcompoundjhunquote jinc-theoremiihreset-corollaryiiii
Notice the trick with quasi and unquote in order to take into account additional action
which might have been undertaken by the previous value of the macro inc-theorem.
The following code from number-long-article.ts is used in order to prex all standard
environments with the number of the current section:
hassignjsection-cleanjhmacrojhreset-subsectionihreset-std-enviii
hassignjdisplay-std-env jhmacrojnr jhsection-prexinr ii

11.4.6. Customizing sectional tags
By default, TEXMACS provides the standard sectional tags from LATEX part, chapter, section, subsection, subsubsection, paragraph, subparagraph, as well as the special tag appendix.
TEXMACS also implements the unnumbered variants part*, chapter*, etc. and special sectionlike tags bibliography, table-of-contents, the-index, the-glossary, list-of-gures, list-of-tables.
Remark 11.6. Currently, the sectional tags take one argument, the section title, but a
second argument with the body of the section is planned to be inserted in the future (see
the experimental structured-section package). For this reason (among others), style les
should never redene the main sectional tags, but rather customize special macros which
have been provided to this eect.
From a global point of view, an important predicate macro is sectional-short-style. When it
evaluates to true, then appendices, tables of contents, etc. are considered to be at the same
level as sections. In the contrary case, they are at the same level as chapters. Typically,
articles use the short sectional style whereas book use the long style.
The rendering of a sectional tag x is controlled through the macros x-sep, x-title and xnumbered-title. The x-sep macro prints the separator between the section number and the
section title. It defaults to the macro sectional-sep, which defaults in its turn to a wide
space. For instance, after redening
hassignjsectional-sepjhmacroj  ii
sectional titles would typically look like

11.1  Hairy GNUs

96

Writing TEXMACS style files

The x-title and x-numbered-title macros respectively specify how to render unnumbered and
numbered section titles. Usually, the user only needs to modify x-title, since x-numberedtitle is based on x-title. However, if the numbers have to be rendered in a particular way,
then it may be necessary to redene x-numbered-title. For instance, consider the redenition
hassignjsubsection-numbered-titlej
hmacrojnamej
hsectional-normalj
hwithjfont-seriesjboldjhthe-subsectioni. inameiii
This has the following eect on the rendering of subsection titles:
2.3. Very hairy GNUs
Notice that the section-base package provides several useful helper macros like sectionalnormal.
Remark 11.7. Sectional titles can either be rendered in a short or in the long fashion.
By default, paragraphs and subparagraphs use the short rendering, for which the body
starts immediately at the right of the title:
My paragraph. Blah, blah, and more blahs...
All other sectional tags use the long rendering, in which case the section title takes a
separate line on its own:

My section
Blah, blah, and more blahs...
We do not recommend to modify the standard settings (i.e. to render paragraphs in a
long way or sections in a short way). If you really want to do so, then we recommend to
redene the corresponding environment variables enrich-x-long. This will ensure upward
compatibility when sectional tags will take an additional argument (see remark 11.6).
Besides their rendering, several other aspects of sectional tags can be customized:


The call-back macro x-clean can be used for cleaning some counters when a new
section is started. For instance, in order to prex all standard environments by the
section counter, you may use the following lines:
hassignjsection-cleanjhmacrojhreset-subsectionihreset-std-enviii
hassignjdisplay-std-env jhmacrojnr jhsection-prexinr ii



The call-back macro x-header should be used in order to modify page headers and
footers when a new section is started. Typically, this macro should call headerprimary, or header-secondary, or do nothing.



The call-back macro x-toc should be used in order to customize the way new sections
appear in the table of contents.

11.4 Customizing the standard TEXMACS styles

97

11.4.7. Customizing the treatment of title information
TEXMACS uses the doc-data tag in order to specify global data for the document. These data
are treated in two stages by the doc-data macro. First, the document data are separated
into several categories, according to whether the data should be rendered as a part of the
main title or in footnotes or the abstract. Secondly, the data in each category are rendered
using suitable macros.
Each child of the doc-data is a tag with some specic information about the document.
Currently implemented tags are doc-title, doc-subtitle, doc-author, doc-date, doc-runningtitle, doc-running-author, doc-keywords, doc-msc and doc-note. The doc-author tag may occur
several times. The author-data tag is used in order to specify structured data for each of
the authors of the document. Each child of the author-data tag is a tag with information
about the corresponding author. Currently implemented tags with author information are
author-name, author-aliation, author-email, author-homepage and author-note.
Most of the tags listed above also correspond to macros for rendering the corresponding
information as part of the main title. For instance, if the date should appear in bold italic
at a distance of at least 1fn from the other title elds, then you may redene doc-date as
hassignjdoc-datej
hmacrojbodyj
hconcatj
hvspace*j1fnij
hdoc-title-blockjhwithjfont-shapejitalicjfont-seriesjboldjbodyiij
hvspacej1fniiii
The title-block macro is used in order to make the text span appropriately over the width
of the title. The doc-title and author-name are special in the sense that they also render
possible references to footnotes. For this reason, you should rather customize the doc-rendertitle and author-render-name macros in order to customize the rendering of the title and the
name themselves.
Notice also that the doc-running-title and author-running-author macros do not render anything, but rather call the header-title and header-author call-backs for setting the appropriate
global page headers and footers. By default, the running title and author are extracted
from the usual title and author names.
In addition to the rendering macros which are present in the document, the main title
(including author information, the date, etc.) is rendered using the doc-make-title macro.
The author information, as part of the main title, is rendered using render-doc-author or
render-doc-authors, depending on whether the document has one or more authors. Footnotes
to the title or to one of the authors are rendered using doc-title-note resp. doc-author-note.
These footnote macros always expect a document tag on input, because they may compress
it into a horizontal concatenation.
The rst stage of processing the document data is more complex and the reader is invited
to take a look at the short descriptions of the macros which are involved in this process.
It is also good to study the denitions of these macros in the package itself. In order to
indicate the way things work, we nish with an example on how the email address and
homepage of an author can be rendered in a footnote instead of the main title:

98

Writing TEXMACS style files

hassignjdoc-author-mainj
hmacrojdataj
hquasij
hunquote*jhselectjhquote-argjdataijauthor-nameii
hunquote*jhselectjhquote-argjdataijauthor-aliationiiiii
hassignjdoc-author-data-notej
hxmacrojdataj
hquasij
hunquote*jhselectjhquote-argjdataijauthor-emailii
hunquote*jhselectjhquote-argjdataijauthor-homepageii
hunquote*jhselectjhquote-argjdataijauthor-notejdocumentjhpat-anyiiiiii

11.5. Further notes and tips
11.5.1. Customizing arbitrary tags
Imagine that you want to change the rendering of a given tag, like lemma. As a general
rule, TEXMACS provides a set of well-chosen macros which can be customized by the user so
as to obtain the desired eect. For instance, as we have seen above, you should use modify
one of the macros render-theorem, theorem-name or theorem-sep in order to customize the
rendering of lemma and all other theorem-like environments.
However, in some cases, it may not be clear which well-chosen macro to customize. If
we just wanted to change the presentation of lemmas and not of any other theorem-like
environments, then we clearly cannot modify render-theorem, theorem-name or theorem-sep.
In other cases, the user may not want to invest his time in completely understanding the
macro hierarchy of TEXMACS, and nd out about the existence of render-theorem, theoremname and theorem-sep.
So imagine that you want all lemmas to appear in red. One thing you can always do is
copy the original denition of lemmas in a safe place and redene the lemma macro on top
of the original denition:
hassignjorig-lemmajlemmai
hassignjlemmajhmacrojbodyjhwithjcolor jredjhorig-lemmajbodyiiii
Alternatively, if only the text inside the lemma should be rendered in red, then you may do:
hassignjorig-lemmajlemmai
hassignjlemmajhmacrojbodyjhorig-lemmajhwithjcolor jredjbodyiiii
Of course, you have to be careful that the name orig-lemma is not already in use.
Another frequent situation is that you only want to modify the rendering of a tag when it
is used inside another one. On the web, the Cascading Style Sheet language (CSS) provides
a mechanism for doing this. In TEXMACS, you may simulate this behaviour by redening
macros inside a with. For instance, imagine that we want the inter-paragraph space inside
lists inside theorem-like environments to vanish. Then we may use:

11.5 Further notes and tips

99

hassignjorig-render-theoremjrender-theoremi
hassignjrender-theoremj
hmacrojnamejbodyj
hwithjorig-render-listjrender-listj
hwithjrender-listjhmacrojx jhorig-render-listjx iij
horig-render-theoremj
namej
bodyiiiii
On the one hand side, this mechanism is a bit more complex than CSS, where it suces
to respecify the par-par-sep attribute of lists inside theorems. On the other hand, it is also
more powerful, since the render-theorem macro applies to all theorem-like environments at
once. Furthermore, if the above mechanism is to be used frequently, then real hackers may
simplify the notations using further macro magic.

11.5.2. Standard utilities
In the package std-utils, the user may nd several useful additional macros for writing
style les. It mainly contains macros for


Writing block environments which span over the entire paragraph width. Notice that
the title-base package provides some additional macros for wide section titles.



Writing wide block environments which are underlined, overlined or in a frame box.



Recursive indentation.



Setting page headers and footers.



Localization of text.

It is good practice to use these standard macros whenever possible when writing style les.
Indeed, the low-level TEXMACS internals may be subject to minor changes. When building
upon standard macros with a clear intention, you increase the upward compatibility of
your style-sheets.

Chapter 12
Customizing TEXMACS
One major feature of TEXMACS is that it can be highly customized. First of all, the most
important aspects of the program can be congured in Edit!Preferences. Most other parts
of TEXMACS can be entirely adapted or reprogrammed using the Guile/Scheme extension
language. In the sequel, we give a short overview of how this works in simple cases.

12.1. Introduction to the Guile extension language
Like Emacs, TEXMACS comes with a Lisp-like extension language, namely the Guile
Scheme dialect from the GNU project. For documentation about Guile Scheme, we
refer to
http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/guile.html
Scheme has the advantage that it may be extended with extern C and C++ types and
routines. In our case, we have extended Scheme with routines which you can use to create
your own menus and key-combinations, and even to write your own extensions to TEXMACS.
If you have downloaded the source les of TEXMACS, then it may be interesting for you to
take a look at the les
Guile/Glue/build-glue-basic.scm
Guile/Glue/build-glue-editor.scm
Guile/Glue/build-glue-server.scm
These three glue les contain the C++ routines, which are visible within Scheme. In
what follows, we will discuss some of the most important routines. We plan to write a more
complete reference guide later. You may also take a look at the scheme .scm les in the
directory $TEXMACS_PATH/progs.

12.2. Writing your own initialization files
When starting up, TEXMACS executes the le
$TEXMACS_PATH/progs/init-texmacs.scm
as well as your personal initialization le
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/progs/my-init-texmacs.scm
if it exists. By default, the path $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH equals .TeXmacs. Similarly, each
time you create a new buer (either by creating a new le or opening an already existing
one), the le
$TEXMACS_PATH/progs/init-buffer.scm
is executed, as well as
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/progs/my-init-buffer.scm
101

102

Customizing TEXMACS

if it exists.
Example 12.1. Suppose you want to add a style package CustomStyle.ts of your own to
every new document you create. You can add the following lines to $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/
progs/my-init-buffer.scm:
(when (buffer-newly-created? (current-buffer))
(set-style-list (append (get-style-list) '("CustomStyle")))
(buffer-pretend-saved (current-buffer)))
First we check whether the current-buffer has been newly created in order not to apply
the style to existing les when we open them. Then we add the new package (instead of
changing it with init-style) using set-style-list and nally we call buffer-pretendsaved to prevent TEXMACS from thinking the buer has been modied by the change of
style, or it would always prompt asking for conrmation before closing an empty buer.

12.3. Creating your own dynamic menus
You may dene a menu with name name either using
(menu-bind name . def)
or
(tm-menu (name) . def)
Here def is a program which represents the entries of the menu. In particular, you may
take a look at the les in the directory
$TEXMACS_PATH/progs/menu
in order to see how the standard TEXMACS menus are dened. In the case of tm-menu, it is
possible to specify additional arguments, which makes it possible to dynamically construct
more complex menus which depend on parameters.
More precisely, the program def in menu-bind or tm-menu is a list of entries of one of the
following forms:
(=> "pulldown menu name" menu-definition)
(-> "pullright menu name" menu-definition)
("entry" action)
--(if condition menu-definition)
(when condition menu-definition)
(link variable)
(former)
The constructors => and -> are used to create pulldown or pullright menus and menudefinition should contain a program which creates the submenu. In the main (or system)
menu bar all root items are pulldown menus and all submenus of these are pullright. Both
pulldown and pullright may be used in toolbars or other widgets.

12.4 Creating your own keyboard shortcuts

103

The constructor ("entry" action) creates an ordinary entry, where action will be compiled and executed when you click on entry. Items of a menu may be separated using --. The constructor if is used for inserting menu items only if a certain condition is
satised (for instance, if we are in math mode), whereas while always inserts the item but
deactivates (e.g. greying it out) it condition is not met.
If you declared a menu name, then you may use this menu indirectly using the link
constructor, thus one may link any such indirect submenu to as many menus as desired.
Finally, new items may be added to any given menu a posteriori using former, as in the
following example:
(tm-menu (tools-menu)
(former)
--("New item" (noop)))
The main TEXMACS menus are:


texmacs-menu: contains the root entries of the main menu bar at the top of the
window (or desktop under MacOS). It uses link to display file-menu, edit-menu,
insert-menu, text-menu, paragraph-menu, document-menu and help-menu among
others.



texmacs-main-icons: contains the main toolbar, which typically features buttons
to open and save les, copy and paste text, etc.



texmacs-mode-icons: contains the icons which depend on the current editing mode,
that is: mathematics, text, code, etc.



texmacs-focus-icons: these icons change with the cursor. One should install here
any icons that are specic to a particular tag or context.



texmacs-extra-icons: custom icons for user extensions.



texmacs-popup-menu: the menu which pops up when the user right-clicks on a
TEXMACS document. Extending or replacing this menu is useful for instance for
plugin writers: you may want to display some extra actions while removing others
when the user in inside a session for your plugin.

12.4. Creating your own keyboard shortcuts
Keymaps are specied using the command
(kbd-map . keymaps)
Optionally, you may specify conditions which must be satised for the keymap to be valid
using the :mode option. For instance, the command
(kbd-map (:mode in-math?) . keymaps)

104

Customizing TEXMACS

species a list of keyboard shortcuts which will only be valid in math-mode. Each item in
keymaps is of one of the following forms:
(key-combination action_1 ... action_n)
(key-combination result)
(key-combination result help-message)
In the rst case, the action_i are Scheme commands associated to the string keycombination. In the second and third case, result is a string which is to be inserted in
the text when the key-combination has been completed. An optional help-message may
be displayed when the key-combination is nished.

12.5. Other interesting files
Some other les may also be worth looking at:


$TEXMACS_PATH/fonts/enc contains encodings for dierent TEX fonts.



$TEXMACS_PATH/fonts/virtual contains denitions of virtual characters.



$TEXMACS_PATH/langs/natural/dic contains the current dictionaries used by
TEXMACS.



$TEXMACS_PATH/langs/natural/hyphen contains hyphenation patterns for various
languages.



$TEXMACS_PATH/progs/fonts contains Scheme programs for setting up the fonts.

Chapter 13
The TEXMACS plug-in system
There are many ways in which TEXMACS can be customized or extended: users may dene
their own style les, customize the user interface, or write links with extern programs. The
plug-in system provides a universal mechanism to combine one or several such extensions
in a single package. Plug-ins are both easy to install by other users and easy to write and
maintain.

13.1. Installing and using a plug-in
From the user's point of view, a plug-in myplugin will usually be distributed on some website as a binary tarball with the name
myplugin-version-architecture .tar.gz
If you installed TEXMACS yourself in the directory $TEXMACS_PATH, then you should unpack
this tarball in the directory $TEXMACS_PATH/plugins, using
tar -zxvf myplugin -version -architecture.tar.gz
This will create a myplugin subdirectory in $TEXMACS_PATH/plugins. As soon as you
restart TEXMACS, the plug-in should be automatically recognized. Please read the documentation which comes with your plug-in in order to learn using it.
Remark 13.1. If you did not install TEXMACS yourself, or if you do not have write access to
$TEXMACS_PATH, then you may also unpack the tarball in $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins.
Here we recall that $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH defaults to $HOME/.TeXmacs. When starting
TEXMACS, your plug-in should again be automatically recognized.
Remark 13.2. If the plug-in is distributed as a source tarball like myplugin -versionsrc.tar.gz, then you should rst compile the source code before relaunching TEXMACS.
Depending on the plug-in (read the instructions), this is usually done using
cd myplugin ; make
or
cd myplugin ; ./configure; make
Remark 13.3. In order to upgrade a plug-in, just remove the old version in $TEXMACS_PATH/
plugins or $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins using

rm -rf myplugin
and reinstall as explained above.

13.2. Writing your own plug-ins
In order to write a plug-in myplugin , you should start by creating a directory
105

106

The TEXMACS plug-in system

$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins/myplugin
where to put all your les (recall that $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH defaults to $HOME/.TeXmacs).
In addition, you may create the following subdirectories (when needed):

b i n  For binary les.
d o c  For documentation (not yet supported).
l a n g s  For language related les, such as dictionaries (not yet supported).
l i b  For libraries.
p a c k a g e s  For style packages.
p r o g s  For Scheme programs.
s r c  For source les.
s t y l e s  For style les.
As a general rule, les which are present in these subdirectories will be automatically
recognized by TEXMACS at startup. For instance, if you provide a bin subdirectory, then
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins/myplugin /bin
will be automatically added to the PATH environment variable at startup. Notice that
the subdirectory structure of a plug-in is very similar to the subdirectory structure of
$TEXMACS_PATH.
Example 13.4. The easiest type of plug-in only consists of data les, such as a collection
of style les and packages. In order to create such a plug-in, it suces to create directories
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins/myplugin
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins/myplugin /styles
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins/myplugin /packages
and to put your style files and packages in the last two directories. After restarting TEXMACS,
your style les and packages will automatically appear in the Document!Style and Document!Use package menus.

For more complex plug-ins, such as plug-ins with additional Scheme or C++ code, one
usually has to provide a Scheme conguration le
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins/myplugin /progs/init-myplugin .scm
This conguration le should contain an instruction of the following form
(plugin-configure myplugin
configuration-options)
Here the configuration-options describe the principal actions which have to be undertaken at startup, including sanity checks for the plug-in. In the next sections, we will
describe some simple examples of plug-ins and their conguration. Many other examples
can be found in the directories

13.4 Example of a plug-in with C++ code

107

$TEXMACS_PATH/examples/plugins
$TEXMACS_PATH/plugins
Some of these are described in more detail in the chapter about writing new interfaces.

13.3. Example of a plug-in with Scheme code
The w o r l d plug-in.
Consider the world plug-in in the directory
$TEXMACS_PATH/examples/plugins
This plug-in shows how to extend TEXMACS with some additional Scheme code in the le
world/progs/init-world.scm
In order to test the world plug-in, you should recursively copy the directory
$TEXMACS_PATH/examples/plugins/world
to $TEXMACS_PATH/plugins or $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins. When relaunching TEXMACS,
the plug-in should now be automatically recognized (a World menu should appear in the
menu bar).

How it works.
The le init-world.scm essentially contains the following code:
(plugin-configure world
(:require #t))
(when (supports-world?)
(display* "Using world plug-in!\n"))
The conguration option :require species a condition which needs to be satised for the
plug-in to be detected by TEXMACS (later on, this will for instance allow us to check whether
certain programs exist on the system). The conguration is aborted if the requirement is
not fullled.
Assuming that the conguration succeeds, the supports-world? predicate will evaluate
to #t. In our example, the body of the when statement corresponds to some further initialization code, which just sends a message to the standard output that we are using our
plug-in. In general, this kind of initialization code should be very short and rather load a
module which takes care of the real initialization. Indeed, keeping the init-myplugin .scm
les simple will reduce the startup time of TEXMACS.

13.4. Example of a plug-in with C++ code
The m i n i m a l plug-in.
Consider the example of the minimal plug-in in the directory
$TEXMACS_PATH/examples/plugins
It consists of the following les:

108

The TEXMACS plug-in system

minimal/Makefile
minimal/progs/init-minimal.scm
minimal/src/minimal.cpp
In order to try the plug-in, you rst have to recursively copy the directory
$TEXMACS_PATH/examples/plugins/minimal
to $TEXMACS_PATH/progs or $TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/progs. Next, running the Makefile
using
make
will compile the program minimal.cpp and create a binary
minimal/bin/minimal.bin
When relaunching TEXMACS, the plug-in should now be automatically recognized.
How it works.
The minimal plug-in demonstrates a minimal interface between TEXMACS and an extern
program; the program minimal.cpp is explained in more detail in the chapter about writing
interfaces. The initialization le init-minimal.scm essentially contains the following code:
(plugin-configure minimal
(:require (url-exists-in-path? "minimal.bin"))
(:launch "minimal.bin")
(:session "Minimal"))
The :require option checks whether minimal.bin indeed exists in the path (so this will
fail if you forgot to run the Makefile). The :launch option species how to launch the
extern program. The :session option indicates that it will be possible to create sessions
for the minimal plug-in using Insert!Session!Minimal.

13.5. Summary of the configuration options for plugins
As explained before, the Scheme conguration le myplugin/progs/init-myplugin .scm
of a plug-in with name plugin should contain an instruction of the type
(plugin-configure myplugin
configuration-options)
Here follows a list of the available configuration-options :
(:winpath package-path inner-bin-path )  Specify where to search for the plugin under windows. The package-path is the usual place where the plug-in is
installed. The inner-bin-path is the place where to look for the binary executable
corresponding to the plug-in, relative to the package-path .
(:winpath package-path inner-bin-path )  Analogous to :winpath, but under
MacOS.

13.5 Summary of the configuration options for plug-ins

109

(:require condition )  This option species a sanity condition which needs to
be satised by the plug-in. Usually, it is checked that certain binaries or libraries
are present on your system. If the condition fails, then TEXMACS will continue as
whether your plug-in did not exist. In that case, further conguration is aborted.
The :require option usually occurs rst in the list of conguration options.
(:versions version-cmd)  This option species a Scheme expression versioncmd which evaluates to a list of available versions of the plug-in.
(:setup cmd )  This command is only executed when the version of the plug-in
changed from one execution of TEXMACS to another one. This occurs mainly when
installing new versions of TEXMACS or helper applications.
(:launch shell-cmd )  This option species that the plug-in is able to evaluate
expressions over a pipe, using a helper application which is launched using the shellcommand shell-cmd.
(:link lib-name export-struct options )  This option is similar to :launch,
except that the extern application is now linked dynamically. For more information, see the section about dynamic linking.
(:session menu-name )  This option indicates that the plug-in supports an evaluator for interactive shell sessions. An item menu-item will be inserted to the
Insert!Session menu in order to launch such sessions.
(:serializer ,fun-name)  If the plug-in can be used as an evaluator, then this
option species the Scheme function fun-name which is used in order to transform
TEXMACS trees to strings.
(:commander ,fun-name)  This command is similar to the :serializer option
except that it is used to transform special commands to strings.
(:tab-completion #t)  This command indicates that the plug-in supports tab-completion.
(:test-input-done #t)  This command indicates that the plug-in provides a routine for testing whether the input is complete.
It should be noticed that the conguration of the plug-in myplugin automatically creates
a few predicates:
supports-myplugin ?. Test whether the plug-in is fully operational (all requirements
are met).
in-myplugin ?. Test whether myplugin is the current programming language.
myplugin-scripts?. Test whether myplugin is the current scripting language.

Chapter 14
The TEXMACS format
14.1. TEXMACS trees
All TEXMACS documents or document fragments can be thought of as trees. For instance,
the tree
with

mode math

concat

x + y + frac + sqrt
1 2

y+z

typically represents the formula
x+y+

1 p
+ y+z
2

(14.1)

Internal nodes of TEXMACS trees.
Each of the internal nodes of a TEXMACS tree is a string symbol and each of the leafs is an
ordinary string. A string symbol is dierent from a usual string only from the eciency
point of view: TEXMACS represents each symbol by a unique number, so that it is extremely
fast to test weather two symbols are equal.
Leafs of TEXMACS trees.
Currently, all strings are represented using the universal TEXMACS encoding. This encoding
coincides with the Cork font encoding for all characters except < and >. Character
sequences starting with < and ending with > are interpreted as special extension characters. For example,  stands for the letter . The semantics of characters in the
universal TEXMACS encoding does not depend on the context (currently, cyrillic characters
are an exception, but this should change soon). In other words, the universal TEXMACS
encoding may be seen as an analogue of Unicode. In the future, we might actually switch
to Unicode.
The string leafs either contain ordinary text or special data. TEXMACS supports the following atomic data types:
Boolean numbers. Either true or false.
Integers. Sequences of digits which may be preceded by a minus sign.
Floating point numbers. Specied using the usual scientic notation.
Lengths. Floating point numbers followed by a length unit, like 29.7cm or 2fn.
111

112

The TEXMACS format

Serialization and preferred syntax for editing.
When storing a document as a le on your hard disk or when copying a document fragment
to the clipboard, TEXMACS trees have to be represented as strings. The conversion without
loss of information of abstract TEXMACS trees into strings is called serialization and the
inverse process parsing. TEXMACS provides three ways to serialize trees, which correspond
to the standard TEXMACS format, the XML format and the Scheme format.
However, it should be emphasized that the preferred syntax for modifying TEXMACS documents is the screen display inside the editor. If that seems surprising to you, consider that
a syntax is a way to represent information in a form suitable to understanding and modication. The on-screen typeset representation of a document, together with its interactive
behaviour, is a particularly concrete syntax. Moreover, in the Document!Source menu,
you may nd dierent ways to customize the way documents are viewed, such as dierent
levels of informative ags and a source tree mode for editing style les.

14.2. TEXMACS documents
Whereas TEXMACS document fragments can be general TEXMACS trees, TEXMACS documents
are trees of a special form which we will describe now. The root of a TEXMACS document is
necessarily a document tag. The children of this tag are necessarily of one of the following
forms:
hTeXmacsjversioni

This mandatory tag species the version of TEXMACS
ument.

(TEXMACS version)
which was used to save the doc-

hprojectjref i

(part of a project)

An optional project to which the document belongs.

hstylejversioni
hstylejhtuplejstylejpack-1 jjpack-nii

(style and packages)

An optional style and additional packages for the document.

hbodyjcontenti

(body of the document)

This mandatory tag species the body of your document.

hinitialjtablei

(initial environment)

Optional specication of the initial environment for the document, with information
about the page size, margins, etc.. The table is of the form hcollection j binding-1 j  j
binding-ni. Each binding-i is of the form hassociatejvar-ijval-ii and associates the initial
value val-i to the environment variable var-i. The initial values of environment variables
which do not occur in the table are determined by the style le and packages.

hreferencesjtablei

(references)

An optional list of all valid references to labels in the document. Even though this
information can be automatically recovered by the typesetter, this recovery requires
several passes. In order to make the behaviour of the editor more natural when loading
les, references are therefore stored along with the document.

14.3 Default serialization

113

The table is of a similar form as above. In this case a tuple is associated to each label.
This tuple is either of the form htuplejcontent jpage-nr i or htuplejcontent jpage-nr jlei.
The content corresponds to the displayed text when referring to the label, page-nr to
the corresponding page number, and the optional le to the le where the label was
dened (this is only used when the le is part of a project).
(auxiliary data attached to the le)

hauxiliaryjtablei

This optional tag species all auxiliary data attached to the document. Usually, such
auxiliary data can be recomputed automatically from the document, but such recomputations may be expensive and even require tools which are not necessarily installed on
your system. The table, which is specied in a similar way as above, associates auxiliary
content to a key. Standard keys include bib, toc, idx, gly, etc.

Example 14.1. An article with the simple text hello world! is represented as
document
TeXmacs

style

body

1.99.9

article

document

hello world!

14.3. Default serialization
Documents are generally written to disk using the standard TEXMACS syntax (which corresponds to the .tm and .ts le extensions). This syntax is designed to be unobtrusive
and easy to read, so the content of a document can be easily understood from a plain text
editor. For instance, the formula (14.1) is represented by
+>
On the other hand, TEXMACS syntax makes style les dicult to read and is not designed
to be hand-edited: whitespace has complex semantics and some internal structures are not
obviously presented. Do not edit documents (and especially style les) in the TEXMACS
syntax unless you know what you are doing.
Main serialization principle.
The TEXMACS format uses the special characters <, |, >, \ and / in order to serialize trees.
By default, a tree like
f
is serialized as

(14.2)

x1  xn


If one of the arguments x1; :::; xn is a multi-paragraph tree (which means in this context
that it contains a document tag or a collection tag), then an alternative long form is used
for the serialization. If f takes only multi-paragraph arguments, then the tree would be
serialized as

114

The TEXMACS format

<\f>
x1
<|f>
...
<|f>
xn

In general, arguments which are not multi-paragraph are serialized using the short form.
For instance, if n=5 and x3 and x5 are multi-paragraph, but not x1, x2 and x4, then (14.2)
is serialized as
<\f|x1|x2>
x3
<|f|x4>
x5

The escape sequences \, \|, \ and \ may be used to represent the characters
<, |, > and \. For instance, + is serialized as \+\.
Formatting and whitespace.
The document and concat primitives are serialized in a special way. The concat primitive is
serialized as usual concatenation. For instance, the text an important note is serialized as
an  note
The document tag is serialized by separating successive paragraphs by double newline
characters. For instance, the quotation
Ik ben de blauwbilgorgel.
Als ik niet wok of worgel,
is serialized as
<\quote-env>
Ik ben de blauwbilgorgel.
Als ik niet wok of worgel,

Notice that whitespace at the beginning and end of paragraphs is ignored. Inside paragraphs, any amount of whitespace is considered as a single space. Similarly, more than two
newline characters are equivalent to two newline characters. For instance, the quotation
might have been stored on disk as
<\quote-env>
Ik ben de

Als ik niet wok of


blauwbilgorgel.

worgel,

The space character may be explicitly represented through the escape sequence \ . Empty
paragraphs are represented using the escape sequence \;.

14.4 XML serialization

115

Raw data.
The raw-data primitive is used inside TEXMACS for the representation of binary data, like
image les included into the document. Such binary data is serialized as
<#binary-data >
where the binary-data is a string of hexadecimal numbers which represents a string of
bytes.

14.4. XML serialization
For compatibility reasons with the XML technology, TEXMACS also supports the serialization of TEXMACS documents in the XML format. However, the XML format is generally
more verbose and less readable than the default TEXMACS format. In order to save or load
a le in the XML format (using the .tmml extension), you may use File!Export!XML
resp. File!Import!XML.
It should be noticed that TEXMACS documents do not match a predened DTD, since the
appropriate DTD for a document depends on its style. The XML format therefore merely
provides an XML representation for TEXMACS trees. The syntax has both been designed to
be close to the tree structure and use conventional XML notations which are well supported
by standard tools.
The encoding for strings.
The leafs of TEXMACS trees are translated from the universal TEXMACS encoding into Unicode. Characters without Unicode equivalents are represented as entities (in the future,
we rather plan to create a tmsym tag for representing such characters).
XML representation of regular tags.
Trees with a single child are simply represented by the corresponding XML tag. In the
case when a tree has several children, then each child is enclosed into a tm-arg tag. For
p
instance, x + y is simply represented as
y+z
whereas the fraction

1
2

is represented as


1
2

In the above example, the whitespace is ignored. Whitespace may be preserved by setting
the standard xml:space attribute to preserve.
Special tags.
Some tags are represented in a special way in XML. The concat tag is simply represented
p
1
by a textual concatenation. For instance, 2 + x + y is represented as
< m-arg>
f
1
<
t
m-arg>
2

+
sy
< qrt> +z

116

The TEXMACS format

The document tag is not explicitly exported. Instead, each paragraph argument is enclosed
within a tm-par tag. For instance, the quotation
Ik ben de blauwbilgorgel.
Als ik niet wok of worgel,
is represented as


Ik ben de blauwbilgorgel.


Als ik niet wok of worgel,


A with tag with only string attributes and values is represented using the standard XML
attribute notation. For instance, some blue text would be represented as
some blue text
Conversely, TEXMACS provides the attr primitive in order to represent attributes of XML
tags. For instance, the XML fragment
some special text
would be imported as some hmy-tag j hattr j beast j hearyi j speciali text. This will make it
possible, in principle, to use TEXMACS as an editor of general XML les.

14.5. Scheme serialization
Users may write their own extensions to TEXMACS in the Scheme extension language. In
that context, TEXMACS trees are usually represented by Scheme expressions. The Scheme
syntax was designed to be predictable, easy to hand-edit, and expose the complete internal
structure of the document. For instance, the formula (14.1) is represented by
(with "mode" "math" (concat "x+y+" (frac "1" "2") "+" (sqrt "y+z")))
The Scheme representation may also be useful in order to represent complex macros with
a lot of programatic content. Finally, Scheme is the safest format when incorporating
TEXMACS snippets into emails. Indeed, both the standard TEXMACS format and the XML
serialization may be quite sensitive to white-space.
In order to save or load a document in Scheme format, you may use File!Export!Scheme
resp. File!Import!Scheme. Files saved in Scheme format can easily be processed by
external Scheme programs, in the same way as les saved in XML format can easily be
processed by tools for processing XML, like XSLT.
In order to copy a document fragment to an email in Scheme format, you may use Edit!
Copy to!Scheme. Similarly, you may paste external Scheme fragments into TEXMACS using
Edit!Paste from!Scheme. The Scheme format may also used interactively inside Scheme
sessions or interactive commands. For instance, typing ⌘X followed by the interactive
command

14.6 The typesetting process

117

(insert '(frac "1" "2"))
inserts the fraction

1
2

at the current cursor position.

14.6. The typesetting process
In order to understand the TEXMACS document format well, it is useful to have a basic
understanding about how documents are typeset by the editor. The typesetter mainly
rewrites logical TEXMACS trees into physical boxes, which can be displayed on the screen or
on paper (notice that boxes actually contain more information than is necessary for their
rendering, such as information about how to position the cursor inside the box or how to
make selections).
The global typesetting process can be subdivided into two major parts (which are currently
done at the same stage, but this may change in the future): evaluation of the TEXMACS tree
using the stylesheet language, and the actual typesetting.
The typesetting primitives are designed to be very fast and they are built-in into the editor.
For instance, one has typesetting primitives for horizontal concatenations (concat), page
breaks (page-break), mathematical fractions (frac), hyperlinks (hlink), and so on. The precise
rendering of many of the typesetting primitives may be customized through the built-in
environment variables. For instance, the environment variable color species the current
color of objects, par-left the current left margin of paragraphs, etc.
The stylesheet language allows the user to write new primitives (macros) on top of the
built-in primitives. It contains primitives for dening macros, conditional statements, computations, delayed execution, etc. The stylesheet language also provides a special extern tag
which oers you the full power of the Scheme extension language in order to write macros.
It should be noticed that user-dened macros have two aspects. On the one hand they
usually perform simple rewritings. For instance, the macro
hassignjseqjhmacrojvar jfromjtojvarfrom; :::; vartoii
is a shortcut in order to produce sequences like a1; :::; an. When macros perform simple
rewritings like in this example, the children var , from and to of the seq tag remain accessible
from within the editor. In other words, you can position the cursor inside them and modify
them. User dened macros also have a synthetic or computational aspect. For instance,
the dots of a seq tag as above cannot be edited by the user. Similarly, the macro
hassignjsquarejhmacrojx jhtimesjx jx iii
serves an exclusively computational purpose. As a general rule, synthetic macros are sometimes easier to write, but the more accessibility is preserved, the more natural it becomes
for the user to edit the markup.
It should be noticed that TEXMACS also produces some auxiliary data as a byproduct of
the typesetting product. For instance, the correct values of references and page numbers,
as well as tables of contents, indexes, etc. are determined during the typesetting stage and
memorized at a special place. Even though auxiliary data may be determined automatically
from the document, it may be expensive to do so (one typically has to retypeset the
document). When the auxiliary data are computed by an external plug-in, then it may
even be impossible to perform the recomputations on certain systems. For these reasons,
auxiliary data are carefully memorized and stored on disk when you save your work.

118

The TEXMACS format

14.7. Data relation descriptions
The rationale behind D.R.D.s.
One major advantage of TEXMACS is that the editor uses general trees as its data format.
Like for XML, this choice has the advantages of being simple to understand and making
documents easy to manipulate by generic tools. However, when using the editor for a
particular purpose, the data format usually needs to be restricted to a subset of the set of
all possible trees.
In XML, one uses Data Type Denitions (D.T.D.s) in order to formally specify a subset
of the generic XML format. Such a D.T.D. species when a given document is valid for a
particular purpose. For instance, one has D.T.D.s for documents on the web (XHTML),
for mathematics (MathML), for two-dimensional graphics (SVG) and so on. Moreover,
up to a certain extent, XML provides mechanisms for combining such D.T.D.s. Finally,
a precise description of a D.T.D. usually also provides some kind of reference manual for
documents of a certain type.
In TEXMACS, we have started to go one step further than D.T.D.s: besides being able to
decide whether a given document is valid or not, it is also very useful to formally describe
certain properties of the document. For instance, in an interactive editor, the numerator
of a fraction may typically be edited by the user (we say that it is accessible), whereas the
URL of a hyperlink is only editable on request. Similarly, certain primitives like itemize
correspond to block content, whereas other primitives like sqrt correspond to inline content.
Finally, certain groups of primitives, like chapter, section, subsection, etc. behave similarly
under certain operations, like conversions.
A Data Relation Description (D.R.D.) consists of a Data Type Denition, together with
additional logical properties of tags or document fragments. These logical properties are
stated using so called Horn clauses, which are also used in logical programming languages
such as Prolog. Contrary to logical programming languages, it should nevertheless be
relatively straightforward to determine the properties of tags or document fragments, so
that certain database techniques can be used for ecient implementations. At the moment,
we only started to implement this technology (and we are still using lots of C++ hacks
instead of what has been said above), so a more complete formal description of D.R.D.s
will only be given at a later stage.
One major advantage of the use of D.R.D.s is that it is not necessary to establish rigid
hierarchies of object classes like in object oriented programming. This is particularly useful
in our context, since properties like accessibility, inline-ness, etc. are quite independent one
from another. In fact, where D.T.D.s may be good enough for the description of passive
documents, more ne-grained properties are often useful when manipulating documents in
a more interactive way.
Current D.R.D. properties and applications.
Currently, the D.R.D. of a document contains the following information:


The possible arities of a tag.



The accessibility of a tag and its children.

In the near future, the following properties will be added:


Inline-ness of a tag and its children.

14.8 TEXMACS lengths

119



Tabular-ness of a tag and its children.



Purpose of a tag and its children.

The above information is used (among others) for the following applications:


Natural default behaviour when creating/deleting tags or children (automatic insertion of missing arguments and removal of tags with too little children).



Only traverse accessible nodes during searches, spell-checking, etc.



Automatic insertion of document or table tags when creating block or tabular environments.



Syntactic highlighting in source mode as a function of the purpose of tags and
arguments.

Determination of the D.R.D. of a document.
TEXMACS associate a unique D.R.D. to each document. This D.R.D. is determined in two
stages. First of all, TEXMACS tries to heuristically determine D.R.D. properties of userdened tags, or tags which are dened in style les. For instance, when the user denes a
tag like
hassignjhijhmacrojnamejHello name!ii
TEXMACS automatically notices that hi is a macro with one element, so it considers 1 to be
the only possible arity of the hi tag. Notice that the heuristic determination of the D.R.D.
is done interactively: when dening a macro inside your document, its properties will
automatically be put into the D.R.D. (assuming that you give TEXMACS a small amount
of free time of the order of a second; this minor delay is used to avoid compromising the
reactivity of the editor).
Sometimes the heuristically dened properties are inadequate. For this case, TEXMACS
provides the drd-props tag in order to manually override the default properties.

14.8. TEXMACS lengths
A simple TEXMACS length is a number followed by a length unit, like 1cm or 1.5mm. TEXMACS
supports three main types of units:
Absolute units. The length of an absolute unit like cm or pt on print is xed.
Context dependent units. Context-dependent length units depend on the current
font or other environment variables. For instance, 1ex corresponds to the height of
the x character in the current font and 1par correspond to the current paragraph
width.
User dened units. Any nullary macro, whose name contains only lower case roman
letters followed by -length, and which returns a length, can be used as a unit itself.
For instance, the following macro denes the dm length:
hassignjdm-lengthjhmacroj10cmii

120

The TEXMACS format

Furthermore, length units can be stretchable. A stretchable length is represented by a triple
of rigid lengths: a minimal length, a default length and a maximal length. When justifying
lines or pages, stretchable lengths are automatically sized so as to produce nicely looking
layout.
In the case of page breaking, the page-exibility environment provides additional control
over the stretchability of white space. When setting the page-exibility to 1, stretchable
spaces behave as usual. When setting the page-exibility to 0, stretchable spaces become
rigid. For other values, the behaviour is linear.
Absolute length units.

c m . One centimeter.

m m . One millimeter.
i n . One inch.
p t . The standard typographic point corresponds to 1/72.27 of an inch.
b p . A big point corresponds to 1/72 of an inch.
d d . The Didôt point equals 1/72 of a French inch, i.e. 0.376mm.
p c . One pica equals 12 points.
c c . One cicero equals 12 Didôt points.
Rigid font-dependent length units.

f s . The font size. When using a 12pt font, 1fs corresponds to 12pt.
f b s . The base font size. Typically, when selecting 10 as the font size for your document
and when typing large text, the base font size is 10pt and the font size 12pt.
l n . The width of a nicely looking fraction bar for the current font.
s e p . A typical separation between text and graphics for the current font, so as to keep
the text readable. For instance, the numerator in a fraction is shifted up by 1sep.
y f r a c . The height of the fraction bar for the current font (approximately 0.5ex).
e x . The height of the x character in the current font.
e m u n i t . The width of the M character in the current font.
Stretchable font-dependent length units.

f n . This is a stretchable variant of 1quad. The default length of 1fn is 1quad. When
stretched, 1fn may be reduced to 0.5fn and extended to 1.5fn.
f n s . This length defaults to zero, but it may be stretched up till 1fn.
b l s . The base line skip is the sum of 1quad and par-sep. It corresponds to the
distance between successive lines of normal text.

14.8 TEXMACS lengths

121

Typically, the baselines of successive lines are separated by a distance of 1fn (in
TEXMACS and LATEX a slightly larger space is used though so as to allow for subscripts and superscripts and avoid a too densely looking text. When stretched, 1fn
may be reduced to 0.5fn and extended to 1.5fn.

s p c . The (stretchable) width of space character in the current font.
x s p c . The additional (stretchable) width of a space character after a period.
Box lengths.
Box length units can only be used within some special markup elements, such as move, shift,
resize, clipped and image. The principal body of this content (e.g. the content being moved
in the case of move) is typeset as a box. The following lengths units then correspond to
the size and the extents of the box.

w . The width of the box.
h . The height of the box.
l . The logical left x-coordinate of the box.
r . The logical right x-coordinate of the box.
b . The logical bottom y-coordinate of the box.
t . The logical top y-coordinate of the box.
For instance, the code
hmovejHello therejjhplusj-0.5bj-0.5tii
can be used to center Hello there at the base-line.
Other length units.

p a r . The width of the paragraph. That is the length the text can span. It is aected
by paper size, margins, number of columns, column separation, cell width (if in a
table), etc.
p a g . The height of the main text in a page. In a similar way as par, this length unit
is aected by page size, margins, etc.
p x . One screen pixel, the meaning of this unit is aected by the shrinking factor.
t m p t . The smallest length unit for internal length calculations by TEXMACS. 1px
divided by the shrinking factor corresponds to 256tmpt.
Dierent ways to specify lengths.
There are three types of lengths in TEXMACS:
Simple lengths. A string consisting of a number followed by a length unit.
Abstract lengths. An abstract length is a macro which evaluates to a length. Such
lengths have the advantage that they may depend on the context.
Normalized lengths. All lengths are ultimately converted into a normalized length,
which is a tag of the form htmlenjl i (for rigid lengths) or htmlenjminjdef jmax i (for
stretchable lengths). The user may also use this tag in order to specify stretchable
lengths. For instance, htmlen j hminus j 1quad j 1pti j 1quad j 1.5quadi evaluates to a
length which is 1quad by default, at least 1quad-1pt and at most 1.5quad.

Chapter 15
Built-in environment variables

The way TEXMACS typesets documents is inuenced by so called environment variables.
The style-sheet language uses a so called environment (or context) to store both environment variables and macros. The environment variables are subdivided into two categories:
built-in variables and additional variables provided by style les. Built-in variables usually
aect the layout, while additional variables mostly serve computational purposes. In the
next sections of this chapter, we will describe all built-in environment variables.
A typical built-in environment variable is color . The value of an environment variable may
be changed permanently using assign and temporarily using the with primitive:
Some colored text.
Some hwithjcolor jdark redjcoloredi text.
Counters are typical environment variables dened in style-sheets.
1. A weirdly
4. numbered list...
henumeratej
hitemiA weirdly
hassignjitem-nr j3ihiteminumbered list...i
The typesetting language uses dynamic scoping of variables. That means that macros can
access and modify variables in their calling context. In the previous example, the enumerate
macro locally initializes item-nr to 0 (uses with) and the item macro increments it by one
and shows its value. Since enumerate locally redenes item-nr , the original value of itemnr is restored on exit.
Each document comes with an initial environment with the initial values of environment
values, i.e. their values just before we typeset the document. If an environment variable
does not occur in the initial environment, then its initial value defaults to its value after
typesetting the document style and possible additional packages. The initial environment
before typesetting the style les and packages is built-in into the editor.
Some variables, like header and footer variables, must be set inside the document, their
initial environment value is ignored. Generally, they should be set by header and sectioning
markup.
123

124

Built-in environment variables

15.1. General environment variables
mode := text

(major mode)

This very important environment variable determines the current mode. There are
four possible values: text (text mode), math (mathematical mode), prog (programming mode) and src (source mode). The behaviour of the editor (menus, keystrokes,
typesetting, etc.) depends heavily on the mode. For example, the following code may
be used in order to include a mathematical formula inside text:
The formula a2 + b2 = c2 is well known.
The formula hmathjahrsupj2i+bhrsupj2i=chrsupj2ii is well known.
Some other environment variables (mainly the language and the font) also depend on
the current mode (in this context, the source mode always behaves in a similar way as
the text mode). During copy&paste and search&replace operations, TEXMACS tries to
preserve the mode.
language := english
math-language := texmath
prog-language := scheme

(language)

A second major environment variable is the current language. In fact, there are three
such environment variables: one for each mode. The language in which content is
written is responsible for associating a precise semantics to the content. This semantics
is used for dierent purposes:


The language may specify rules for typesetting content. For instance, the text
language species punctuation and hyphenation rules. Similarly the mathematical language containns spacing information for mathematical operators.



Several editing operations depend on the current language: when performing
a search or replace operation, TEXMACS is both mode and language sensitive.
Similarly, the text language determines the dictionary to use when spell-checking
the document.



The language controls (among other parameters like the mode and the document
format) the way content is being converted from one context to another.
Currently, no real language-dependent conversions have been implemented yet.
But in the future one may imagine that copying a piece of English text to a
document written in French will perform an automatic translation. Similarly, a
mathematical document might be converted from inx to postx notation.



The programming language determines the current scripting language in use.
Other scripting languages than Scheme are currently only used for interactive
sessions, but primitives like extern might become language-sensitive in the future.

At the moment, the current language is mainly used as a hint for indicating the semantics of text: it is not required that a text written in English contains no spelling errors,
or that a formula written in a mathematical language is mathematically or even syntactically correct. Nevertheless, the editor is intended to enforce correctness more and
more, especially for mathematics.

15.1 General environment variables

125

The language may be specied globally for the whole document in Document!Language
and locally for a piece of text in Format!Language.
(name of programming session)

prog-session := default

This environment variables is used in addition to the prog-language variable in order
to determine a concrete implementation as well as a particular instance of the current
programming language. For instance, in case of the Maxima language, dierent implementation may be used fooor the underlying Lisp. Similarly, one may wish to run two
dierent instances of Maxima in parallel.
(magnication)

magnication := 1

This variable determines the magnication which is applied to all content. Magnications bigger than one are typically useful for presentations (from slides or from a
laptop):

normal

big

huge

normalhhtabj5mmihwithjmagnicationj2jbigihhtabj5mmihwithjmagnicationj3jhugei
The magnication should not be confused with the font size: contrary to the magnication, the font size may also aect the shapes of the glyphs. The magnication is
usually specied for the entire document in Document!Magnication.
bg-color := white

(background color)

The background color for your document, as specied in Document!Color!Background.
color := black

(foreground color)

The current foreground color of text and graphics, as specied in Document!Color!
Foreground or Format!Color. Named colors, like Salmon, are supported for dierent
color charts: dvips, x11 and html.
preamble := false

(edit source tree?)

This ag determines whether we are editing normal text or a style-sheet. The source
tree or preamble mode may be selected in Document!Source!Edit source tree.
info-ag := short

(informative ags style)

This variable controls the rendering of informative ags, which are for instance used to
indicate the locations of otherwise invisible labels or typesetting directives. The infoag may take the values none, short and detailed:
Label 1, Label 2, Label 3.
hwithjinfo-agjnonejLabel 1hlabeljflag-label-1ii, hwithjinfo-agjshortjLabel 2hlabelj
flag-label-2ii, hwithjinfo-agjdetailedjLabel 3hlabeljflag-label-3ii.
Usually, the rendering of informative ags is specied document-wide in Document!
Informative ags.

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Built-in environment variables

15.2. Specifying the current font
In this section, we describe the environment variables which control the rendering of fonts.
Font properties may be controlled globally for the whole document in Document!Font and
locally for document fragments in Format!Font.

From an abstract point of view, a font is dened to be a graphically consistent
way of
P
rendering strings. Fonts are usually made up from glyphs like x, ,  ,  , etc. When
rendering a string, the string is decomposed into glyphs so as to take into account ligatures
(like , , , , ). Next, the individual glyphs are positioned while taking into account
kerning information (in xo the o character is slightly shifted to the left so as to take
prot out of the hole in the x). In the case of mathematical fonts, TEXMACS also provides
a coherent rendering for resizable characters, like the large brackets in
¡


(()) :

Similarly, a font family is a family of fonts with dierent characteristics (like font weight,
slant, etc.), but with a globally consistent rendering. One also says that the fonts in a font
family mix well together. For instance, the standard computer modern roman font and
its bold and italic variants mix well together, but the computer modern roman font and
the Avant Garde font do not.
Remark 15.1. In versions of TEXMACS prior to 1.99.1, the fonts for the mathematical
and programming modes could be controlled independently using the environment variables math-font, math-font-family, math-font-series, math-font-shape, prog-font, prog-fontfamily, prog-font-series, prog-font-shape. In more recent versions of TEXMACS, the environment variables font, font-family, font-series and font-shape directly control the font for
all modes.
(font name)

font := roman

These variables control the main name of the font, also called the font family. For
instance:
Computer modern roman, Pandora, Chancery, Palatino
Similarly, TEXMACS supports various mathematical fonts:
Roman: a2 + b2 = c 2
Adobe: a 2 + b 2 = c 2
New roman: a2 + b2 = c2
Concrete: a2 b2 c2

+ =

Most fonts only implement a subset of all Unicode glyphs. Sometimes, the user might
wish to combine several fonts to cover a larger subset. For instance, when specifying
roman,IPAMincho or cjk=IPAMincho,roman as the font name, ordinary text and mathematics will be typeset using the default roman font, whereas Chinese text will use
the IPAMincho font. Similarly, when specifying math=Stix,roman as the font name,
ordinary text will be typeset using the default roman font, but mathematical formulas
using the Stix font.

15.2 Specifying the current font

127

(font variant)

font-family := rm

This variable selects a variant of the major font, like a sans serif font, a typewriter font,
and so on. As explained above, variants of a given font are designed to mix well together.
Physically speaking, many fonts do not come with all possible variants (sans serif,
typewriter, etc.), in which case TEXMACS tries to fall back on a suitable alternative font.
Typical variants for text fonts are rm (roman), tt (typewriter) and ss (sans serif):
roman, typewriter and sans serif
Sans serif formula: sin (x + y) = sin x cos y + cos x sin y
(font weight)

font-series := medium

The font series determines the weight of the font. Most fonts only provide regular and
bold font weights. Some fonts also provide light as a possible value.
medium, bold
(font shape)

font-shape := right

The font shape determines other characters of a font, like its slant, whether we use
small capitals, whether it is condensed, and so on. For instance,
upright, slanted, italic, left slanted, Small Capitals, proportional typewriter, bold
condensed, at sans serif, long
(font base size)

font-base-size := 10

The base font size is specied in pt units and is usually invariant throughout the
document. Usually, the base font size is 9pt, 10pt, 11pt or 12pt. Other font sizes are
usually obtained by changing the magnication or the relative font-size.
9pt, 10pt,

11pt, 12pt
(font size)

font-size := 1

The real font size is obtained by multiplying the font-base-size by the font-size multiplier. The following standard font sizes are available from Format!Size:
size
Small

multiplier size
0.59
Very small
0.84
Normal

Large

1.19

Huge

1.68

Tiny

Very large

Really huge

multiplier
0.71
1
1.41
2

Table 15.1. Standard font sizes.

From apmathematical point of view, the multipliers are in a geometric progression with
factor 4 2 . Notice that the font size is also aected by the index level.

128

Built-in environment variables

(fonts rendering quality)

dpi := 600

The rendering quality of raster fonts (also called Type 3 fonts), such as the fonts
generated by the Metafont program is controlled through its discretization precision
in dots per inch. Nowadays, most laser printers oer a printing quality of at least
600dpi, which is also the default dpi setting for TEXMACS. For really high quality
printing, professionals usually use a precision of 1200dpi. The dpi is usually set once
and for all for the whole document.

15.3. Typesetting mathematics
(index level)

math-level := 0

The index level increases inside certain mathematical constructs such as indices and
fractions. When the index level is high, formulas are rendered in a smaller font. Nevertheless, index levels higher than 2 are all rendered in the same way as index level 2;
this ensures that formulas like
ex

e
ee

1

=

1 + x + ex
1+

1
ex +

1
x
ee

remain readable. The index level may be manually changed in Format!Index level, so
as to produce formulas like
xy

z

xhrsupjhwithjmath-level j0jyhrsupjziii
(display style)

math-display := false

This environement variable controls whether we are in display style or not. Formulas
which occur on separate lines like
n
H( 1; :::;

n)

=

1
1

+  +

1
n

are usually typeset in display style, contrary to inline formulas like
1

n
H(

1; :::;

n)

=

1
1

+  +

. As you notice, formulas in display style are rendered using a wider spacing. The
display style is disabled in several mathematical constructs such as scripts, fractions,
binomial coecients, and so on. As a result, the double numerators in the formula
n

H(

1; :::;

n) = 1
1

n
+  +

1
n

are typeset in a smaller font. You may override the default settings using Format!
Display style.

15.4 Paragraph layout

129

(condensed display style)

math-condensed := false

By default, formulas like a +  + z are typeset using a nice, wide spacing around the
+ symbol. In formulas with scripts like ea++z + e ++ the readability is further
enhanced by using a more condensed spacing inside the scripts: this helps the reader
to distinguish symbols occurring in the scripts from symbols occurring at the ground
level when the scripts are long. The default behaviour can be overridden using Format!
Condensed.
(position in fractions)

math-vpos := 0

For a high quality typesetting of fraction, it is good to avoid subscripts in numerators to
descend to low and superscripts in denominators to ascend to high. TEXMACS therefore
provides an additional environment variable math-vpos which takes the value 1 inside
numerators, ¡1 inside denominators and 0 otherwise. In order to see the eect the
dierent settings, consider the following formula:
a2¡1 + a20 + a21
hwith j math-vpos j -1 j hrigid j a2¡1ii+hwith j math-vpos j 0 j hrigid j a20ii+hwith j math-vpos j 1 j
hrigidja21ii
In this example, the grouping is necessary in order to let the dierent vertical positions
take eect on each a2i . Indeed, the vertical position is uniform for each horizontal
concatenation.

15.4. Paragraph layout
(paragraph alignment)

par-mode := justify

This environment variable species the alignment of the dierent lines in a paragraph.
Possible values are left, center, right and justify:
This paragraph is aligned
to the left. This paragraph
is aligned to the left. This
paragraph is aligned to the
left.
This paragraph is aligned to
the right. This paragraph is
aligned to the right. This
paragraph is aligned to the
right.

This paragraph is has been
centered. This paragraph
is has been centered. This
paragraph is has been centered.
This paragraph has been
justied. Justication is the
default alignment mode for
paragraphs. So be it.

Table 15.2. The supported modes for alignment.

par-exibility := 1000.0

(paragraph exibility)

When using the justied alignment mode, it sometimes occurs that certain lines need to
be stretched a lot, thereby leaving abnormally large spaces in the middle of those lines.
This is typically the case inside bibliographies with unbreakable hyperlinks. The parexibility variable species a threshold above which justication of a line is abandoned.
More precisely, we switch to left alignment whenever the remaining space on a line
exceeds par-exibility times the maximal amount of stretching which still looks nice
for the given font.

130

Built-in environment variables

For certain paragraphs with
wide unbreakable pieces of
text, such as the hyperlink
http://www.texmacs.org it is
sometimes preferrable to switch
from justied to left aligned text
when the spacing between words
becomes to wide.

For certain paragraphs with
wide unbreakable pieces of
text, such as the hyperlink
http://www.texmacs.org it is
sometimes preferrable to switch
from justied to left aligned text
when the spacing between words
becomes to wide.

Table 15.3. Dierence between a large and small exibility (on the left and right hand sides
respectively).

par-hyphen := normal

(quality of hyphenation)

This parameter controls the quality of the hyphenation algorithm. Possible values are
normal and professional. The professional hyphenation algorithm uses a global algorithm on the entire paragraph, whereas the normal one uses a faster rst-t algorithm.
The dierence between the different hyphenation algorithms
provided by TEXMACS is seen
best for long paragraphs which
are typeset into a narrow
column. The professional
hyphenation usually succeeds
to minimize the number of
ugly gaps between words.

The difference between the
different hyphenation algorithms provided by TEXMACS
is seen best for long paragraphs which are typeset into
a narrow column. The professional hyphenation usually succeeds to minimize the number
of ugly gaps between words.

Table 15.4. Comparison dierent hyphenation algorithms. At the left hand side, we have used
the normal algorithm and on the right hand side the professional one. Even though there are
some ugly gaps at the right hand side around hyphenation, the really bad gap around The
on the left hand side has been avoided.

(paragraph width)

par-width := auto

This environment variable controls the width of paragraphs. By default, it is automatically determined as a function of the page (or screen) size and margins.
par-left := 0cm
par-right := 0cm

(left and right margins)

These environment variables specify absolute left and right margins for the paragraph,
with respect to the default left and right margins (which are determined as a function
of the page layout). For instance:
This text uses the default margins.
This text uses a left margin of 1cm
This text uses a left margin of 2cm
This text uses a left margin of 3cm
The left and right margins of this text have both
been set to 3cm.
Environments like itemize and quote-env which maybe nested usually compute new
margins as a function of the old values by adding or subtracting some space:

15.4 Paragraph layout

131

hassignjquote-envj
hmacrojbodyj
hsurroundj
hvspace*j0.5fnij
hright-ushihvspacej0.5fnij
hwithjpar-left jhplusjpar-left j3fnijpar-right jhplusjpar-right j3fnijpar-rst j0fnj
par-par-sepj0.25fnjbodyiiii
(rst indentation)

par-rst := 1.5fn

The par-rst parameter species the additional indentation which is used for the rst
line of the paragraph. The aim of rst indentations is to indicate the starts of new
paragraphs. An alternative technique is the use of vertical whitespace.

The article and book
styles in TEXMACS indictate
the starts of new paragraphs
through the use of a first
indentation.
The
generic
and
letter styles rather use vertical whitespace.

The generic and letter
styles in TEXMACS indictate
the starts of new paragraphs
through the use of vertical
whitespace.

The article and book
styles rather use a first
indentation.

Table 15.5. Two classical ways to indicate the starts of new paragraphs.

par-sep := 0.2fn

(extra separation between successive lines)

The sum of the font size and par-sep determines the ideal distance between two successive base lines in a paragraph (also called the base line skip). Of course, when the
lines contain large boxes, then this distance may need to be increased. When 1fn for
par-sep, one may for instance produce documents with a double interline space:
A double interline space corresponds to par-sep := 1fn. Double interline spaces are
often used by lazy people who want to pretend that they have written many pages.
They generally do not care about tropical rain forests.
In the case when two successive lines use dierent base line skips, then the maximal
value is used in order to compute the ideal distance between their baselines. This allows
for a reasonable spacing when the font size is changed from one paragraph to another:
Normal text.

Some very large text.
And back to normal.
par-line-sep := 0.025fn*

(extra space between lines)

This parameter corresponds an additional stretchable amount of whitespace between
successive lines in a paragraph. Setting par-line-sep to a small stretchable value which
defaults to 0 allows the page breaker to correctly stretch pages which contain a very
long textual paragraph. Indeed, par-line-sep vanishes, then the height of a textual
paragraph is of the form a + b n, where a and b are constants and n is the number of
lines. There is no reason why the usable height of a page should be of this form.

132

Built-in environment variables

par-par-sep := 0.5fn*

(extra space between paragraphs)

The par-par-sep parameter species the amount of vertical whitespace which separates
two successive paragraphs. This space is determined in stretchable length units. By
default, TEXMACS does not use any whitespace between successive paragraphs, except
when no nice page breaks could be found (this explains the use of the fn* length unit).
Starts of new paragraphs are rather indicated through the use of rst indentations (see
table 15.5).
In the case when two successive paragraph use dierent paragraph separations, then
the maximum of the two is taken. In fact, the par-par-sep length is added to both the
vertical spacing before and the vertical spacing after the paragraph.
par-hor-sep := 0.5fn
par-ver-sep := 0.2fn

(minimal space between ink)

When a paragraph contains several exceptionally large boxes, then TEXMACS attempts
to shove successive lines into another as long as none of the boxes collide:
1

Consider a fraction which decends more than usual like x + 1 at the end of a line and an
x
expression like ee which is higher than usual.
When these expressions occur at dierent places, then TEXMACS tries to render the successive
lines in a compact manner.
1
In the case of a fraction x + 1 and an exceptionally high expression at the wrong place, like
x
the expression ee here, the boxes are separated by env-ver-sep.

As soon as the horizontal distance between two large boxes is less than par-hor-sep,
then they are considered to be in collision. In that case, the vertical distance between
them must be at least par-ver-sep. Also, the amount of showing never exceeds 1ex.
When using an interline space of 1.5 or 2, the default value of par-ver-sep allows the
user to type larger formulas in the text while preserving a uniform layout. When using a
small par-sep and a large par-ver-sep, the distance between two successive lines remains
small, except when their contents are horizontally close. This may for instance be used
to reduce the space between a short like followed by a centered equation.
par-fnote-sep := 0.2fn

(minimal space between dierent footnotes)

This parameter controls the amount of vertical space between successive footnotes.
(number of columns)

par-columns := 1

This environment variable species the number of columns into which the text is being
typeset. Dierent numbers of columns may be used successively in the same document.
(distance between columns)

par-columns-sep := 2fn

This environment variable species the amount of horizontal whitespace which separates dierent columns in multi-column mode.

15.5. Page layout
In this section, we describe how TEXMACS lls pages with typesetted content. Besides
specifying the settings on how to print a document, the user may also determine the way
pages should be rendered on screen. It should be noticed that the number of environment
variables is redundant in the sense that some variables are computed as a function of other
ones. For instance, by default, the paragraph width is computed as a function of the page
size and the left and right margins.

15.5 Page layout

133

Paper specic variables.
(the size of pages)

page-type := a4

Specify the size of a page when printing out. Most standard formats are available in
Document!Page!Size. By default, the paper size is the one of your printer (the default
printer settings may be changed in Edit!Preferences!Printer). When the page-type is
set to user, then the page size is given by page-width and page-height.
(page orientation)

page-orientation := portrait
The orientation of pages can be either portrait or landscape.
page-nr := 0

(current page number)

The current page number. This environment variable should be manipulated with care,
since it is not yet available at typesetting time. For a reliable determination of page
numbers, one may combine the label and page-ref primitives. Nevertheless, the page-nr
variable can be used in the macros which render page headers and footers.
page-the-page

(display the page number)

This environment variable really contains the macro which is used for rendering the
page-number. By default, it renders page-nr . The macro takes no arguments. In order
to simulate a document whose rst page number is 123, one may redene
hassignjpage-the-pagejhmacrojhplusjpage-nr j122iii
page-breaking := optimal

(page breaking algorithm)

This parameter species the page breaking algorithm. The default optimal algorithm
takes into account the global document and tries hard to avoid bad page breaks. The
alternative sloppy algorithm uses a fast rst-t algorithm, but produces bad page break
with a higher probability. The medium quality algorithm is the same as the optimal
algorithm, except for two column content.
page-exibility := 1.0

(exibility for stretching)

This parameter species how much stretchable spaces may be extended or reduced in
order to ll pages which are too short or too long. A page exibility of 1 allows spaces
to be stretched to their minimal and maximal values. A page exibility of 0 prevents
spaces to be stretched. For other values of page-exibility the behaviour is linear.
page-shrink := 1fn

(allowed amount of page shrinking)

In the case when it is very hard to nd good page breaks, this parameter species an
additional amount of space by which a page is allowed to be reduced.
page-extend := 0fn

(allowed amount of page extensions)

In the case when it is very hard to nd good page breaks, this parameter species an
additional amount of space by which a page is allowed to be extended.
Screen specic variables.

134

Built-in environment variables

page-medium := papyrus

(the page medium)

This environment variable, which is initialized using Document!Page!Type, species
how pages are rendered on the screen. The following values are available:

p a p e r . Page breaks are visually indicated on the screen. This mode is useful
for ajusting the nal version of a document before printing or sending it to
a publisher. However, the use of this mode slows down the editor since every
modication in the document triggers the page-breaking algorithm.
Notice also that the mere selection of this mode does not imply the screen
margins and page decorations to be as on paper. In order to previsualize a
document in a fully realistic way, you should also set Document!Page!Screen
margins!Show header and footer and Document!Page!Screen margins!Margins
as on paper.

p a p y r u s . The paragraph width is the same as on paper, but page breaking is
disabled. This mode is most useful during the editing phase of a document
which will ultimately be printed out. It combines a reasonable editing speed
with realistic line breaks.
a u t o m a t i c . The paragraph width is as large as possible so as to t into the current
window and page breaking is disabled. This setting, which makes optimal use
of the available space on your screen, is useful for documents which are not
intended to be printed out. It may for instance be selected when using TEXMACS
as a browser or as an interface to computer algebra systems.
page-screen-width := 10cm

(width of the rendering window)

In automatic mode, this environement variable contains the width of the screen.
page-screen-height := 10cm

(height of the rendering window)

In automatic mode, this environement variable contains the height of the screen.
page-screen-margin := true

(special margins for screen editing?)

This ag species whether the screen margins are manually specied by the user, or
whether they are the same as on paper.
page-screen-left := 5mm
page-screen-right := 5mm
page-screen-top := 15mm
page-screen-bot := 15mm

(left margin on screen)

When page-screen-margin is true, then these environment variables determine the
margins which are to be used for rendering on the screen.
page-show-hf := false

(show headers and footers on screen?)

This ag determines whether the page headers and footers should be visible on the
screen. When set to true, it should be noticed that the headers and footers are not
always correctly updated when editing. In the case when you suspect them to be wrong,
refreshing the display by scrolling down and up should display the correct values.
Specifying the margins.

15.5 Page layout

135

The parameters for page margins are represented schematically at the left hand side in
gure 15.1. One may either specify the paragraph width as a function of the left and right
margins, or vice versa. The left and right margins may depend on whether the page number
is odd or even.
page-width-margin := false
page-height-margin := false

(compute margins from main text dimensions?)

When page-width-margin is set to false, then the paragraph width par-width is determined automatically from the page size and the left and right margins. When set to
true, the left and right margins are determined as a function of the page size, the paragraph width, page-odd-shift and page-even-shift. For compatability with TEX/LATEX, it
is also possible to set page-width-margin to tex, in which case the horizontal margins are
determined from page-odd, page-even and par-width. The page-height-margin variable
plays a similar role for the vertical margins.
page-width := auto
page-height := auto

(page width)

By default, the width and height of a page are automatically determined from the page
type. When page-type is set to user, then the user may manually specify the page size
using page-width and page-height.
page-odd := auto
page-even := auto

(left margin)

If page-width-margin is set to false, then page-odd and page-even specify the left
margins for odd and even pages. If page-width-margin is true, then these values are
computed as a function of the page size, the paragraph width, page-odd-shift and pageeven-shift. When page-odd and page-even are set to auto, then a nice default left
margin is determined as a function of the specied page type.
(right margin)

page-right := auto

If page-width-margin is set to false, then page-right species the right margin for odd
pages. The right margin for even pages is given by the formula
page-right+page-even¡page-odd
If page-width-margin is true or when page-right is set to auto, then the right margin
is determined in a similar way as the left margin.
page-odd-shift := 0mm
page-even-shift := 0mm

(margin shifts)

If page-width-margin is set to true, then the left margins for odd and even pages
are determined from the page size, paragraph width and the margin shifts using the
formulas
page-width¡par-width
+ page-odd-shift
2
page-width¡par-width
page-odd =
+ page-even-shift
2

page-even =

The right margin is always taken to be such that the paragraph width and the left and
right margins sum up to the page width.

136

Built-in environment variables

t
h
w

r

l

w

m

l

d

f
b

Figure 15.1. Schematic representation of the layout of pages. On the left hand
side, the parameters l, r, t and b respectively correspond to the left, right, top and
bottom margins, and w corresponds to the paragraph width. On the right hand
side, h, f , d and m correspond to the header, footer, footnote and marginal note
separations, w to the width of marginal notes, and l to the length of the footnote
bar.

Page decorations.
page-odd-header :=
page-odd-footer :=
page-even-header :=
page-even-footer :=

(header for odd pages)

These environment variables contain the header and footer texts for odd and even pages.
page-head-sep := 8mm
page-foot-sep := 8mm

(separation between headers/fotters and text)

These parameters determine the space between the main text and page headers and
footers. They correspond to the h and f distances at the right hand side of gure 15.1.
page-fnote-sep := 1.0fn

(space between footnotes and text)

The separation between the main text and footnotes, i.e. the distance d in gure 15.1.
(length of footnote bars)

page-fnote-barlen := 7.5fn
The length of the foornote bar.
page-oat-sep := 1.5fn

(separation between oats and text)

The separation between the main text and oating objects.
page-mnote-sep := 5mm

(separation between marginal notes and text)

The separation between marginal notes and the main text (not implemented yet).
page-mnote-width := 15mm
The width of marginal notes (not implemented yet).

(width of marginal notes)

15.6 Table layout

137

15.6. Table layout
The environment variables for tables can be subdivided in variables (prexed by table-)
which apply to the whole table and those (prexed by cell-) which apply to individual cells.
Whereas usual environment variables are set with assign and with, the tabular environment
variables are rather set with the tformat primitive. This makes it possible to apply certain
settings to any rectangular subtable of the entire table and in particular to rows or columns.
For more details, see the documentation of the twith and cwith primitives.
Layout of the table as a whole.
table-width :=
table-height :=

(hint for table dimensions)

These parameters indicate a hint for the dimensions of the table. The table-hmode and
table-vmode variables determine how to take into account these settings.
table-hmode :=
table-vmode :=

(determination of table dimensions)

These parameters specify how to determine the dimensions of the table. At the moment,
the values of table-hmode and table-vmode are actually ignored and table-width and
table-height are interpreted as the minimal width and height of the table.
table-halign := l
table-valign := f

(alignment inside text)

These parameters determine how the table should be aligned in the surrounding text.
Possible values for table-halign are l (left), c (center) and r (right), and possible
values for table-valign are t (top), f (centered at fraction bar height), c (center) and
b (bottom).
In addition to the above values, the alignment can take place with respect to the
baselines of particular cells. Such values for table-halign are L (align w.r.t. the left
column), C (align w.r.t. the middle column), R (align w.r.t. the right column) and O
(align w.r.t. the priviledged origin column table-col-origin). Similarly, table-halign may
take the additional values T (align w.r.t. the top row), C (align w.r.t. the middle row),
B (align w.r.t. the bottom row) and O (align w.r.t. the priviledged origin row table-roworigin).
table-row-origin := 0
table-col-origin := 0

(priviledged cell)

Table coordinates of an priviledged origin cell which may be used for aligning the
table in the surrounding text (see above).
table-lsep := 0fn
table-rsep := 0fn
table-bsep := 0fn
table-tsep := 0fn

(padding around table)

Padding around the table (in addition to the padding of individual cells).
table-lborder := 0ln
table-rborder := 0ln
table-bborder := 0ln

138

Built-in environment variables

(border around table)

table-tborder := 0ln

Border width for the table (in addition to borders of the individual cells).
table-hyphen := n

(allow for hyphenation?)

A ag which species whether page breaks may occur at the middle of rows in the table.
When table-hyphen is set to y, then such page breaks may only occur when
1. The table is not surrounded by other markup in the same paragraph.
2. The rows whether the page break occurs has no borders.
An example of a tabular environment which allows for page breaks is eqnarray*.
table-min-rows :=
table-min-cols :=
table-max-rows :=
table-max-cols :=

(constraints on the table's size)

It is possible to specify a minimal and maximal numbers of rows or columns for the
table. Such settings constraint the behaviour of the editor for operations which may
modify the size of the table (like the insertion and deletion of rows and columns). This
is particularly useful for tabular macros. For instance, table-min-columns and tablemax-columns are both set to 3 for the eqnarray* environment.
Layout of the individual cells.
cell-background :=

(background color)

A background color for the cell.
cell-width :=
cell-height :=

(hint for cell dimensions)

Hints for the width and the height of the cell. The real width and height also depend
on the modes cell-hmode and cell-vmode, possible lling (see cell-hpart and cell-vpart
below), and, of course, on the dimensions of other cells in the same row or column.
cell-hpart :=
cell-vpart :=

(ll part of unused space)

When the sum s of the widths of all columns in a table is smaller than the width w
of the table itself, then it should be specied what should be done with the unused
space. The cell-hpart parameter species a part in the unusued space which will be
taken by a particular cell. The horizontal part taken by a column is the maximum of
the horizontal parts of its composing cells. Now let pi the so determined part for each
column (i 2 f1; :::; ng). Then the extra horizontal space which will be distributed to
this column is pi (w ¡ s)/(p1 +  + pn). A similar computation determines the extra
vertical space which is distributed to each row.
cell-hmode := exact
cell-vmode := exact

(determination of cell dimensions)

These parameters specify how to determine the width and the height of the cell. If cellhmode is exact, then the width is given by cell-width. If cell-hmode is min or max, then
the width is the minimul resp. maximum of cell-width and the width of the content.
The height is determined similarly.

15.6 Table layout

cell-halign := l
cell-valign := B

139

(cell alignment)

These parameters determine the horizontal and vertical alignment of the cell. Possible
values of cell-halign are l (left), c (center), r (right), . (decimal dot), , (decimal
comma) and R (vertical baseline). Possible values of cell-valign are t (top), c (center),
b (bottom) and B (baseline).
cell-lsep := 0fn
cell-rsep := 0fn
cell-bsep := 0fn
cell-tsep := 0fn

(cell padding)

The amount of padding around the cell (at the left, right, bottom and top).
cell-lborder := 0ln
cell-rborder := 0ln
cell-bborder := 0ln
cell-tborder := 0ln

(cell borders)

The borders of the cell (at the left, right, bottom and top). The displayed border
between cells Ti;j and Ti;j+1 at positions (i; j) and (i; j + 1) is the maximum of the
borders between the right border of Ti;j and the left border of Ti;j+1. Similarly, the
displayed border between cells Ti;j and Ti+1;j is the maximum of the bottom border of
Ti;j and the top border of Ti+1;j .
cell-vcorrect := a

(vertical correction of text)

As described above, the dimensions and the alignment of a cell may depend on the
dimensions of its content. When cells contain text boxes, the vertical bounding boxes
of such text may vary as a function of the text (the letter k resp. y ascends resp.
descends further than x). Such dierences sometimes leads to unwanted, non-uniform
results. The vertical cell correction allows for a more uniform treatment of text of the
same font, by descending and/or ascending the bounding boxes to a level which only
depends on the font. Possible values for cell-vcorrect are n (no vertical correction),
b (vertical correction of the bottom), t (vertical correction of the top), a (vertical
correction of bottom and the top).
cell-hyphen := n

(allow for hyphenation inside cells)

By default, the cells contain inline content which is not hyphenated. By selecting
Table!Special cell properties!Hyphenation!Multi-paragraph, the cell contents becomes
multi-paragraph. In that case, cell-hyphen determines how this content is hyphenated.
Possible values are n (disable line breaking) and b, c and t (enable line breaking and
align at the bottom, center resp. top line).
cell-row-span := 1
cell-col-span := 1

(span of a cell)

Certain cells in a table are allowed to span over other cells at their right or below them.
The cell-row-span and cell-col-span specify the row span and column span of the cell.
cell-decoration :=

(decorating table for cell)

This environment variable may contain a decorating table for the cell. Such a decoration
enlarges the table with extra columns and cells. The tmarker primitive determines the
location of the original decorated cell and its surroundings in the enlarged table are
lled up with the decorations. Cell decorations are not really used at present and may
disappear in future versions of TEXMACS.

140

Built-in environment variables

cell-orientation := portrait
(orientation of cell)
Other orientations for cells than portrait have not yet been implemented.
cell-row-nr := 1
cell-col-nr := 1
(current cell position)
In the future, these environment variables should contain the current cell position
during the typesetting process.

15.7. Editing source trees
The dierent rendering styles for source trees are described in more detail in the section
about the global presentation of source trees. The corresponding environment variables
are briey described here.
src-style := angular
(rendering style for source tags)
The principal rendering style for source trees as specied in Document!Source!Style.
Possible values are angular, scheme, functional and latex.
src-special := normal
(how to render special tags)
How to render special tags like concat, document, compound, etc., as specied in Document!Source!Special. Possible values are raw, format, normal and maximal.
src-compact := normal
(compactication level)
How compact should tags be rendered, as specied in Document!Source!Compactication. Possible values are none, inline, normal, inline tags and all.
src-close := compact
(closing style for long tags)
The rendering style of closing tags as specied in Document!Source!Closing style.
Possible values are repeat, long, compact and minimal.

15.8. Miscellaneous environment variables
The following miscellaneous environment variables are mainly intended for internal use:
save-aux := true
(save auxiliary content)
This ag species whether auxiliary content has to be saved along with the document.
sfactor := 5
The shrinking factor which is used for rendering.

(shrinking factor)

par-no-rst := false
(disable rst indentation for next paragraph?)
This ag disables rst indentation for the next paragraph.
cell-format
(current cell format)
This variable us used during the typsetting of tables in order to store the with-settings
which apply to the current cell.
atom-decorations
line-decorations
page-decorations
xo-decorations
yo-decorations
(auxiliary variables for decorations)
These environment variables store auxiliary information during the typsetting of decorations.

Chapter 16
Built-in TEXMACS primitives
In this chapter, we describe those built-in TEXMACS primitives which are intended to be
used in normal documents. The additional primitives which are used for writing style les
are described in a separate chapter.

16.1. Fundamental primitives
(vertical sequence of paragraphs)

hdocumentjpar-1 jjpar-ni

This primitive is used for sequences of logical paragraphs. A simple, plain text document is made of a sequence of paragraphs. For instance,
A simple document.
Made of several paragraphs. The second paragraph is very long, so that it is hyphenated across several line.
is internally represented as a document with two subtrees:
hdocumentj
A simple document.j
Made of several paragraphs. The second paragraph is very long, so that it is
hyphenated across several line.i
From the visual point of view, dierent paragraphs are often separated by some vertical whitespace. Alternatively, new paragraphs are indicated through the use of an
additional indentation. The root of a TEXMACS document is usually a document node.
The document tag is also used for marking multi-paragraph content inside other tags,
such lists or theorem-like environments. Environments which require the use of a document tag for at least one argument are called block environments.

hparagraphjunit-1 jjunit-ni

(vertical sequence of paragraph units)

hconcatjitem-1 jjitem-ni

(horizontal sequence of inline markup)

This not yet implemented primitive is a variant of document. While a document is
made up of logical paragraphs, a paragraph is made up of paragraph units. From a
visual point of view, dierent paragraphs are singled out using some additional space
or indentation. New paragraph units rather correspond to simple new lines. Typically,
displayed equations are also paragraph units in a larger paragraph.

This primitive is used for sequences of line items, also called inline content. For
instance,
141

142

Built-in TEXMACS primitives

Some emphasized text.
is internally represented as:
hconcatjSome jhemjemphasizedij text.i
The concat operator is essential to put compound structures in trees taking multiple
parameters. For example, let us place the previous fragment in a multi-paragraph
context:
Multiple paragraphs.
Some emphasized text.
In this example, we need the concat tag in order to indicate that Some emphasized
text. corresponds to a single paragraph:
hdocumentj
A simple document.j
hconcatjSome jhemjemphasizedij text.ii
Notice that block tags like document may contain inline tags such as concat as its
children, but not vice versa. In order to typeset line content before or after block
content, one has to use the surround tag below.
hsurroundjleftjrightjbodyi

(surround block content with inline content)

Although it is not possible in TEXMACS to use block content inside horizontal concatenations, it is sometimes useful to add some additional inline content before or after a
block environment. The surround primitive serves this purpose, by adding a left and
right surrounding to some block content body. For instance,
hsurroundj jj
htheoremj
Given P 2 TfF g and f < g 2 T with P (f ) P (g) < 0, there exists an h 2 T with
P (h) = 0.ii
produces
Theorem 16.1. Given P 2 TfF g and f < g 2 T with P (f ) P (g) < 0, there exists
an h 2 T with P (h) = 0.
In general, the surround is mainly used in style les, but it occasionally turns out to be
useful in regular documents as well.

16.2. Formatting primitives
16.2.1. White space primitives
hvspacejleni

16.2 Formatting primitives

hvspacejlenjminjmax i

143

(vertical space after)

This primitive inserts an elastic vertical space after the current paragraph. All operands
must be length values. The len argument species the default length and the min and
max arguments the bounds to vertical stretching for page breaking and lling. If min
and max are not specied, then they are determined implicitly from the length unit of
len.
Notice that operands are not evaluated, so they must be literal strings.
hvspace*jleni
hvspace*jlenjminjmax i

(vertical space before)

This primitive is similar to vspace, except that the vertical space is inserted before the
current paragraph. The actual vertical space between two consecutive paragraphs is the
maximum, not the sum, of the vertical spaces specied by the the vspace and vspace*
tags in the surrounding paragraphs.
hspacejleni
hspacejlenjbotjtopi

(rigid horizontal space)

This primitive inserts an empty box whose width is len, and whose bottom and top
sides are at distances bot and top from the baseline.
If bot and top are not specied, then an empty box is inserted whose bottom is on the
baseline and whose height is the same as the lowercase letter x in the current font.
Notice that operands are not evaluated, so they must be literal strings.
hhspacejleni
hhspacejlenjminjmax i

(stretchable horizontal space)

This primitive inserts a stretchable horizontal space of nominal width len, which must
be a length value. The min and max arguments specify bounds to horizontal stretching
for line breaking and lling. If min and max are not specied, then they are determined
implicitly from the length unit of len.
Notice that operands are not evaluated, so they must be literal strings.
hhtabjmini
hhtabjminjweighti

(horizontal spring)

Springs are horizontal spaces which extend so the containing paragraph takes all the
available horizontal space. When a paragraph is line wrapped, split in several visual
lines, only springs in the last line are extended.
A spring has a minimal width and a weight. If the weight is 0, the spring is weak,
otherwise it is strong. If a line contains mixed weak and strong springs, only the strong
springs extend.
The fraction of the available horizontal space taken up by each strong spring is proportional to its weight. If there are only weak springs, they share the available space evenly.
hhtabjmini inserts a strong spring of minimal width min and of weight unity. The
min operand must be a length value.

144

Built-in TEXMACS primitives

hhtabjminjweighti species the weight, which can be a positive decimal number or
one of the two special values documented below.
hhtab j min j rsti inserts a tail weak spring, only the rst one in a paragraph is
signicant.
hhtab j min j lasti inserts a head weak spring, only the last one in a paragraph is
signicant.
Operands are not evaluated and must be literal strings.
Weak springs are useful in style-sheets. For example, tail weak springs are used to make
the list environment extend to across the full paragraph, so vertical motion commands
in nested lists behave as expected. In regular documents, springs are often used to place
some text on the right side of the page and some other text on the left side.

16.2.2. Line breaking primitives
A simple document is a sequence of logical paragraphs, one for each subtree of a document
or paragraph node. Paragraphs whose width exceed the available horizontal space are broken
into physical lines by the hyphenation algorithm. By default, hyphenated lines are justied:
horizontal spaces can be shrunk or extended in order to produce a good-looking layout.
hnew-linei

(start a new paragraph)

This is a deprecated tag in order to split a logical paragraph into several logical paragraphs without creating explicit subtrees for all paragraphs.
We recall that logical paragraphs are important structures for the typesetting process.
Many primitives and environment variables (vertical spacing, paragraph style, indentation, page breaking, etc.) operate on whole paragraphs or at the boundaries of the
enclosing paragraph.

hnext-linei

(start a new line)

This is a tag which will become deprecated as soon as the paragraph primitive will be
correctly implemented. Its usage is similar to the new-line tag with the dierence that
we start a new logical paragraph unit instead of a new logical paragraph.
Currently, the next-line tag can also be used in order to force a line break with the
additional property that the line before the break is not justied or lled.

hline-breaki

(line breaking hint, with lling)

Print an invisible space with zero hyphenation penalty. The line breaking algorithm
searches for the set of hyphenation points minimizing the total penalty, so line breaking
is much more likely to occur at a line-break than anywhere else in its vicinity.
Unlike next-line, this is a hint which may or may not be obeyed by the typesetter, and
it does not prevent the previous line from being lled.

hno-breaki

(forbid line breaking at this point)

Set an hyphenation point with an innite penalty. That is useful when the hyphenation
patterns for a language fall short of preventing some forbidden patterns like arse-nal
or con-genital. An alternative way to prevent breaks is to use the rigid tag.

16.2 Formatting primitives

145

16.2.3. Indentation primitives
There are two main ways to distinguish between successive paragraphs: separate them by
a small vertical space, or use an indentation for each new paragraph. The indentation can
be explicitly controlled using the no-indent, yes-indent, no-indent* and yes-indent* tags. The
no-indent and yes-indent primitives apply to the current paragraph, while the no-indent* and
yes-indent* apply the next paragraph.
hno-indenti
hyes-indenti

Disable or enable indentation for the current paragraph. For instance, the code
hno-indentiThis is a long paragraph which demonstrates the disabling indentation
using the hmarkupjno-indenti primitive.
hyes-indentiThis is a long paragraph which demonstrates enabling indentation using
the hmarkupjyes-indenti primitive.
typically produces
This is a long paragraph which demonstrates the disabling indentation using the noindent primitive.
This is a long paragraph which demonstrates enabling indentation using the yesindent primitive.

hno-indent*i
hyes-indent*i

Disable or enable indentation for the next paragraph. For instance,
A rst paragraph.hyes-indent*i
A second paragraph.
typically produces
A rst paragraph.
A second paragraph.
Notice that no-indent and yes-indent override no-indent* and yes-indent* directives in the
previous paragraph.
Currently, the no-indent* and yes-indent* tags are mainly used in order to control the
indentation after section titles or environments like equation which usually correspond
to paragraph units. In the future, when sectional tags will take the section bodies as
arguments, and when the paragraph tag will be correctly implemented, the no-indent*
and yes-indent* will become deprecated.

16.2.4. Page breaking primitives
The physical lines in a document are broken into pages in a way similar to how paragraphs
are hyphenated into lines. The page breaker performs page lling, it tries to distribute page
items evenly so text runs to the bottom of every page. It also tries to avoid orphans and
widows, which are single or pairs of soft lines separated from the rest of their paragraph
by a page break, but these can be produced when there is no better solution.

146

Built-in TEXMACS primitives

hno-page-breaki

(prevent automatic page breaking after this line)

Prevent the occurrence of an automatic page break after the current line. Set an innite
page breaking penalty for the current line, similarly to no-break.
Forbidden page breaking points are overridden by new page and page break primitives.

hno-page-break*i

(prevent automatic page breaking before this line)

Similar to no-page-break, but set the page breaking penalty of the previous line.

hnew-pagei

(start a new page after this line)

Cause the next line to appear on a new page, without lling the current page. The page
breaker will not try to position the current line at the bottom of the page.

hnew-page*i

(start a new page before this line)

hpage-breaki

(force a page break after this line)

Similar to new-page, but start the new page before the current line. This directive is
appropriate to use in chapter headings.

Force a page break after the current line. A forced page break is dierent from a new
page, the page breaker will try to position the current line at the bottom of the page.
Use only to ne-tune the automatic page breaking. Ideally, this should be a hint similar
to line-break, but this is implemented as a directive, use only with extreme caution.

hpage-break*i

(force a page break before this line)

Similar to page-break, but force a page break before the current line.

When several new page and page break directives apply to the same point in the
document, only the rst one is eective. Any new-page or page-break after the rst one in a
line is ignored. Any new-page or page-break in a line overrides any new-page* or page-break*
in the following line. Any new-page* or page-break* after the rst one in a line is ignored.

16.2.5. Box operation primitives
hmovejcontentjdelta-x jdelta-yi

(adjust position)

This primitive moves the box with the specied content by delta-x to the right and
delta-y upwards. It may be used for ne-grained positioning. During the evaluation of
delta-x and delta-y, the box lengths w, h, l, r, b and t of content are dened.

hshiftjcontentjdelta-x jdelta-yi

(shift contents, not the bounding box)

This primitive is similar to move, except that the bounding box of the shifted content
is the same as the bounding box of the original content.

hresizejcontentjleft-limjbot-limjright-limjtop-limi

(adjust size)

Resize the box for the content according to new left, bottom, right and top limits leftlim, bot-lim, right-lim and top-lim. The limits may be specied in terms of the box
lengths w, h, l, r, b and t of content. For instance, the code

16.2 Formatting primitives

147

(hresizejHopsajhminusj1lj5mmijjhplusj1rj5mmiji)
widens the box for Hopsa by 5mm on each side:
(

Hopsa

)
(adjust size and clip)

hclippedjcontentjleft-limjbot-limjright-limjtop-limi

This primitive is similar to resize, except that the content is clipped so as to t in the
specied new bounding box.

hif*jconditionjcontenti

(conditional appearance of box)

The box with the content is displayed as usual if the condition is satised and displayed
as whitespace otherwise. This primitive is used in particular for the denition of the
phantom macro. For instance, the non-text 
 is produced using hif* j false j
phantomi.

hrepeatjcontentjpatterni

(ll line)

This primitive can be used to decorate some content with a given pattern. For instance,
when dening the macro
hassignjwipe-outjhmacrojx jhrepeatjx jhwithjcolor jredj/iiii
the code hwipe-outjobsoletei produces obsolete
///////. The repeat primitive may also be used
to ll the current line with a given content, like the dots in tables of contents.

hdatomsjfoojcontenti
hdlinesjfoojcontenti
hdpagesjfoojcontenti

(decorations)

These primitives are used to decorate a posteriori the lines of a paragraph, the lines of
a page, or the pages of a document. Currently, only decorations of atoms on lines of a
paragraph have been implemented.
The rst argument foo is a macro which will be applied to all boxes in the line and the
second argument content is the part of the paragraph to which the decoration will be
applied. For instance, the construction
hdatomsj
hmacrojx j x ij
bodyi
may be used in order to visualize the boxes in a given paragraph:
Here is a suciently long paragraph. Here is a suciently long paragraph.
Here is a suciently long paragraph. Here is a suciently long paragraph.
Here is a suciently long paragraph. Here is a suciently long paragraph.
When used in combination with the repeat primitive, one may for instance produce the
dotted lines in tables of contents using the macro

148

Built-in TEXMACS primitives

hassignj
toc-dotsj
hmacroj
hdatomsj
hmacrojx jhrepeatjx jhspacej0.2fni.hspacej0.2fniiij
hhtabj5mmiiii
Notice that the datoms primitive is quite fragile, because the foo macro has no access
to the environment in which content is typeset.

16.3. Mathematical primitives
hleftjlarge-delimiter i
hleftjlarge-delimiter jsizei
hleftjlarge-delimiter jbottomjtopi
hmidjlarge-delimiter ji
hrightjlarge-delimiter ji

(large delimiters)

These primitives are used for producing large delimiters, like in the formula



1 1
1

:
a1 a2
an

Matching left and right delimiters are automatically sized so as contain the enclosed
expression. Between matching left and right delimiters, the formula may contain an
arbitrary number of middle delimiters, which are sized in a similar way. Contrary
to TEX, the depth of a large delimiter is not necessarily equal to its height, so as to
correctly render formulas like
0
1
1
f@
1 A
x+
1
y+ z

The user may override the automatically determined size by specifying additional length
parameters size or bottom and top. For instance,
fhleftj(j-8mmj4mmixhmidj|j8mmiyhrightj)j-4mmj8mmi
is rendered as



f xy



The size may also be a number n, in which case the n-th available size for the delimiter
is taken. For instance,
ghleftj(j0ihleftj(j1ihleftj(j2ihleftj(j3izhrightj)j3ihrightj)j2ihrightj)j1ihrightj)j0i
is rendered as
g((((z))))

16.3 Mathematical primitives

149

(big symbols)

hbigjbig-symboli

This primitive is used in order to produce big operators as in
1
X

(16.1)

ai z i

i=0

The size of the operator depends on whether the formula is rendered in display style
or not. Formulas in separate equations, like (16.1), are said to
in display
P be rendered
i. The user may
style, contrary to formulas which occur in the main text, like 1
a
z
i=0 i
use Format!Display style to override the current settings.
Notice that the formula (16.1) is internally represented as
hbigjsumihrsubji=0ihrsupj1iahrsubjii*zhrsupjiihbigj.i
The invisible big operator hbigj.i is used to indicate the end of the scope of hbigjsumi.
(fractions)

hfracjnumjdeni

x
.
y

The frac primitive is used in order to render fractions like
In display style, the
numerator num and denominator den are rendered in the normal size, but display style
is turned of when typesetting num and den. When the display style is turned of, then
the arguments are rendered in script size. For instance, the content
hfracj1jahrsubj0i+hfracj1jahrsubj1i+hfracj1jahrsubj2i+iii
is rendered in display style as
1
a0 +

1
a1 + a

hsqrtjcontenti
hsqrtjcontentjni

1

2 + 

(roots)
p
The sqrt primitive is used in order to render square roots like x or n-th roots like 3 x .
The root symbol is automatically sized so as to encapsulate the content:
p

r

i+j

hlsubjscripti
hlsupjscripti
hrsubjscripti
hrsupjscripti

f (x)
y2 + z2

(scripts)

These primitives are used in order to attach a script to the preceding box in a horizontal
concatenation (in the case of right scripts) or the next one (in the case of left scripts).
When there is no such box, then the script is attached to an empty box. Moreover,
when both a subscript and a superscript are specied on the same side, then they are
merged together. For instance, the expression
hrsubjaihrsupjbi+hlsubj1ihlsupj2ixhrsubj3ihrsupj4i=yhrsubj1i+hlsubjci

150

Built-in TEXMACS primitives

is rendered as
b 2 4
a+1x3 = y1 + c

When a right script is attached to an operator (or symbol) which accepts limits, then
it is rendered below or above instead of beside the operator:
lim an

n!1

Scripts are rendered in a smaller font in non-display style. Nevertheless, in order to
keep formulas readable, the size is not reduced below script-script-size.
hlprimejprime-symbolsi
hrprimejprime-symbolsi

(primes)

Left and right primes are similar to left and right superscripts, except that they behave
in a dierent way when being edited. For instance, when your cursor is behind the prime
symbol in f 0 and you press backspace, then the prime is removed. If you are behind f n
and you press backspace several times, then you rst enter the superscript, next remove
n and nally remove the superscript. Notice also that prime-symbols is necessarily a
string of concatenated prime symbols. For instance, f 0y is represented by fhrprimej'yi.

hbelowjcontentjscripti
habovejcontentjscripti

(scripts above and below)

The below and above tags are used to explicitly attach a script below or above a given
content. Both can be mixed in order to produce content with both a script below and
above:
1

xor xi
i=1

can be produced using
habovejhbelowjxorji=1ij1i xhrsubjii
hwidejcontentjwide-symbol i
hwide*jcontentjwide-symbol i

(wide symbols)

These primitives can be used in order to produce wide accents above or below some
mathematical content. For instance x + y corresponds to the markup hwidejx+yji.
(negations)

hnegjcontenti

This primitive is mainly used for producing negated symbols or expressions, such as 
or a.
(trees)

htreejrootjchild-1 jjchild-ni

This primitive is used to produce a tree with a given root and children child-1 until
child-n. The primitive should be used recursively in order to produce trees. For instance,
+
x y


2 y z

16.4 Table primitives

151

corresponds to the markup
htreej+jxjyjhtreejj2jyjzii
In the future, we plan to provide further style parameters in order to control the
rendering.

16.4. Table primitives
Tables are always present in documents inside evaluable tags which take a tformat operand.
All fundamental table structures have inaccessible borders. The basic top-level table tag
is tabular.
htformatjwith-1 jjwith-njtablei

(table formatting container)

Every tabular structure in a document contains a tformat tag.
htformatjtablei means the table and cell variables dened in the top-level table tag are
not modied. The table argument may be a table or a nested tformat tag, the latter
does not appear in documents but is produced by the evaluation of the top-level tag.
htformat j with-1 j  j with-n j tablei is used when the table contains specic formatting
information. The with-1 to with-n arguments must all be twith or cwith tags.

htwithjvar jval i

(set a table variable)

The formatting of the table as a whole is specied by a number of table variables,
which are used internally and do not appear in the environment like regular typesetter
variables.
The twith primitive sets the table variable var (literal string) to the value val (evaluated).

hcwithjtop-rowjbot-rowjleft-col jright-coljvar jval i

(set a cell variable for a range)

The formatting of cells is specied by a number of cell variables, which are used internally and do not appear in the environment like regular typesetter variables. Rows,
columns, and generally any rectangular range of cells can associated to a cell variable
setting by a single cwith tag.
The cwith primitive sets the cell variable var (literal string) to the value val (evaluated)
for the range of cells spanning rows top-row to bot-row and columns left-col to rightcol (literal non-zero integers).
Range coordinates must be non-zero literal integers, positive values are counted left to
right and top to bottom, negative values are counted right to left and bottom to top.
For example, 2 means the second row or column and -1 means the last row or column.
Typical values for (top-row ; bot-row ; left-col ; right-col ) are (r; r; 1; ¡1) for row r, (1;
¡1; c; c) for column c, and (r; r; c; c) for the cell at row r, column c. When new cells
are inserted, it makes a dierence whether the rows are counted from the top or bottom,
and the columns are counted from the left or right. If m is the number of rows and n
the number of columns, then r and r ¡ m ¡ 1 represent the same rowthe former is
relative to the top border while the latter is relative the bottom border. Similarly, c
and c ¡ n ¡ 1 represent the same column.

152

Built-in TEXMACS primitives

htablejrow-1 jjrow-ni

(row container)

hrowjcell-1 jjcell-ki

(cell container)

The only purpose of the table tag is to contain row tags. The number of rows in a table
is the number of subtrees in its table tag.

The only purpose of the row tag is to contain cell tags. All row tags in a given table
must have exactly as many subtrees, all cell tags, as there are columns in the table.
(cell data container)

hcelljcontenti

Table cells can contain any document fragment. A cell may directly contain an inline
content tag or a concat, if it has block content it must always contain a document tree.
A cell whose operand is a document is a multi-paragraph cell . Since tables are allowed
in line context, this is the only construct which allows, indirectly, the nesting of a
block context within a line context. Note that most block content can only be typeset
correctly within an hyphenated cell, this is controlled by the cell-hyphen table variable.
(subtable cell data)

hsubtablejtablei

In addition to regular markup, cells can accept subtable as an operand. The operand
of subtable is a tformat tree containing regular table data.
A similar eect can be obtained with normal table by setting the cell's padding to zero
in all directions, the extra twist of a subtable is its inaccessible border positions.

htmarkerjtablei

(decoration origin marker)

This tag is used in the denition of cell decorations, see the documentation of the celldecoration environment variable.
It is also used outside tables, in the switch tag to mark the currently displayed position.
(built-in tabular macro)

htabularjtablei

This macro implements standard left aligned tables without borders. Although the
tabular macro is built-in into TEXMACS, it should not really be considered as a primitive.
However, it is not part of any style le either.

16.5. Linking primitives
hlabeljnamei

(reference target)

The operand must evaluate to a literal string, it is used as a target name which can be
referred to by reference, pageref and hlink tags.
Label names should be unique in a document and in a project.
Examples in this section will make references to an example label named there.
hlabeljtherei

hreferencejnamei

(reference to a name)

The operand must evaluate to a literal string, which is the name of a label dened in
the current document or in another document of the current project.

16.5 Linking primitives

153

hreferencejtherei
The reference is typeset as the value of the variable the-label at the point of the target
label. The the-label variable is set by many numbered structures: sections, gures,
numbered equations, etc.
A reference reacts to mouse clicks as an hyperlink.
hpagerefjnamei

(page reference to a name)

The operand must evaluate to a literal string, which is the name of a label dened in
the current document or in another document of the current project.
hpagerefjtherei
The pageref is typeset as the number of the page containing the target label. Note that
page numbers are only computed when the document is typeset with page-breaking,
that is not in automatic or papyrus page type.
A pageref reacts to mouse clicks as an hyperlink.
(inline hyperlink)

hhlinkjcontentjurl i

This primitive produces an hyperlink with the visible text content pointing to url.
The content is typeset as inline url. The url must evaluate to a literal string in URL
syntax and can point to local or remote documents, positions inside documents can be
be specied with labels.
The following examples are typeset as hyperlinks pointing to the label there, respectively in the same document, in a document in the same directory, and on the web.
hhlinkjsame documentj../devel/format/regular/#therei
hhlinkjsame directoryj../devel/format/regular/file.tm#therei
hhlinkjon the webjhttp://example.org/#therei
If the document is not editable, the hyperlink is traversed by a simple click, if the
document is editable, a double-click is required.

hincludejurli

(include another document)

The operand must be a literal string and is interpreted as a le name. The content of
this le is typeset in place of the include tag, which must be placed in block context.

hactionjcontentjscripti

(attach an action to content)

Bind a Scheme script to a double mouse click on content. For instance, when clicking
here, you may launch an xterm. This action is encoded by
hactionjherej(lambda () (system "xterm &"))i
When clicking on actions, the user is usually prompted for conrmation, so as to avoid
security problems. The user may control the desired level of security in Edit!Preferences!Security. Programmers may also declare certain Scheme routines to be secure.
Scheme programs which only use secure routines are executed without conrmation
from the user.

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Built-in TEXMACS primitives

16.6. Miscellaneous physical markup
(atomic entity)

hrigidjcontenti

Typeset the content, which must be line content, as an atomic line item. Hyphenation
within the rigid and special spacing handling on its borders are disabled.

hoatjtypejwherejbodyi

(oating page insertion)

Floating insertions are page items which are typeset out of band, they are associated
to two boxes: the anchor box marks the structural position of the oat, the oating box
contains the typeset body operand. This facility is used by footnotes and oating blocks.
The rst and second operands are evaluated, but for clarity the rst operand appears as
a literal string in the examples. Since the body is typeset out of band, it may be block
content even if the oat occurs in line context.
hoatjfootnotejjbodyi produces a footnote insertion, this should only be used within
the footnote macro and is considered style markup. The oating box of a footnote
is typeset at the end of the the page containing the anchor box.
hoat j oat j where j bodyi produces a oating block, this is considered physical
markup. The position of the oating box is chosen by the page breaker, which uses
this extra freedom to minimize the page breaking penalty.
The where operand must evaluate to a string which may contain the following
characters:
t. Allow the oating box at page top.
b. Allow the oating box at page bottom.
h. Allow the oating box here, in the middle of the page near the anchor box.
f. Force the oating box within the same page as the anchor box.

hspecicjmediumjbodyi

(medium-specic content)

This primitive marks body for output only on the specied medium. The following
values of medium are supported:
texmacs. The body is typeset as usual line content.
latex. The body, which must be a string, is not visible from within TEXMACS, but
it will be included in a verbatim way when the document is exported to LATEX.
html. Similar to the latex medium, but for HTML exports.
screen. The body is only typeset when the document is visualized on a screen. This
may be useful to provide additional visual information to the user during the
editing phase which should disappear when printing out. A similar tag which
may be used for this purpose is ag.
printer. This medium is complementary to screen, when the body should only be
visible when printing out, but not when the document is displayed on the screen.

hraw-datajdatai

(binary content)

In some contexts you need to embed uneditable data inside a document, most of the
time this is uneditable binary data. The raw-data primitive makes it impossible to view
or modify its subtree from within the editor.

Chapter 17
Primitives for writing style files
17.1. Environment primitives
The current environment both denes all style parameters which aect the typesetting
process and all additional macros provided by the user and the current style. The primitives
in this section are used to access and modify environment variables.
(variable mutation)

hassignjvar jvali

This primitive sets the environment variable named var (string value) to the value of the
val expression. This primitive is used to make non-scoped changes to the environment,
like dening markup or increasing counters.
This primitive aects the evaluation process through value, provides, and macro definitions and the typesetting process through special typesetter variables.
Example 17.1. Enabling page breaking by style.
The page-medium is used to enable page breaking. Since only the initial environment
value for this variable is eective, this assignation must occur in a style le, not within
a document.
hassignjpage-mediumjpaperi
Example 17.2. Setting the chapter counter.
The following snippet will cause the immediately following chapter to be number 3.
This is useful to get the the numbering right in book style when working with projects
and include.
hassignjchapter-nr j2i
The operand must be a literal string and is interpreted as a le name. The content of
this le is typeset in place of the include tag, which must be placed in block context.
(variable scope)

hwithjvar-1 jval-1 jjvar-njval-njbodyi

This primitive temporarily sets the environment variables var-1 until var-n (in this
order) to the evaluated values of val-1 until val-n and typesets body in this modied
environment. All non-scoped change done with assign to var-1 until var-n within body
are reverted at the end of the with.
This primitive is used extensively in style les to modify the typesetter environment.
For example to locally set the text font, the paragraph style, or the mode for mathematics.
155

156

Primitives for writing style files

(variable value)

hvaluejvar i

This primitive evaluates the current value of the environment variable var (literal
string). This is useful to display counters and generally to implement environmentsensitive behavior.
This primitive is used extensively in style les to modify the typesetter environment.
For example to locally set the text font, the paragraph style, or the mode for mathematics.
(denition predicate)

hprovidesjvar i

This predicate evaluates to true if the environment variable var (string value) is
dened, and to false otherwise.
That is useful for modular markup, like the session environments, to fall back to a
default appearance when a required package is not used in the document.

17.2. Macro primitives
Macros can be used to dene new tags and to build procedural abstractions in style les.
Older versions of TEXMACS used to make a distinction between macros (all children accessible) and functions (no accessible child). In modern TEXMACS there are only macros: the
accessibility of children is determined heuristically and can be controlled with drd-props.
hmacrojvar-1 jjvar-njbodyi

(macro of xed arity)

This primitive returns a macro (the TEXMACS analogue of a -expression) with n arguments, named after the literal strings var-1 until var-n.
New tags are dened by storing macros in the environment. Most of the time, macros
are stored without scope with assign, but it is sometimes useful to redene a tag locally
within the scope of a with. For example, itemized and enumerated environment redene
item locally.
Example 17.3. Denition of the abbr tag
hassignjabbr jhmacrojx jhrigidjx iii
Storing a macro in the environment denes a tag whose arity is xed to the number of
arguments taken by the macro.

hargjvar jindex-1 jjindex-ni

(retrieve macro arguments)

This primitive is used to retrieve the arguments of a macro within its body. For instance,
harg j var i expands the content of the macro argument with name var (literal string).
Of course, this argument must be dened by a macro containing the arg tag.
This tag is similar to value, but diers in important ways:


The argument namespace is distinct from the environment, hargjvar i and hvaluej
var i will generally evaluate to dierent values (although you should not rely on
this).

17.2 Macro primitives



157

The value of arg retains the position of the macro argument in the document
tree, that makes it possible to edit the arguments of a macro-dened tag while
it is active.

When more than one argument is specied, hargjvar jindex-1 jjindex-ni expands to a
subtree of the argument var . The value of the named argument must be a compound
tree (not a string). The operands var until index-n must all evaluate to positive integers
and give the path to the subtree of the macro argument.
(macro with a variable arity)

hxmacrojvar jbodyi

This primitive returns a macro (the TEXMACS analogue of a -expression) capable of
taking any number of arguments. The arguments are stored in the macro variable
with name var (a literal string) during the evaluation of the body. The i-th individual
argument can then be accessed using hargjvar jii.

hmap-argsjfoojrootjvar i
hmap-argsjfoojrootjvar jrsti
hmap-argsjfoojrootjvar jrstjlasti

(map a tag on subtrees of an argument)

This primitive evaluates to a tree whose root is labeled by root and whose children are
the result of applying the macro foo to the children of the macro argument with name
var .
By default, the macro foo is applied to all children. If rst has been specied, then
we rather start at the i-th child of var , where i is the result of evaluating rst. If last
has been specied too, then we stop at the j-th child of var (the j-th child not being
included), where j is the result of evaluating last. In this last case, the arity of the
returned tree is therefore j ¡ i.
Stated otherwise, map-args applies foo to all subtrees of the macro argument var (or a
range of subtrees if rst and last are specied) and collects the result in a tree with label
root. In addition, the second argument to foo gives its position of the rst argument
in the expansion of var .
The map-args is analogue to the Scheme function map. Since TEXMACS use labeled trees,
the label of the mapping list must also be specied.
Example 17.4. Comma-separated lists.
The comma-separated tag has any arity (though it does not make much sense with arity
zero) and typesets its operands interspersed with commas.
hassignjcomma-extrajhmacrojx j, x ii
hassignjcomma-separatedj
hxmacrojargsj
hconcatj
hargjargsj0ij
hmap-argsjcomma-extrajconcatjargsj1iiii

heval-argsjvari

(macro with a variable arity)

This primitive evaluates to the tree with the same label as the expansion of the argument var and whose subtrees are the result of the evaluation of the subtrees of the
expansion of var .

158

Primitives for writing style files

hcompoundjfoojarg-1 jjarg-ni

(expand an unnamed macro)

This primitive is useful to expand macros which are the result of a computation: it
applies the macro which is the result of the evaluation of foo to the arguments arg-1
until arg-n. The compound primitive is useful in call-back and lambda programming
idioms, where a higher-level macro is given a macro as an operand, which it may later
apply under certain conditions or with operands which are not known to the client code.
Actually, in the current implementation, foo may either evaluate to a macro or to a
literal string which gives the name of a macro. However, we discourage users to rely on
the second case.
Example 17.5. Lambda programming with macros.
In the code below, hlterjpredjti expects a macro pred and a tuple t on input and returns
a tuple containing the elements of t for which pred evaluates to true.
hassignjlter j
hmacrojpredjtj
hifj
hequaljhlengthjtij0ij
htupleij
hmergej
hifj
hcompoundjpredjhlook-upjtj0iij
htuplejhlook-upjtj0iij
htupleiij
hlterjpredjhrangejtj1jhlengthjtiiiiiii
As an application, we may dene a macro hevens j ti, which expects t to be a tuple
containing integers, and which returns the tuple of integers in t which are divisible by 2.
hassignjevensjhmacrojtjhlterjhmacrojx jhequaljhmodjx j2ij0iijtiii

hdrd-propsjvar jprop-1 jval-1 jjprop-njval-ni

(set D.R.D. properties of a tag)

The arity and children accessibility of tags dened by macros are determined heuristically by default. The drd-props primitive overrides this default for the environment
variable (usually a macro) with name var . The currently supported property-value
pairs are:
(arity, n)  Sets the arity to the given xed value n (literal integer).
(accessible, all)  Make it impossible to deactivate the tag with normal editor
actions. Inaccessible children become eectively uneditable.
(accessible, none)  Make it impossible to position the caret within the tag when
it is active, so children can only be edited when the tag is inactive.

hget-labeljexpressioni

(label of an expression)

hget-arityjexpressioni

(arity of an expression)

Returns the label of the tree obtained when evaluating expression.

Returns the arity of the tree obtained when evaluating expression.

17.3 Flow control primitives

159

17.3. Flow control primitives
hifjconditionjif-bodyi
hifjconditionjif-bodyjelse-bodyi

(conditional markup)

This primitive can be used to typeset if-body only if the condition is satised. If the
optional else-body is specied, then it is typeset if and only if the condition fails.
Remark 17.6. It should be noticed that the use of conditional markup can be a bit
tricky due to the fact that the accessibility of arguments cannot necessarily be checked
beforehand. For instance, in the macro denition
hmacrojx jhifjhvisibility-agijx ii
the macro argument x is accessible if and only if hvisibility-agi evaluates to true. This
condition cannot necessarily be checked a priori. For certain editing operations, like
searches or spell checking, the incorrect determination of the accessibility may lead
to the positioning of the cursor at unaccessible places, or to the ignorance of certain
markup. In the future, we plan to improve this aspect of the editor, but it is better to
avoid conditional markup whenever another solution can be found.
Remark 17.7. The conditional constructs are only fully implemented for inline markup.
In the case when you need conditional markup for block structures you currently have
to write macros for the if-case and the else-case and use the compound tag. For instance:

hassignjcoldjhmacrojx jhwithjcolor jbluejx iii
hassignjhotjhmacrojx jhwithjcolor jredjx iii
hassignjadaptivejhmacrojx jhcompoundjhif jhsummer ijhotjcoldijx iii
hcasejcond-1 jbody-1 jjcond-njbody-ni
hcasejcond-1 jbody-1 jjcond-njbody-njelse-bodyi

(case distinction)

These commands are respectively equivalent to
hifjcond-1 jbody-1 jhifjcond-njbody-nii
hifjcond-1 jbody-1 jhifjcond-njbody-njelse-bodyii

hwhilejconditionjbodyi

(repeated evaluation)

This construct maybe used in order to repeatedly execute a given body while a given
condition is satised. For instance, when declaring
hassignjcountj
hmacrojfromjtoj
hwithjijfromj
hconcatj
hwhilejhlessjijtoiji, hassignjijhplusjij1iiij
toiiii
the code hcountj1j50i produces
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26,
27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50

160

Primitives for writing style files

17.4. Evaluation control primitives
This section describes several primitives for controlling the way expressions in the stylesheet language are evaluated. The primitives are analogous to the Scheme primitives
eval, quote, quasiquote, etc., although the TEXMACS conventions are slightly dierent
than those used by conventional functional languages like Scheme.
hevaljexpr i

(force evaluation)

Typeset the result of the evaluation of expr . This primitive is usually combined with
a tag like quote or quasiquote for delaying the evaluation.

hquotejexpr i

(delayed evaluation)

Evaluation of the expression hquote j expr i yields expr itself. This kind of delayed
evaluation may be useful in combination with the eval primitive which forces evaluation.

hquasiquotejexpr i

(delay evaluation and substitution)

This tag is a variant of the quote tag, which returns the expression expr in which all
subexpressions of the form hunquotejsubexpr i have been replaced by the evaluations of
subexpr . For instance,
hassignjhellojhquasiquotejhmacrojnamejhunquotejhlocalizejHelloii name.iii
may be used to dene a macro hello whose value is localized for the current language.
In a French document, the declaration would typically be equivalent to
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejBonjour name.ii
Notice however that it is usually better not to use the quasiquote primitive for such
applications. When dening
hassignjhellojhmacrojnamejhlocalizejHelloi name.ii
the typesetting of hhello j Namei would naturally adapt itself to the current language,
while the above version would always use the language at the moment of the denition
of the macro. Nevertheless, the rst form does have the advantage that the localization
of the word Hello only has to be computed once, when the macro is dened. Therefore,
the quasiquote primitive may sometimes be used in order to improve performance.

hunquotejsubexpr i

(mark substitutable subexpressions)

This tag is used in combination with quasiquote and quasi in order to mark the subexpressions which need to be evaluated.

hunquote*jsubexprsi

(unquote splicing)

This tag is similar to unquote, except that the argument subexprs now evaluates to a
list of subexpressions, which are inserted into the arguments of the parent node. For
instance, consider the macro
hassignjfunj
hxmacrojx j
hquasij
htreejdupjhunquote*jhquote-argjx iijhunquote*jhquote-argjx iiiiii

17.5 Functional operators

Then hfunjajbjci is typeset as

161

dup
a b c a b c
(substitution)

hquasijexpr i

This tag is a shortcut for heval jhquasiquote jexpr ii. This primitive is often used in the
TEXMACS style les in order to write macros which dene sets of other macros. For
instance, the macro
hassignjnew-theoremj
hmacrojnamejtextj
hquasij
hassignjhunquote jnameij
hmacrojbodyj
hsurroundjhno-indentihstrongjhunquotejtexti. ijhright-ushij
bodyiiiiii
may be used in order to dene new theorem-like environments.
(retrieve a value but don't evaluate)

hquote-valuejvar i

When retrieving an environment variable var , one is usually interested in its typeset
value, as given by hvaluejvar i. In some cases, it may be useful to access the real, nontypeset value. This can be done with hquote-valuejvar i.

hquote-argjvar jindex-1 jjindex-ni

(retrieve an argument but don't evaluate)

When retrieving (a subexpression of) a macro argument var , one is usually interested
in its typeset value, as given by hargjvar jindex-1 jjindex-ni. In some cases, it may be
useful to access the real, non-typeset value. This can be done with hquote-argjvar jindex1 jjindex-ni.

17.5. Functional operators
Functional operators are used for computational purposes during the typesetting phase,
such as increasing counters, localizing strings like theorem and so on. A fundamental set
of basic functional operators are built-in primitives. New functional operators can easily
be added using the extern primitive. Functional operators operate on ve main types of
arguments: strings, numbers, lengths, booleans and tuples. Some operators are overloaded,
so that they can be used for several types.

17.5.1. Operations on text
hlengthjexpr i

(length of a string)

If expr is a string, the length of the string is returned. For instance, hlength j Helloi
evaluates to 5.

hrangejexpr jstartjendi

(extract a substring)

Return the substring of expr starting at position start and ending at position end (not
included). For instance, hrange j hottentottententententoonstelling j 9 j 15i evaluates to
tenten.

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Primitives for writing style files

(concatenate strings)

hmergejexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

This primitive may be used to concatenate several strings expr-1 until expr-n. For
instance, hmergejHellojWorldi produces HelloWorld.

hnumberjnumber jrender-asi

(alternative rendering of numbers)

Renders a number in a specied way. Supported values for render-as are
roman. Lower case Roman: hnumberj18jromani ¡! xviii.
Roman. Upper case Roman: hnumberj18jRomani ¡! XVIII.
alpha. Lower case letters: hnumberj18jalphai ¡! r.
Alpha. Upper case letters: hnumberj18jAlphai ¡! R.
arabic. Arabic numbers: hnumberj18jarabici ¡! 18.
fnsymbol. Footnotes symbols: hnumberj2jfnsymboli ¡! y.

hdatei
hdatejformati
hdatejformatjlanguagei

(obtain the current date)

Returns the current date in a specied format (which defaults to a standard languagespecic format when empty) and a specied language (which defaults to English). The
format is similar to the one used by the Unix date command. For instance, hdatei
evaluates to June 1, 2019, hdatejjfrenchi to 1 juin 2019 and hdatej%d %B om %k:%Mj
dutchi to 01 June om 11:51.

htranslatejwhatjfromjintoi

(translation of strings)

Returns the translation of a string what of the language from into the language into,
using the built-in TEXMACS dictionaries. The languages should be specied in lowercase
letters. For instance, htranslatejFilejenglishjfrenchi yields Fichier.
The list of currently available languages can be checked in the Document!Language
menu. The built-in TEXMACS dictionaries can be found in
$TEXMACS_PATH/languages/natural/dic
When attempting to use a non-existing dictionary, the program may quit. For most
purposes, it is more convenient to use the localize macro, which converts a string from
English into the current language.

17.5.2. Arithmetic operations
hplusjexpr-1 jjexpr-ni
hminusjexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

(addition and subtraction)

Add or subtract numbers or lengths. For instance, hplus j1j2.3j5i yields 8.3 and hplus j
1cmj5mmi produces htmlenj90708.6i. In the case of subtractions, the last argument is
subtracted from the sum of the preceding arguments. For instance, hminusj1i produces
-1 and hminusj1j2j3j4i yields 2.

17.5 Functional operators

163

(multiplication)

htimesjexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

Multiply two numbers expr-1 until expr-n. One of the arguments is also allowed to be
a length, in which case a length is returned. For instance, htimesj3j3i evaluates to 9 and
htimesj3j2cmi to htmlenj362835i.
(division)

hoverjexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

Divide the product of all but the last argument by the last argument. For instance,
hoverj1j2j3j4j5j6j7i evaluates to 102.857, hoverj3spcj7i to htmlenj2214j3318.86j4976.57i,
and hoverj1cmj1pti to 28.4528.

hdivjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i
hmodjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i

(division with remainder)

Compute the result of the division of an integer expr-1 by an integer expr-2 , or its
remainder. For instance, hdivj18j7i=2 and hmodj18j7i=4.

hequaljexpr-1 jexpr-2 i
hunequaljexpr-1 jexpr-2 i
hlessjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i
hlesseqjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i
hgreaterjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i
hgreatereqjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i

(comparing numbers or lengths)

Return the result of the comparison between two numbers or lengths. For instance,
hlessj123j45i yields false and hlessj123mmj45cmi yields true.

17.5.3. Boolean operations
horjexpr-1 jjexpr-ni
handjexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

Returns the result of the boolean or/and on the expressions expr-1 until expr-n. For
instance, horjfalsejhequalj1j1ijfalsei yields true.

hxorjexpr-1 jexpr-2 i

Returns the exclusive or of two expressions expr-1 and expr-2 , i.e. hxorjtruejtruei yields
false.

hnotjexpr i

Returns the negation of expr .

17.5.4. Operations on tuples
htuplejexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

(construct a tuple)

Forms a tuple from the expressions expr-1 until expr-n.

his-tuplejexpr i

(tuple predicate)

Tests whether a given expression expr evaluates to a tuple.

hlengthjexpr i

(length of a tuple)

If expr is a tuple, then we return its arity. For instance, hlength j htuple j hop j holaii
evaluates to 2.

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(access an entry in a tuple)

hlook-upjtuplejwhichi

Returns the element with index which in tuple. For instance, hlook-upjhtuple jajbjcij1i
yields b.

hrangejexpr jstartjendi

(extract a subtuple)

hmergejexpr-1 jjexpr-ni

(concatenate tuples)

Return the subtuple of expr starting at position start and ending at position end (not
included). For instance, hrangejhtuplejajholajhopjbjcij2j4i evaluates to htuplejhopjbi.
This primitive may be used to concatenate several tuples expr-1 until expr-n. For
instance, hmergejhtuplej1j2ijhtuplej3j4j5ii produces htuplej1j2j3j4j5i.

17.6. Transient markup
The tags described in this section are used to control the rendering of style les and style
le elements. It both contains markup for activation and deactivation of content and for
the rendering of tags.
hactivejcontenti
hactive*jcontenti
hinactivejcontenti
hinactive*jcontenti

(activation/deactivation of content)

These tags can be used to temporarily or permanently change the activity of the content. In usual documents, tags are by default active. In style les, they are by default
1
inactive. For instance, an activated fraction is rendered as 2 ; when deactivated, it is
rendered as hfracj1j2i.

The active and inactive tags only activate or deactivate the root tag of the content.
Typically, a tag which contains hidden information (like hlink) can be deactivated by
positioning the cursor just behind it and pressing ⌫ . This action just deactivates the
hyperlink, but not the potentially complicated body of the hyperlink. Therefore, the
hyperlink is transformed into an inactive tag of the form hinactivejhhlinkjbodyjref ii.
The active* and inactive* variants are used to activate or deactivate the whole content
(except when other (dis-)activation tags are found inside the content). The inactive* is
used frequently inside the present documentation in order to show the inactive representation of TEXMACS content. Nevertheless, it is sometimes desirable to reactivate certain
subtrees inside deactivated content. For instance, the following piece of deactivated
code (using disactive*) contains the reactivated subexpression ~~~ (using active*):
hassignjlovejhmacrojfromj~~~ from from.ii
hinline-tagjnamejarg-1 jjarg-ni

(rendering of inline tags)

This tag is used for the default inline rendering of an inactive tag with a given name
and arguments arg-1 until arg-n. For instance, hinline-tagjfoojxjyi produces hfoojxjyi.
The style of the rendering may be customized in the Document!Source!Source tags
menu, or by modifying the src-style, src-special, src-compact and src-close environment
variables.

hopen-tagjnamejarg-1 jjarg-ni
hmiddle-tagjnamejarg-1 jjarg-ni

17.6 Transient markup

165

(rendering of multi-line tags)

hclose-tagjnamejarg-1 jjarg-ni

These tags are similar to inline-tag, when some of the arguments of the tag run over
several lines. Typical HTML-like tags would correspond to hopen-tagjnamei and hclosetag jnamei. Since TEXMACS macros may take more than one argument, a middle-tag is
provided for separating distinct multi-paragraph arguments. Moreover, the opening,
middle and closing tags may take additional inline arguments for rendering in a compact
fashion. For instance, the code
hopen-tagjtheoremi
hindentjThe weather should be nice today.i
hclose-tagjtheoremi
is rendered by default as
htheoremj
The weather should be nice today.
i
The rendering may be customized in a similar way as in the case of inline-tag.

hstyle-withjvar-1 jval-1 jjvar-njval-njbodyi
hstyle-with*jvar-1 jval-1 jjvar-njval-njbodyi

(alter presentation in style les only)

This tag may be used in order to temporarily modify the rendering of inactive tags,
by setting each environment variable var-i to val-i in the local typesetting context of
body. When importing a style le, each style-with/style-with* tag is replaced by its body.
In the case of style-with, the modied rendering is only applied to the root tag of the
body. In the case of style-with*, the rendering is modied for the entire body.

hstyle-onlyjhfoojcontentii
hstyle-only*jhfoojcontentii

(content for use in style les only)

This tag may be used in order to render an inactive tags as whether we applied the
macro foo on it. When importing a style le, each style-only/style-only* tag is replaced
by its content. In the case of style-only, the modied rendering is only applied to the
root tag of the content. In the case of style-only*, the rendering is modied for the entire
content.

hsymboljsymbol i
hlatexjcmdi
hhybridjcmdi
hhybridjcmdjargi

(auxiliary tags for entering special content)

These tags are used only temporarily when entering special content.
When pressing ⌃Q , a symbol tag is created. After entering the name of the symbol, or
the ASCII-code of the symbol and pressing return, the symbol tag is replaced by the
corresponding symbol (usually a string enclosed in <>).
When pressing \ , a hybrid tag is created. After entering a string and pressing return, it
is determined whether the string corresponds to a LATEX command, a macro argument,
a macro or an environment variable (in this order). If so, then the hybrid tag is replaced
by the appropriate content. When pressing \ while a selection is active, then the
selection automatically becomes the argument of the hybrid command (or the hybrid
command itself, when recognized).

166

Primitives for writing style files

The latex tag behaves similarly as the hybrid tag except that it only recognizes LATEX
commands.
The rendering macros for source trees are built-in into TEXMACS. They should not really
be considered as primitives, but they are not part of any style le either.
hindentjbodyi

(indent some content)

hrightushi

(indent some content)

Typeset the body using some indentation.

Flush to the right. This macro is useful to make the end of a block environment run
until the right margin. This allows for more natural cursor positioning and a better
layout of the informative boxes.

hsrc-macrojmacro-namei
hsrc-varjvariable-namei
hsrc-argjargument-namei
hsrc-ttjverbatim-contenti
hsrc-integerjinterger i
hsrc-lengthjlengthi
hsrc-errorjmessagei

(syntactic highlighting on purpose)

These macros are used for the syntactic highlighting of source trees. They determine
how to render subtrees which correspond to macro names, variable names, argument
names, verbatim content, integers, lengths and error messages.

hsrc-titlejtitlei
hsrc-style-lejnamejversioni
hsrc-packagejnamejversioni
hsrc-package-dtdjnamejversionjdtdjdtd-versioni

(style and package administration)

These macros are used for the identication of style les and packages and their corresponding D.T.D.s. The src-title is a container for src-style-le, src-package, src-packagedtd as well as src-license and src-copyright macros.
The src-style-le tag species the name and version of a style le and sets the environment variable with name-style to version. The src-package-dtd species the name and
version of a package, as well as the corresponding dtd and its version dtd-version. It
sets the environment variable name-package to version and dtd-dtd to dtd-version. The
src-package tag is a shorthand for src-package-dtd when the name of the D.T.D. coincides
with the name of the package.

17.7. Miscellaneous style-sheet primitives
hexternjscheme-foojarg-1 jjarg-ni

(apply extern typesetting macro)

This primitive allows the user to implement macros in Scheme. The primitive applies
the Scheme function or macro scheme-foo to the arguments arg-1 until arg-n. For
instance, the code hexternj(lambda (name) `(concat "hi " ,name))jdudei yields hi
dude.
The arguments arg-1 until arg-n are evaluated and then passed as trees to scheme-foo.
When dening a macro which relies on extern scheme code, it is therefore recommended
to pass the macro arguments using the quote-arg primitive:

17.8 Internal primitives

167

hassignjinc-divj
hmacrojx jyj
hexternj
(lambda (x y) `(frac ,x (concat "1+" ,y)))j
hquote-argjx ij
hquote-argjyiiii
It has been foreseen that the accessibility of the macro arguments x and y is preserved
for this kind of denitions. However, since TEXMACS does not heuristically analyze your
Scheme code, you will have to manually set the D.R.D. properties using drd-props.
Notice also that the Scheme function scheme-foo should only rely on secure scheme
functions (and not on functions like system which may erase your hard disk). User
implemented Scheme functions in plug-ins may be dened to be secure using the
:secure option. Alternatively, the user may dene all Scheme routines to be secure
in Edit!Preferences!Security!Accept all scripts.
hwritejaux jcontenti

(write auxiliary information)

hagjcontentjcolor i
hagjcontentjcolor jvar i

(display an informative ag)

Adds content to the auxiliary section aux of the document. This tag is used for instance
by hnocitejcitekeyi to add entries to the automatically generated bibliography at the
end of the document, without inserting a citation in the text.

This tag is used to in order to inform the user about information which is present in the
document, but not visible when printed out. TEXMACS displays such informative ags for
labels, formatting directives such as page breaks, and so on. In Document!Informative
ags, the user may specify how the informative ags should be rendered.
The two-argument variant displays an informative ag with a given content and color .
The content is only rendered when selecting Document!Informative ags!Detailed. For
instance, hag jwarningjredi is rendered as . The optional var argument may be used
in order to specify that the ag should only be visible if the macro argument var
corresponds to an accessible part of the document. For instance, TEXMACS automatically
generates labels for section titles (so as to include them in the table of contents), but
it is undesirable to display informative ags for such labels.

17.8. Internal primitives
The primitives in this section are merely for internal use by TEXMACS only. They are
documented for the sake of completeness, but you should only use them if you really know
what you are doing.
huniniti

(unknown content or uninitialized data)

hunknowni

(unknown content or uninitialized data)

This primitive is mainly used for default uninitialized value of environment variables;
the main advantage of this tag is to be distinct from the empty string.

This primitive is mainly used for default uninitialized value of environment variables;
the main advantage of this tag is to be distinct from the empty string.

168

Primitives for writing style files

This value is less likely to be encountered than uninit
(error messages)

herrorjmessagei

This primitive should never appear in documents. It is provided as aid in tracking down
invalid constructs. It is produced at evaluation time by any kind of primitive which is
given improper operands.

hcollectionjbinding-1 jjbinding-ni
hassociatejkeyjvaluei

(collections of bindings)

The collection tag is used to represent hash tables with bindings binding-1 until bindingn. Each binding is of the form hassociatejkeyjvaluei, with a key and an associated value.
(XML-like attributes)

hattrjkey-1 jval-1 jjkey-njval-ni

This tag is included for future compatibility with XML. It is used for encoding XMLstyle attributes by TEXMACS trees. For instance, the fragment

Some XML stuff

would typically be represented as
hblahjhattrjcolor jbluejemotionjverboseijSome XML stui

htagjcontentjannotationi
hmeaningjcontentjannotationi

(associate a meaning to some content)

Associate a special meaning to some content. Currently, no real use has been made of
these tags.
(save values on stack)

hbackupjsavejstack i

Used to represent temporarily saved values on a stack.
(marker for decorations)

hdboxi

This primitive is only intended for internal use by the datoms, dlines and dpages primitives.

hrewrite-inactivejtjvar i

(internal primitive for rendering inactive markup)

This internal primitive is used for rewriting an inactive tree into a new tree whose
rendering corresponds to the rendering of the inactive tree. It may be successfully
invoked from within a macro.
e.g. hassignjshow-inactivejhmacrojx jhrewrite-inactivejx jiii

which might be invoked to show itself or another assigned variable using quasiquote in
this manner: hquasiquotejhshow-inactivejhunquotejshow-inactiveiii
hnew-dpagei
hnew-dpage*i

Yet to be implemented primitives for starting a new double page.

(new double page)

17.8 Internal primitives

hidentityjmarkupi

169

(identity macro)

The identity macro is built-in into TEXMACS. It should not really be considered as a
primitive, but it is not part of any style le either.

In addition to these primitives for internal use only, there are also quite a few obsolete
primitives, which are no longer being used by TEXMACS, but whose names should be avoided
when creating your own macros. The full list of obsolete primitives is: format, line-sep, withlimits, split, old-matrix, old-table, old-mosaic, old-mosaic-item, set, reset, expand, expand*, hideexpand, apply, begin, end, func, env, authorize.

Chapter 18
The standard TEXMACS styles
The user may select a major style from the Document!Style menu. The major style usually
reects the kind of document you want to produce (like a letter, an article or a book) or
a particular layout policy (like publishing an article in a given journal).
The user may further customize the main style, by selecting one or more additional style
packages. Some of these packages are available in the menu Document!Style!Add package.
Other style packages mainly customize specic tags, and they can be selected from the
Focus!Preferences!Style options menu group, whenever available. For instance, inside a
theorem, you may use Focus!Preferences!European numbering to enable European style
numbering for theorem-like environments (that is, theorems, propositions, lemmas, etc. are
all numbered using their own individual counters).
In this chapter, we will survey the standard document styles and packages provided by
TEXMACS. Most style les and packages have an abstract interface, the d.t.d. (data domain
denition), which species which macros are exported by the style or package, and how to
use them. Distinct styles or packages (like header-article and header-book) may share
the same abstract interface, but dier in the way macros are rendered. For this reason,
we will mainly be concerned with the description of the standard d.t.d.s, except when we
focus on the rendering. Users may customize standard styles by dening new ones which
match the same abstract interface (see the chapter on writing TEXMACS style les).

18.1. General organization
18.1.1. Standard TEXMACS styles
The main TEXMACS styles are:
generic
This is the default style when you open a new document. The purpose of this style is
to produce quick, informal documents. For this reason, the layout of paragraphs is very
simple: instead of indenting the rst lines of paragraphs, they are rather separated by
white-space.
article
This style may be used for writing short scientic articles, which are subdivided into
sections. The numbering of environments like theorems, remarks, etc. is relative to the
entire document. If you use the number-long-article package, then the numbers are
prexed by the section number.
beamer
This style may be used for the creation of highly interactive laptop presentations. By
default, we use a bluish theme similar to the LATEX beamer package, but other themes
can be selected from the menus.
171

172

The standard TEXMACS styles

book
This is the basic style for writing books. Books are assumed to be subdivided into
chapters and numbers of environments are prexed by the chapter number. In general,
it is also comfortable to store each chapter in a separate le, so that they can be edited
more eciently. This issue is explained in more detail in the section about books and
multile documents.
seminar
Documents based on this style are typically printed on slides for presentations using
an overhead projector. You may also want to use it when making presentation directly
from your laptop, after selecting View!Presentation mode. Notice however, that slides
correspond to real pages, whereas you rather should use switches in presentation
mode.
source
This is the privileged style for editing style les and packages. It enables source mode,
so that documents are rendered in a way which makes the structure fully apparent. For
more details, we refer to the section on the rendering of style les.
The article style admits several variants, so as to make the layout correspond to the policy
of specic journals. Currently, we have implemented TEXMACS analogues of the common
LATEX styles amsart, acmconf, elsart, ieeeconf, aip, aps, svjour, etc. Similarly, we are
developing styles tmarticle and tmbook which provide an alternative layout for articles
and books.
In addition to variants of the article and book styles, TEXMACS provides also a few other
styles, which are based on the main styles, but which provide some additional markup.
letter
This style is based on the informal generic style, but it provides additional markup
for writing letters. The additional macros are mainly used for headers and endings of
letters.
exam
This style, which is again based on generic, provides some additional markup for
headers of exams. It also customizes the rendering of exercises.
tmdoc
This style is used for writing the TEXMACS documentation. It contains several tags for
special types of content and extensions for linking, indexing, document traversal, etc..
Some aspects of this style are still under heavy development.

18.1.2. Standard TEXMACS packages
First of all, TEXMACS provides several packages for customizing the behaviour of the standard styles:
number-long-article
This package induces all numbers of environments (theorems, remarks, equations, gures, etc.) to be prefixed by the current section number. It is usually used in combination
with the article style (for long articles) and the book style (for books with long
chapters).

18.2 The common base for most styles

173

number-europe
By default, TEXMACS uses American style numbering. This means that the same
counter is used for numbering similar environments like theorem and proposition. In
other words, a remark following Theorem 3 will be numbered Remark 4. If you want
each environment to have its individual counter, then you should enable European
style numbering, by selecting the number-europe package.
number-us
This package may be used in order to switch back to American style numbering in the
case when a third parties style le enforces European style numbering.
structured-list
This is an experimental package. By default, items in unnumbered lists or enumerations take no arguments and items in descriptions one argument. When using the
structured-list package, they take an optional additional argument with the body
of the item.
structured-section
This is an experimental package. By default, sectional tags only take a title argument.
When using the structured-section package, they take an optional additional argument with the body of the section. Moreover, the environment rsection for recursive
sections is provided.
framed-session
This package may be used in order to obtain an alternative rendering of interactive
sessions. The rendering is designed to be nice for interactive use, although less adequate
for printing.
In addition to these packages, and the many packages for internal use, TEXMACS also
provides a few personal example style packages allouche, bpr and vdh and several style
packages for use in combination with external plug-ins (axiom, giac, macaulay2, etc.).

18.2. The common base for most styles
The std d.t.d. contains the markup which is common to virtually all styles. It is subdivided
into the following parts:

18.2.1. Standard markup
Various standard markup is dened in std-markup. The following textual content tags all
take one argument. Most can be found in the Insert!Content tag menu.
hstrongjcontenti

Indicates an important region of text. You can enter this tag via Insert!Content
tag!Strong.

hemjcontenti

Emphasizes a region of text like in the real thing. This tag corresponds to the menu
entry Insert!Content tag!Emphasize.

174

The standard TEXMACS styles

hdfnjcontenti

For denitions like a gnu is a horny beast. This tag corresponds to Insert!Content
tag!Denition.

hsampjcontenti

A sequence of literal characters like the ae ligature æ. You can get this tag via Insert!
Content tag!Sample.

hnamejcontenti

The name of a particular thing or concept like the Linux system. This tag is obtained
using Insert!Content tag!Name.

hpersonjcontenti

The name of a person like Joris. This tag corresponds to Insert!Content tag!Person.

hcite*jcontenti

A bibliographic citation like a book or magazine. Example: Melville's Moby Dick. This
tag, which is obtained using Insert!Content tag!Cite, should not be confused with cite.
The latter tag is also used for citations, but where the argument refers to an entry in
a database with bibliographic references.

habbrjcontenti

An abbreviation. Example: I work at the C.N.R.S. An abbreviation is created using
Insert!Content tag!Abbreviation or the ⌥A keyboard shortcut.

hacronymjcontenti

An acronym is an abbreviation formed from the rst letter of each word in a name or
a phrase, such as HTML or IBM. In particular, the letters are not separated by dots.
You may enter an acronym using Insert!Content tag!Acronym.

hverbatimjcontenti

Verbatim text like output from a computer program. Example: the program said hello.
You may enter verbatim text via Insert!Content tag!Verbatim. The tag may also be
used as an environment for multi-paragraph text.

hkbdjcontenti

Text which should be entered on a keyboard. Example: please type return. This tag
corresponds to the menu entry Insert!Content tag!Keyboard.

hcode*jcontenti

Code of a computer program like in cout << 1+1; yields 2. This is entered using
Insert!Content tag!Code. For longer pieces of code, you should use the code environment.

hvarjcontenti

Variables in a computer program like in cp src-file dest-file . This tag corresponds
to the menu entry Insert!Content tag!Variable.

18.2 The common base for most styles

175

hmathjcontenti

This tag is used for mathematics inside regular text. Example: the formula sin2 x +
cos2 x = 1 is well-known.

hopjcontenti

This is a tag which can be used inside mathematics for specifying that an operator
should be considered on itself, without any arguments. Example: the operation + is a
function from R2 to R. This tag may become depreciated.

httjcontenti

This is a physical tag for typewriter phase. It is used for compatibility with HTML,
but we do not recommend its use.

Most of the following logical size tags can be found in Insert!Size tag (or Insert!Size tag):
hreally-tinyjcontenti, htinyjcontenti
hreally-smalljcontenti, hvery-smalljcontenti, hsmallerjcontenti, hsmalljcontenti
hnormal-sizejcontenti
hlargejcontenti, hlargerjcontenti, hvery-largejcontenti, hreally-largejcontenti
hhugejcontenti, hreally-hugejcontenti

These logical size tags should be used by preference when typesetting parts of your
document in a larger or smaller font. Environments like footnotes or captions of tables
may also be based on logical size tags. Document styles from professional publishers
often assign very precise font settings to each of the logical size tags. By default, the
size tags are rendered as follows:
Really tiny

Tiny
Really small

Very small
Smaller

Small

Normal size

Large

Larger

Very large

Really large

Huge

Really huge
The following are standard environments:
hverbatimjbodyi

Described above.

hcodejbodyi

Similar to code*, but for pieces of code of several lines.

176

The standard TEXMACS styles

hquote-envjbodyi

Environment for short (one paragraph) quotations.

hquotationjbodyi

Environment for long (multi-paragraph) quotations.

hversejbodyi

Environment for poetry.

hcenterjbodyi

This is a physical tag for centering one or several lines of text. It is used for compatibility
with HTML, but we do not recommend its use.

Some standard tabular environments are
htabular*jtablei

Centered tables.

hblockjtablei

Left aligned tables with a border of standard 1ln width.

hblock*jtablei

Centered tables with a border of standard 1ln width.

The following tags are used to adjust the typesetting of content whenever necessary:
hsmashjbodyi
hsmash-topjbodyi, hsmash-bottomjbodyi

(smash vertical size to the size of an 'x')

hswelljbodyi
hswell-top j bodyi, hswell-bottom j bodyi
font)

(increase vertical size to the largest character in

These macros can be used to adjust the vertical extents of the body to those of the
character 'x'. In the case of smash-top and smash-bottom, only the top resp. bottom are
changed.

These macros can be used to increase the vertical extents of the body to those of the
largest character in the current font. In the case of swell-top and swell-bottom, only the
top resp. bottom are changed. This kind of adjustments may for instance be used in
order to ensure that 2  2 matrices with simple textual contents always have the same
size:






f 0
a x
f 0
x
;
versus
; a
0 a
0 f
0 f
0 a
In fact, for a more uniform appearance, swelling is activated by default inside matrices.
hextendjcontentjleft-limjbot-limjright-limjtop-limi

(extend the size)

This primitive is similar to resize, except that the new size of the content is always
larger than the original size.

The following miscellaneous tags don't take arguments:

18.2 The common base for most styles

177

hTeXmacsi

The TEXMACS logo.

hTeXmacs-versioni

The current version of TEXMACS (1.99.9).

hmade-by-TeXmacsi

A macro which may be used to indicate that your document was written using TEXMACS.

hTeXi

The TEX logo.

hLaTeXi

The LATEX logo.

hhrulei

A horizontal rule like the one you see below:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The following miscellaneous tags all take one or more arguments:
hphantomjcontenti

This tag takes as much space as the typeset argument content would take, but content
is not displayed. For instance, hphantomjphantomi yields 
.

hoverlinejcontenti

For overlined text, which can be wrapped across several lines.

hunderlinejcontenti

For underlined text, which can be wrapped across several lines.

hfoldedjsummaryjbodyi

The summary is displayed and the body ignored: the macro corresponds to the folded
presentation of a piece of content associated to a short title or abstract. The second
argument can be made visible using Insert!Switch!Unfold.

hunfoldedjsummaryjbodyi

Unfolded presentation of a piece of content body associated to a short title or abstract
summary. The second argument can be made invisible using Insert!Switch!Fold.

hswitchjcurrentjalternativesi

Content which admits a nite number of alternative representation among which the
user can switch using the function keys F9 , F10 , F11 and F12 . This may for instance
be used in interactive presentations. The argument current correspond to the currently
visible presentation and alternative to the set of alternatives.

18.2.2. Standard symbols
The std-symbol d.t.d. denes the special symbols ¢, ¤, ¥, ©, «, ®, °, ², ³, ¹, µ, ¶, ¼, ½,
¾, ¿ and —. It also provides the macro nbsp for non-breakable spaces.

178

The standard TEXMACS styles

As soon as the font support will be further improved, this d.t.d. should become obsolete.

18.2.3. Standard mathematical markup
Standard mathematical markup is dened in std-math.
hbinomjamongjnr i

For binomial coecients, like

hchoosejamongjnr i



n
m



.

Alternative name for binom, but depreciated.

hshrink-inlinejamongjnr i

A macro which switches to scriptsize text when you are not in display style. This macro
is mainly used by developers. For instance, the binom macro uses it.

The following are standard mathematical tabular environments:
hmatrixjtablei

For matrices M =



1 2
3 4

hdetjtablei

For determinants  =

hchoicejtablei

For choice lists jxj =





.

1 2
3 4

.

¡x; if x 6 0
x;
if x > 0

.

18.2.4. Standard lists
18.2.4.1. Using list environments
The standard TEXMACS lists are dened in std-list. The unnumbered lists environments
are:
hitemizejbodyi

The tag before each item depends on the nesting depth.

hitemize-minusjbodyi

Uses ¡ for the tag.

hitemize-dotjbodyi

Uses  for the tag.

hitemize-arrowjbodyi

Uses ! for the tag.

The following environments can be used for producing numbered lists:
henumeratejbodyi

The kind of number before each item depends on the nesting depth.

18.2 The common base for most styles

179

henumerate-numericjbodyi

Number the items by 1, 2, 3, etc.

henumerate-romanjbodyi

Number the items by i, ii, iii, etc.

henumerate-Romanjbodyi

Number the items by I, II, III, etc.

henumerate-alphajbodyi

Number the items by a), b), c), etc.

henumerate-Alphajbodyi

Number the items by A), B), C), etc.

The following environments can be used for descriptive lists:
hdescriptionjbodyi

The environment for default descriptive lists (usually description-compact).

hdescription-compactjbodyi

Align the left hand sides of the items in the list and put their descriptions shortly behind
it.

hdescription-dashjbodyi

Similar to description-compact, but use a  to separate each item from its description.

hdescription-alignjbodyi

Align the left hand sides of the descriptions, while aligning the items to the right.

hdescription-longjbodyi

Put the items and their descriptions on distinct lines.

New items in a list are indicated through the item tag or the item* tag in the case of
descriptions. The item tag takes no arguments and the item* tag one argument. When
using the experimental structured-list package, these tags may take an optional body
argument. In the future, all list items should become structured.
By default, items in sublists are numbered in the same way as usual lists. Each list environment list admits a variant list* whose items are prexed by the last item in the parent
list. Of course, this feature can be used recursively.
18.2.4.2. Customization of list environments
The std-list provides the following redenable macros for customizing the rendering of
lists and items in lists:
hrender-listjbodyi

This block environment is used to render the body of the list. Usually, the macro indents
the body and puts some vertical space around it.

180

The standard TEXMACS styles

haligned-itemjitem-texti

This inline macro is used to render the item-text in a right-aligned way. As a consequence, text after such items will appear in a left-aligned way.

hcompact-itemjitem-texti

This inline macro is used to render the item-text in a left-aligned way. As a consequence,
text after such items may be indented by the width of the item-text (except when the
text is rendered on a dierent paragraph).

18.2.5. Automatic content generation
The std-automatic d.t.d. contains macros for the automatic generation and rendering of
auxiliary content. There are four main types of such content in TEXMACS: bibliographies,
tables of contents, indexes and glossaries. Other types of automatically generated content
like lists of gures are usually similar to one of the four above types (in the case of
lists of gures, we use glossaries). The rendering of the entire sections which contain the
bibliographies, tables of contents, etc. are specied in the section-base d.t.d..
18.2.5.1. Bibliographies
The following macros may be used in the main text for citations to entries in a bibliographic
database.
hcitejref-1 jjref-ni

Each argument ref-i is a citation corresponding to an item in a BiB-TEX le. The
citations are displayed in the same way as they are referenced in the bibliography and
they also provide hyperlinks to the corresponding references. The citations are displayed
as question marks if you did not generate the bibliography. Once you've added a
bibliography le, pressing ⇥ inside the arguments will auto-complete with the cite-keys
in your le.

hnocitejref-1 jjref-ni

Similar as cite, but the citations are not displayed in the main text.

hcite-detailjref jinfoi

A bibliographic reference ref like cite and nocite, but with some additional information
info, like a chapter or a page number.

The following macros may be redened if you want to customize the rendering of citations
or entries in the generated bibliography:
hrender-citejref i

Macro for rendering a citation ref at the place where the citation is made using cite.
The content may be a single reference, like TM98, or a list of references, like Euler1,
Gauss2.

hrender-cite-detailjref jinfoi

Similar to render-cite, but for detailed citations made with cite-detail.

hrender-bibitemjcontenti

18.2 The common base for most styles

181

htransform-bibitemjcontenti

At the moment, bibliographies are generated by BibTEX and imported into TEXMACS.
The produced bibliography is a list of bibliographic items with are based on special
LATEX-specic macros (bibitem, block, protect, etc.). These macros are all dened internally in TEXMACS and eventually boil down to calls of the render-bibitem, which behaves
in a similar way as item*, and which may be redened by the user.
The transform-bibitem is used to decorate the content. For instance, transform-bibitem
may put angular brackets and a space around content.

hbib-listjlargestjbodyi

The individual bibitems are enclosed in a bib-list, which behaves in a similar way as
the description environment, except that we provide an extra parameter largest which
contains a good indication about the largest width of an item in the list.

18.2.5.2. Tables of contents
The following macros may be used in the main text for adding entries to the table of
contents. They are automatically called by most sectional macros, but it is sometimes
desirable to manually add additional entries.
htoc-main-1jentryi
htoc-main-2jentryi

Create an important entry in the table of contents. The macro toc-main-1 is intended
to be used only for very important entries, such as parts of a book; it usually has to be
added manually. The macro toc-main-2 is intended to be used for chapter or sections.
Important entries are usually displayed in a strong font.

htoc-normal-1jentryi
htoc-normal-2jentryi
htoc-normal-3jentryi

Add a normal entry to the table of contents, of dierent levels of importance. Usually,
toc-normal-1 corresponds to sections, toc-normal-2 to subsections and toc-normal-3 to
subsubsections.

htoc-small-1jentryi
htoc-small-2jentryi

Add an unimportant entry to the table of contents, like a paragraph. Since such entries
are not very important, some styles may simply ignore the toc-small-1 and toc-small-2
tags.

By redening the following macros, it is possible to customize the rendering of tables of
contents:
htoc-strong-1jcontentjwherei
htoc-strong-2jcontentjwherei

Used for rendering table of contents entries created using toc-main-1 resp. toc-main-2.

htoc-1jcontentjwherei
htoc-2jcontentjwherei
htoc-3jcontentjwherei

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The standard TEXMACS styles

htoc-4jcontentjwherei
htoc-5jcontentjwherei

Used for rendering table of contents entries created using toc-normal-1, toc-normal-2,
toc-normal-3, toc-small-1 resp. toc-small-2.

htoc-dotsi

The separation between an entry in the table of contents and the corresponding page
number. By default, we use horizontal dots.

18.2.5.3. Indexes
The following macros may be used in the main text for inserting entries into the index.
hindexjprimaryi

Insert primary as a primary entry in the index.

hsubindexjprimaryjsecondaryi

Insert secondary in the index as a subentry of primary.

hsubsubindexjprimaryjsecondaryjternaryi

Similar to subindex but for subsubentries ternary.

hindex-complexjkeyjhowjrangejentryi

Insert complex entries into the index. This feature is documented in detail in the section
about index generation.

hindex-linejkeyjentryi

Adds entry to the index, by sorting it according to key.

The following macros may be redened if you want to customize the rendering of the index:
hindex-1jentryjwherei
hindex-2jentryjwherei
hindex-3jentryjwherei
hindex-4jentryjwherei
hindex-5jentryjwherei

Macro for rendering an entry in the index on page(s) where. The macro index-1 corresponds to principal entries, the macro index-2 to secondary entries, and so on.

hindex-1*jentryi
hindex-2*jentryi
hindex-3*jentryi
hindex-4*jentryi
hindex-5*jentryi

Similar to index-1 until index-5, but without the page number(s).

hindex-dotsi

Macro for producing the dots between an index entry and the corresponding page
number(s).

18.2 The common base for most styles

183

18.2.5.4. Glossaries
The following macros may be used in the main text for inserting glossary entries.
hglossaryjentryi

Insert entry into the glossary.

hglossary-dupjentryi

For creating an additional page number for an entry which was already inserted before.

hglossary-explainjentryjexplanationi

A function for inserting a glossary entry with its explanation.

hglossary-linejentryi

Insert a glossary entry without a page number.

The following macros can be redened if you want to customize the rendering of the
glossary:
hglossary-1jentryjwherei

Macro for rendering a glossary entry and its corresponding page number(s).

hglossary-2jentryjexplanationjwherei

Macro for rendering a glossary entry, its explanation, and its page number.

hglossary-dotsi

Macro for producing the dots between a glossary entry and the corresponding page
number(s).

18.2.6. Utilities for writing style les
The std-utils package provides several macros which may be useful when writing style
les. First of all, the following macros may be used for rendering purposes:
hhushi
hleft-ushi
hright-ushi

Low level tags for ushing to the right in the denition of environments. One usually
should use wide-normal or wide-centered instead.

hwide-normaljbodyi
hwide-centeredjbodyi

These tags are used to make the body span over the entire paragraph width. The text is
left-aligned in the case of wide-normal and centered in the case of wide-centered. Making
a body span over the entire paragraph width does not change the rendering on paper,
but it facilitates the editing on the document. Indeed, on the one hand, the box which
indicates that you are inside the environment will span over the entire paragraph width.
On the other hand, when clicking suciently close to the text inside this box, it becomes
easier to position your cursor at the start or at the end inside the environment. You
may check this by clicking on one of the texts below:

184

The standard TEXMACS styles

>Some text inside a wide-normal environment.

<

>

<

Some text inside a wide-centered environment.

hpadded-normaljspace-abovejspace-belowjbodyi
hpadded-centeredjspace-abovejspace-belowjbodyi

These tags are variants of hwide-normaljbodyi and hwide-centeredjbodyi, which put some
vertical white space space-above and space-below above and below the body.

hwide-bothlinedjtop-border jbot-border jtop-sepjbot-sepjbodyi
hwide-std-bothlinedjbodyi
hpadded-bothlinedjspace-abovejspace-belowjtop-border jbot-border jtop-sepjbot-sepjbodyi
hpadded-std-bothlinedjspace-abovejspace-belowjbodyi
hwide-underlinedjbborder jbsepjbodyi
hwide-std-underlinedjbodyi

These tags are used to make the body span over the entire paragraph width and to
put a horizontal rule above and/or below it. The widths of the rules are given by topborder and bot-border and the separation between the rules by top-sep and bot-sep.
The standard width and separation (used by wide-std-bothlined, padded-std-bothlined and
wide-std-underlined) are 1ln and 1sep. The padded variants specify additional spaces
space-above and space-below above and below the rules. As an example, hwide-stdunderlinedjlefthhtabj5mmirighti yields:
left

right

Wide underlined environments are typically used for page headers. Wide environments
which are both overlined and underlined are typically used for abstracts or oating
gures and tables.
hwide-framedjborder-widthjhsepjvsepjbodyi
hwide-std-framedjbodyi
hwide-framed-coloredjborder-color jbody-color jborder-widthjhsepjvsepjbodyi
hwide-std-framed-coloredjborder-color jbody-color jbodyi

These tags put the body inside a frame box which spans over the whole paragraph.
The user may specify a border-width, horizontal and vertical separations hsep and
vsep between the border and the text, and colors border-color and body-color for the
border and the background. For instance, hwide-std-framed-coloredjbrownjpastel greenj
Hi there!i yields
Hi there!

hindent-leftjleft-amountjbodyi
hindent-rightjright-amountjbodyi
hindent-bothjleft-amountjright-amountjbodyi

These environments may be used in order to increase the current left and/or right
indentation by the amounts left-amount and/or right-amount.

hmargin-rst-otherjrst-marginjother-marginjbodyi

This environment allows to set the margin rst-margin for the rst lines of paragraphs
in the body, as well as the margin other-margin for the other lines. This environment
is for instance useful for glossaries, indexes, etc., in which case other-margin is often
larger than rst-margin. Notice that this environment enables indentation for the rst
line of body.

18.2 The common base for most styles

185

The following macros may be used in order to set headers and footers:
hset-headerjheader-texti

A macro for permanently changing the header. Notice that certain tags in the style
le, like sectional tags, may override such manual changes.

hset-footerjfooter-texti

A macro for permanently changing the footer. Again, certain tags in the style le may
override such manual changes.

hblanc-pagei

Remove all headers and footers from this page.

hsimple-pagei

Remove the header of this page and set the footer to the current page number (centered). This macro is often called for title pages or at the start of new chapters.

Other macros provided by std-utils are:
hlocalizejtexti

This macro should be used in order to localize some English text to the current
language. For instance, hwithjlanguagejfrenchjhlocalizejTheoremii yields Théorème.

hmapjfunjtuplei

This macro applies the macro fun to each of the entries in a tuple (or the children of
an arbitrary TEXMACS tag) and returns the result as a tuple. For instance, hmapjhmacroj
x j hem j x ii jhtuple j1j2j3ii yields hquote jhtuple j1 j2 j 3 ii (the quote only appears when
rendering the result, not when performing further computations with it).

18.2.7. Counters and counter groups
In TEXMACS, all automatic numbering of theorems, sections, etc. is done using counters.
Such counters may be individual counters (like equation-nr ) or belong to a group of similar
counters (like in the case of theorem-nr ). TEXMACS allows for the customization of counters
on an individual or groupwise basis. Typically, you may redene the rendering of a counter
(and let it appear as roman numerals, for instance), or undertake special action when
increasing the counter (such as resetting a subcounter).
New individual counters are dened using the following meta-macro:
hnew-counterjx i

Denes a new counter with name x . The counter is stored in the numerical environment
variable x-nr and in addition, the following macros are dened:
hthe-x i

Retrieve the counter such as it should be displayed on the screen.

hreset-x i

Reset the counter to 0.

186

The standard TEXMACS styles

hinc-x i

Increase the counter. This macro may also be customized by the user so as to reset
other counters (even though this is not the way things are done in the standard
style les).

hnext-x i

Increase the counter, display the counter and set the current label.

For the purpose of customization, the new-counter macro also denes the following
macros:
hdisplay-x jnr i

This is the macro which is used for transforming the numerical value of the counter
into the value which is displayed on the screen.

hcounter-x jx i

This internal macro is used in order to retrieve the name of the environment variable
which contains the counter. By default, this macro returns nr-x, but it may be
redened if the counter belongs to a group.

As noticed in the introduction, TEXMACS uses counter groups in order to make it possible
to treat similar counters in a uniform way. For instance the counter group theorem-env
regroups the counters theorem, proposition, lemma, etc. New counter groups are dened
using:
hnew-counter-groupjgi

Create a new counter group with name g. This results in the creation of the following
macros:
hdisplay-in-g jx jnr i
hcounter-in-g jx i

These macros are similar to the macros display-x and counter-x from above, but
relative to the counter group. The name x of the counter in consideration is passed
as an argument.

New counters can be added to the group using:
hadd-to-counter-groupjx jgi

Denes a new counter x and add it to the counter group g. For counters in groups,
the macros display-x and counter-x are replaced with the corresponding macros displayin-g and counter-in-g for their groups. Nevertheless, two new macros ind-display-x and
ind-counter-x are dened which may take over the roles of display-x and counter-x in the
case when the group consists of individual counters.

At any moment, you may decide whether the counters of a group share a common group
counter, or whether they all use their individual counters. This feature is used for instance
in order to switch between American style numbering and European style numbering:
hgroup-common-counterjgi

Use a common counter for the group (which is stored in the environment variable g-nr ).

18.2 The common base for most styles

187

hgroup-individual-countersjgi

Use an individual counter for each member of the group (this is the default).

We notice that group counters may recursively belong to super-groups. For instance, the
following declarations are from env-base.ts:
hnew-counter-groupjstd-envi

hnew-counter-groupjtheorem-envi
hadd-to-counter-groupjtheorem-envjstd-envi
hgroup-common-counterjtheorem-envi

18.2.8. Special markup for programs
The program d.t.d. provides markup for the layout of computer programs. However, these
tags should be considered as very unstable, since we plan to replace them by a set of more
detailed tags:
halgorithmjnamejbodyi

The name of the algorithm and its body, which includes its possible specication.

hbodyjbodyi

The real body of the algorithm.

hindentjcontenti

For indenting part of an algorithm.

18.2.9. Special markup for sessions
The session d.t.d. provides the following environments for computer algebra sessions:
hsessionjbodyi

Environment for marking a session. All macros below are only for use inside sessions.

hinputjpromptjbodyi

An input eld with a prompt and the actual input.

houtputjbodyi

An output eld.

htextputjbodyi

Fields with ordinary text. These may for instance be used for comments and explanations.

herrputjbodyi

This macro is used inside output elds for displaying error messages.

188

The standard TEXMACS styles

In fact, these environments are based on environments of the form lan-session, lan-input,
lan-output, lan-textput and lan-errput for every individual language lan.
If language-specic environments do not exist, then generic-session, generic-input, genericoutput, generic-textput and generic-errput are taken instead. It is recommended to base the
language-specic environments on the generic ones, which may have dierent implementations according to the style (e.g. the framed-session package). For this purpose, we
also provide the generic-output* environment, which is similar to generic-output, except that
margins remain unaltered.

18.3. Standard environments
The env d.t.d. contains the standard environments which are available in most styles. It
is subdivided into the following parts:

18.3.1. Dening new environments
The env-base d.t.d. contains high-level markup which can be used by the user to dene
new numbered environments for theorems, remarks, exercises and gures:
hnew-theoremjenv-namejdisplay-namei

This meta-macro is used for defining new theorem-like environments. The first argument
env-name species the name for the environment (like experiment) and display-name
the corresponding text (like Experiment). When dening a new theorem-like environment like experiment, an unnumbered variant experiment* is automatically dened
as well.

hnew-remarkjenv-namejdisplay-namei

Similar as new-theorem, but for remarks.

hnew-exercisejenv-namejdisplay-namei

Similar as new-theorem, but for exercises.

hnew-gurejenv-namejdisplay-namei

Similar as new-theorem, but for gures. When dening a new type of gure, like picture, the new-gure macro denes both the inline environment small-picture and the
block-environment big-picture, as well as the unnumbered variants small-picture* and bigpicture*.

The theorem-like and remark-like environments belong to a common counter-group
theorem-env. By default, we use American-style numbering (one common counter for
all environments). When selecting the package number-europe, each environment uses
its own counter. All exercises and gures use their own counter-group.
More generally, the std-env counter-group regroups the counters for all standard TEXMACS
environments. Typically, all counters in this group are prexed in a similar way (for
instance by the number of the chapter). Figure 18.1 shows how the hierarchical organization of this counter group.

18.3 Standard environments

189

std-env
theorem-env exercise-env figure-env equation footnote
theorem
proposition
remark



exercise
problem

figure
table

Figure 18.1. Organization of the counters for the standard TEXMACS environments.

In addition to the standard theorem-like, remark-like, exercise-like and gure-like environments, other numbered textual environments may be dened using the new-env macro.
These environments may be based on arbitrary counter-groups:
hnew-envjenv-namejdisplay-namejgroupjrender i

The rst argument env-name species the name for the environment (like experiment)
and the second, display-name, the corresponding text (like Experiment). The third
argument is the name of the counter group to which the new environment belongs. The
last argument render is the name of a binary macro for rendering the environment.
The arguments of the rendering macro are a name (like Theorem 3.14) and its body.
You may use this macro to dene new environments based on counter-groups other
than the standard ve theorem-env, exercise-env, etc. For instance, in the standard
style-sheets, new-theorem is dened by
hassign j new-theorem j hmacro j env j name j hnew-env j env j name j theorem-env j rendertheoremiii

We recall that you may add new counters or counter-groups to the theorem-env countergroup using the new-counter-group and add-to-counter-group macros, as described in the
section about counters.

18.3.2. Mathematical environments
The env-math d.t.d. species which mathematical environments can be used inside textmode. In other words, the environments should be used inside text-mode, but their bodies
contain mathematical formulas or tables of mathematical formulas.
hequationjbodyi

A numbered equation. Use a label to be able to reference this equation elsewhere.

hequation*jbodyi

An unnumbered equation.

hequation-labjbodyjlabi

An equation with an arbitrary text label to be displayed in references (e.g. reference or
eqref). Notice that the label tag is not created automatically.

heqnarrayjtablei

An array of numbered equations (not yet implemented).

190

The standard TEXMACS styles

heqnarray*jtablei

An array of unnumbered equations. You can use the eq-number tag in order to number
the equation.

Warning 18.1. The numbering of equations inside tables is not yet as it should be. In
particular, the eqnarray tag is equivalent to eqnarray* at the moment. Later on, when the
eqnarray tag will be implemented correctly, you will also have a no-number tag in order to
suppress the number of an equation, and a style package for numbering equations at the
left hand side.
Warning 18.2. There is no option for numbering equations at the left hand side available
yet. Nevertheless, you may use the manual tag leq-number for this. You also have a tag
next-number which directly display the next number and increases the equation counter.
Warning 18.3. We do not encourage the use of the AMS-TEX environments align,
gather and split. Nevertheless, they are available under the names align, gather, eqsplit
together with their variants align*, gather* and eqsplit*. In the future, we plan to provide
more powerful environments.

18.3.3. Theorem-like environments
18.3.3.1. Using the theorem-like environments
The env-theorem d.t.d. contains the default theorem-like and other textual environments,
which are available through Insert!Environment. They are subdivided into three main
categories:
Variants of theorems. The bodies of theorem-like environments are usually emphasized. By default, the following such environments are available via Insert!Environment: theorem, proposition, lemma, corollary, axiom, denition, notation, conjecture.
Variants of remarks. The following ones are available via Insert!Environment: remark,
example, note, warning, convention.
Variants of exercises. Two such environments are provided by default and available
via Insert!Environment: exercise and problem.
The environments are all available in unnumbered versions theorem*, proposition*, etc. as
well. You may use ⌃# in order to switch between the unnumbered and numbered version.
The following tags are also provided:
hproofjbodyi

For proofs of theorems.

hduetojwhoi

An environment which can be used to specify the inventors of a theorem. It should be
used at the start inside the body of a theorem, like in
Theorem. (Pythagoras) a2 + b2 = c2.

18.3 Standard environments

191

18.3.3.2. Customization of the theorem-like environments
The following customizable macros are used for the rendering of textual environments:
hrender-enunciationjnamejbodyi

This macro is used for displaying a theorem-like and remark-like environments. The rst
argument name species the name of the theorem, like Theorem 1.2 and the second
argument body contains the body of the theorem.

hrender-theoremjnamejbodyi

This macro, based on render-enunciation, is used for displaying a theorem-like environments, and used for environments dened by new-theorem.

hrender-remarkjnamejbodyi

This macro, based on render-enunciation, is used for displaying a remark-like environments, and used for environments dened by new-remark.

hrender-exercisejnamejbodyi

Similar to render-enunciation, but for exercise-like environments.

hrender-proofjnamejbodyi

Similar to render-enunciation, but for proofs. This environment is mainly used for customizing the name of a proof, like in End of the proof of theorem 1.2.

Notice that you may also use these macros if you want an environment which is rendered
in a similar way as a theorem, but with another name (like Corollary of Theorem 7).
The following tags can be used for further customization of the rendering:
henunciation-namejnamei

This macro controls the appearance of the names of theorem-like, remark-like and
exercise-like environments. Most styles use bold face or small capitals.

htheorem-namejnamei
hremark-namejnamei
hexercise-namejnamei

These macros default to enunciation-name, but can be customized individually.

henunciation-sepi

The separator between the name of a theorem-like, remark-like or exercise-like environment and its main body. By default, this is a period followed by a space.

htheorem-sepi
hremark-sepi
hexercise-sepi

These macros default to enunciation-sep, but can be customized individually.

Each standard environment x also comes with a customizable macro x-text which renders
the localized name of the environment. For instance, hwithjlanguagejdutchjhtheorem-textii
yields Stelling.

192

The standard TEXMACS styles

18.3.4. Environments for oating objects
18.3.4.1. Using the environments for oating objects
The env-float d.t.d. provides the following environments for oating objects:
hsmall-gurejbodyjcaptioni

This macro produces an inline gure with body as its main body and caption as a
caption. Inline gures may for instance be used to typeset several small gures side by
side inside a oating object.

hbig-gurejbodyjcaptioni

This macro produces a big gure with body as its main body and caption as a caption.
Big gures span over the whole paragraph width.

hsmall-tablejbodyjcaptioni

Similar to small-gure, but for tables.

hbig-tablejbodyjcaptioni

Similar to big-gure, but for tables.

hfootnotejbodyi

Produces a footnote.

The gure-like environments also admit unnumbered versions small-gure*, big-gure*, etc.,
which are obtained using ⌃# .
18.3.4.2. Customization of the environments for oating objects
The following macros can be used for customizing the rendering of gure-like environments:
hrender-small-gurejaux jnamejbodyjcaptioni

This macro is used for rendering small gure-like environments. The rst argument aux
species an auxiliary channel (like gure or table) which is used for inserting the
caption inside the list of gures. The second argument name species the name of the
gure (like Figure 2.3 or Table 5). The last arguments body and caption correspond
to the gure itself and a caption.

hrender-big-gurejaux jnamejbodyjcaptioni

Similar to render-small-gure, but for displaying a big gure-like environments.

The following tags can be used for customizing the appearance the text around gures,
tables and footnotes:
hgure-namejnamei

This macro controls the appearance of the text Figure. By default, we use bold face.

hgure-sepi

This macro produces the separator between the gure and its number and the caption.
By default, it produces a period followed by a space.

18.4 Headers and footers

193

hfootnote-sepi

This macro produces the separator between the number of the footnote and the text.
By default, it produces a period followed by a space.

18.4. Headers and footers
18.4.1. Standard titles
18.4.1.1. Entering titles and abstracts
The header-title d.t.d. provides tags for entering information about the entire document.
The two top-level tags are
hdoc-datajdata-1 jjdata-ni

Specify data attached to your document (title, authors, etc.; see below) and render the
title.

habstractjbodyi

The abstract for your paper.

When creating a doc-data tag using Insert!Title!Insert title, TEXMACS automatically inserts
a doc-title tag as its rst arguments. New data may be inserted from the Insert!Title menu.
Each child data-1 , :::, data-n of the doc-data tag is of one of the following forms:
hdoc-titlejtitlei

Specify the title of the document.

hdoc-subtitlejsubtitlei

Specify the subtitle of the document.

hdoc-authorjdata-1 jjdata-ni

Specify datas for one of the authors of the document (name, aliation, etc.; see below).

hdoc-datejdatei

The creation date of the document. In particular you may take hdatei for the value of
date for the current date.

hdoc-running-titlejtitlei

Specify a running title for your document which may be used in page headers.

hdoc-running-authorjauthor i

Specify a running author for your document which may be used in page headers.

hdoc-keywordsjkw-1 jjkw-ni

Specify keywords kw-1 until kw-n for your document.

hdoc-mscjnr-1 jjnr-ni

Specify A.M.S. subject classication numbers nr-1 until nr-n for your document.

194

The standard TEXMACS styles

hdoc-notejnotei

A note about your document. In particular, you may take hwith-TeXmacs-texti for the
value of note in order to indicate that your document has been written using TEXMACS.

hauthor-datajdata-1 jjdata-ni

Specify structured datas for one of the authors of the document (name, aliation, etc.;
see below).

When inserting an additional author using Insert!Title!Author!Insert author, TEXMACS
inserts a hdoc-author jhauthor-data j...ii tree with an author-name tag as its rst argument.
New author data may be inserted from the Insert!Title!Author menu. Each child data1 , :::, data-n of the author-data tag is of one of the following forms:
hauthor-namejnamei

Specify the name of the author.

hauthor-aliationjaliationi

The aliation of the author.

hauthor-emailjemaili

An email address for the author.

hauthor-homepagejhomepagei

The homepage of the author.

hauthor-notejnotei

A miscellaneous note attached to the author, like a thank-word.

As a general rule, the use of any of the subtags of doc-data or author-data is optional. An
individual subtag may also be specied several times. This is useful for documents with
several authors, or authors with several addresses. The rendering of title information is
very style-dependent: some styles render addresses in a single line or even as a footnote,
where other styles use a more widely spaced presentation. Often, some information like
keywords or AMS subject classication numbers are only rendered as a part of the abstract.
18.4.1.2. Customizing the global rendering of titles
Depending on the kind of attributes, complex titles often use several rendering styles in a
simultaneous version. More precisely, a title usually consists of the following parts:


A well visible part at the top of the title page.



Additional notes, which are displayed in the footer.



An potentially invisible part, with information like running titles and authors.



A postponed part, which is only rendered in the abstract.

Similarly, individual authors may also contain a main part, which is rendered as part of
the title, and an additional part, which is rendered as a footnote. Moreover, the layout
often changes if the paper has more than one author.

18.4 Headers and footers

195

The TEXMACS mechanism for rendering titles therefore relies on several macros which
extract the information corresponding to each of the above parts. This process may also
involve some sorting, like putting the authors before the date or vice versa. At a second
stage, each extracted part of the title is passed to the appropriate rendering macro. The
following macros are used for extracting title information:
hdoc-data-mainjdata-1 jjdata-ni
hdoc-data-main*jdata-1 jjdata-ni

This macro only keeps and sorts the data which should be displayed in the main title.
The doc-data-main* variant is used in the case when the document has more than one
author.

hdoc-data-notejdata-1 jjdata-ni

This macro only keeps and sorts the data which should be displayed as a footnote.

hdoc-data-abstractjdata-1 jjdata-ni

This macro only keeps and sorts the data which should be displayed in the abstract.

hdoc-data-hiddenjdata-1 jjdata-ni

This macro only keeps and sorts the data which might or should not be displayed at all.

In a similar fashion, the following macros are used for extracting author information:
hdoc-author-mainjhauthor-datajdata-1 jjdata-nii

This macro only keeps and sorts the data which should be displayed inside the main
title.

hdoc-author-notejdata-1 jjdata-ni

This macro only keeps and sorts the data which should be displayed as a footnote.

It should be noticed that each of the above macros should return a document tag with the
selected data as its children. For instance,
hdoc-author-mainj
hauthor-aliationjSomewhere in Africaij
hauthor-namejThe big GNUij
hauthor-notejVery hairy indeed!ii
should typically return
hdocumentj
hauthor-aliationjSomewhere in Africaij
hauthor-namejThe big GNUii
The only exception to this rule is doc-data-hidden which should return a concat tag instead.
18.4.1.3. Customizing the rendering of title elds
Both title information and author information is rendered as a vertical stack of title blocks
and author blocks. The following macros may be used to customize the global rendering
of such blocks:

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The standard TEXMACS styles

hdoc-title-blockjcontenti
hdoc-author-blockjcontenti

Macros for rendering one component of the title or author information.

The following macros may be used to customize the rendering of title information; notice
that they are usually built on top of doc-title-block.
hdoc-make-titlejcontenti

This macro is used for the rendering of the main title information. Usually, it contains
at least the title itself, as well as one or several authors.

hdoc-render-titlejtitlei

This macro is used for rendering the title of the document. The doc-title macro also
takes care of rendering references to potential footnotes.

hdoc-subtitlejtitlei

This macro is used for rendering the subtitle of the document.

hrender-doc-authorjcontenti

In the case when the document has a single author, then this macro is used for rendering
the content information about him or her.

hrender-doc-authorsjcontenti

In the case when the document has several authors, then this macros is used for rendering all author-related content which is part of the main title.

hdoc-datejdatei

This macro is used for rendering the creation date of the document.

The following macros may be used to customize the rendering of author information; notice
that they are usually built on top of doc-author-block.
hauthor-render-namejnamei

Renders the name of the author.The author-name macro also takes care of rendering
references to potential footnotes.

hauthor-byjnamei

A macro which may put the text by  in front of the name of an author.

hauthor-aliationjaliationi

Renders the aliation of the author.

hauthor-emailjemaili

Renders the email address of the author.

hauthor-homepagejemail i

Renders the homepage of the author.

The following macros are used for information which is usually not rendered as a part of
the main title, but rather as a footnote or part of the abstract.

18.5 LATEX style sections

197

hdoc-title-notejnotei
hdoc-author-notejnotei

A macro for rendering a note attached to the document or one of its authors. The note
will usually appear as part of a footnote. By default, notes that consist of several lines
are compressed into a single paragraph.

hdoc-keywordsjkw-1 jjkw-ni

A macro for displaying a list of keywords.

hdoc-mscjnr-1 jjnr-ni

A macro for displaying a list of A.M.S. subject classication numbers.

18.4.2. Standard headers
The header d.t.d. provides call-back macros which allow page headers and footers to change
automatically when specifying the title information of the document or when starting
a new section.
hheader-titlejtitlei

This macro is called when specifying the title of a document.

hheader-authorjauthor i

This macro is called when specifying the author (s) of a document.

hheader-primaryjsection-titlejsection-nr jsection-typei

This macro is called at the start of each new primary section (e.g. chapter for book style,
or section for article style). The section-type is a literal text like Chapter or Section.

hheader-secondaryjsection-titlejsection-nr jsection-typei

This macro is called at the start of each new secondary section (e.g. section for book
style, or subsection for article style). The section-type is a literal text like Section
or Paragraph.

In style les, page headers and footers are usually set by the above call-back macros, and
not manually. You may directly modify headers and footers by setting the corresponding
environment variables or using several helper macros supplied by std-utils.

18.5. LATEX style sections
18.5.1. Using sectional tags
The section-base d.t.d. provides the standard tags for sections, which are the same as in
LATEX. Most sectional tags take one argument: the name of the section. The intention of
the following tags is to produce numbered sections:
hpartjtitlei, hchapterjtitlei
hsectionjtitlei, hsubsectionjtitlei, hsubsubsectionjtitlei
hparagraphjtitlei, hsubparagraphjtitlei

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The standard TEXMACS styles

happendixjtitlei

The intention of these macros is to produce a numbered title for a part (resp. chapter,
section, subsection, etc.). The numbering is not required, but merely an intention: the
paragraph and subparagraph tags are usually not numbered and some styles may not
produce numbers at all.

The tags part*, chapter*, section*, subsection*, subsubsection*, paragraph*, subparagraph* and
appendix* can be used for producing the unnumbered variants of the above tags.
By default, all sectional only produce the section title. When using the experimental
package structured-section, all sectional tags are enriched, so that they take the body
of the section as an optional argument. Moreover, an additional tag rsection is provided in
order to produce recursively embedded sections. For instance, an rsection inside a section
behaves like a subsection. In the future, all list items should become structured.
The section-base d.t.d. also provides the following sectional environments with automatically generated content
hbibliographyjaux jstylejle-namejbodyi

This macro is used for producing bibliographies. The rst argument aux species the
auxiliary channel with the data for generating the bibliography (bib, by default). The
arguments style and le-name contain the bibliography style and the le with the
bibliographic database. The body argument corresponds to the automatically generated
content.

htable-of-contentsjaux jbodyi

This macro is used for producing tables of contents. The rst argument aux species
the auxiliary channel with the data for generating the bibliography (toc, by default).
The body argument corresponds to the automatically generated content.

hthe-indexjaux jbodyi

Similar to table-of-contents but for indices and default channel idx.

hthe-glossaryjaux jbodyi
hlist-of-guresjaux jbodyi
hlist-of-tablesjaux jbodyi

Similar to table-of-contents but for glossaries (default channel gly), lists of figures
(default channel figure) and lists of tables (default channel table).

The above tags also admit the variants bibliography*, table-of-contents*, the-index* and theglossary* with an additional argument name before body, which species the name of the
section. For instance, the the-glossary* was formerly used for lists of gures and lists of
tables.

18.5.2. Customization of the sectional tags
The section-base d.t.d. also contains many tags for customizing the rendering of sections
and other section-related behaviour. The following two tags aect all sections:
hsectional-sepi

A macro for customizing the separator between the number of a section and its title.
By default, we use two spaces.

18.5 LATEX style sections

199

hsectional-short-stylei

A predicate which tells whether documents for this style are intended to be short or
long. When sectional-short-style evaluates to true, then appendices, bibliographies, etc.
are supposed to be special types of sections. Otherwise, they will be special types of
chapters.

For each sectional tag x , the following tags are provided for customization:
hx-texti

A macro which displays the (localized) name of the sectional environment. For instance,
hwithjlanguagejfrenchjhappendix-textii produces Annexe.

hx-titlejtitlei

A macro for displaying the unnumbered section title.

hx-numbered-titlejtitlei

A macro for displaying the numbered section title.

hx-display-numbersi

A predicate which species whether numbers will really be displayed. For instance,
in the case of paragraph, this macro evaluates to false. Consequently, even though xnumbered-title does display the paragraph number, the main macro x will call x-title and
not x-numbered-title, so that paragraph titles are not numbered.

hx-sepi

A macro for customizing the separator between the number of a section and its title.
By default, we call sectional-sep.

hx-cleani

A hook for resetting all subcounters of the section.

hx-headerjnamei

A hook for changing the page headers.

hx-tocjnamei

A hook for putting the section title into the table of contents.

Finally, the section-base d.t.d. provides rendering macros render-table-of-contents, renderbibliography, render-index and render-glossary, each of which takes two arguments: the name of
the section and its body. It also provides the macros prologue-text, epilogue-text, bibliographytext, table-of-contents-text, index-text, glossary-text, list-of-gures-text and list-of-tables-text for
customizing the names of special sections.

18.5.3. Helper macros for rendering section titles
The section-base d.t.d. contains several helper macros which can (should) be used when
customizing the rendering of section titles:
hsectional-shortjbodyi

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The standard TEXMACS styles

hsectional-short-italicjbodyi
hsectional-short-boldjbodyi

These macros should be used for rendering short section titles, for which the section
body starts immediately at the right of the title. Usually, titles of paragraphs and
subparagraphs are rendered in a short fashion, while the other section titles span over
the entire width of a paragraph.

hsectional-normaljbodyi
hsectional-normal-italicjbodyi
hsectional-normal-boldjbodyi

These macros should be used for rendering normal left-aligned section titles. Such
titles span over the entire paragraph width.

hsectional-centeredjbodyi
hsectional-centered-italicjbodyi
hsectional-centered-boldjbodyi

These macros should be used for rendering normal centered section titles. Such titles
span over the entire paragraph width.

Chapter 19
Compatibility with other formats
TEXMACS documents can be saved without loss of information in three formats: the native
TEXMACS format, Xml and as a Scheme expression. TEXMACS documents can be converted
in a wysiwyg (what-you-see-is-what-you-get) way to either Postscript or Pdf, which are
used as the primary formats for printing documents. TEXMACS nally provides converters
for LATEX, Html and MathML.
TEXMACS documents can be converted to other formats using the dierent items in the
File!Export menu. Similarly, the File!Import menu contains all formats which can be
imported into TEXMACS. Besides exporting or importing entire documents, it is also possible to copy and paste document fragments using Edit!Copy to and Edit!Paste from.
The default formats for copy and pasting can be specied in Tools!Miscellaneous!Export
selections as and Tools!Miscellaneous!Import selections as.

19.1. Converters for LATEX
19.1.1. Introduction
TEXMACS oers high quality converters to and from LATEX. For simple documents, it sufces to use File!Export!LaTeX resp. File!Import!LaTeX. However, in order to take fully
advantage out of the converts, it is necessary to understand some particularities of LATEX.
First of all, it should be emphasized that TEX/LATEX is not a data format. Indeed, TEX is
a programming language for which no real standardization process has taken place: valid
TEX programs are dened as those which are recognized by the TEX program. In particular,
there exists no formal specication of the language and it is not even clear what should
be considered to be a valid TEX document. As a consequence of this, a converter from
LATEX to TEXMACS can only be designed to be 100% reliable for a (substantial) subset of
the TEX/LATEX language.
A second important point is that publishers usually impose additional constraints on the
kind of LATEX documents which they accept for submissions. For instance, certain journals
provide additional macros for title information, theorems, specic layout features, etc.
Other journals forbid for the denition of new macros in the preamble. Since TEXMACS
is not a TEX/LATEX front-end, it is dicult for us to write specic code for each possible
journal. Nevertheless, some general principles do hold, and we will describe below how to
customize the converter so as to make the conversion process as simple and automatic as
possible.
Another point which should be stressed is that TEXMACS aims to provide a strict superset
of TEX/LATEX. This not completely the case yet, but it is already true that many features
in TEXMACS admit no direct analogues in TEX/LATEX or one of its packages. This is for
instance the case for computer algebra sessions, folding, actions, graphics and presentations, but also for certain typesetting constructs, like vertical alignment and background
lling in tables. When using such additional features, you should be prepared that they
will not be converted correctly to LATEX.
201

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Compatibility with other formats

Finally, when preparing journal papers with TEXMACS, please consider submitting them in
TEXMACS format. The editors of the journal will probably force you to convert your paper
to LATEX, but repeated submissions in TEXMACS format will put pressure upon them to
accept this new format.

19.1.2. Conversion from TEXMACS to LATEX
A TEXMACS document can be exported to LATEX using File!Export!LaTeX. In the case
of certain journal styles like svjour or elsart, the user should also make sure that the
appropriate style les can be found by LATEX, when compiling the result of the conversion.
Please consult your LATEX documentation for how to do this; one solution which usually
works is to put the style le in the same directory as your le.
Notice that the exportation of a TEXMACS document with images may cause the creation
of additional image les. If your destination le is called name.tex, these les are named
name-1.eps, name-2.eps, etc. and they are stored in the same directory. In particular,
all pictures drawn with the editor and all images which are not already in Postscript
format will be converted to encapsulated Postscript les.
In order to ensure that the generated LATEX document compiles, style les and packages or
macros with no LATEX equivalents are either ignored or replaced by a reasonable substitute.
The precise behaviour of the converter may be customized using several user preferences
in the Edit!Preferences!Converters!LaTeX!TeXmacs>LaTeX menu:
Replace unrecognized styles.
This option (which is set by default) tells TEXMACS to replace style les with no
LATEX equivalents by the article style. Furthermore, all additional style packages
are ignored.

In case you know how to write your own style les, you might wish to create
TEXMACS equivalents of those journal styles which you use often. Similarly, you
might wish to create a style package with your own macros together with its LATEX
counterpart. In both cases, you might want to disable the style replacement option.
Replace unrecognized macros.
By default, all TEXMACS macros are expanded until they admit direct LATEX counterparts. Primitives with no LATEX counterparts (like graphics or trees) are ignored.
Moreover, in order to convert certain frequently used macros like theorem or strong,
TEXMACS may put additional denitions in the preamble.

In some cases, the user may wish to keep unrecognized macros in their unexpanded
form. For instance, this may be convenient if you want to import the generated document back into TEXMACS. Another typical situation is when you dened additional
macros in a style package. In these cases, you may disable to macro replacement
option. Of course, any missing macro denitions may result in LATEX errors during
the compilation.
Expand user-dened macros.
When your document or its preamble contains macro denitions, then TEXMACS will
convert these macro denitions into LATEX macro denitions and keep all macro
applications in their unexpanded forms. This allows you to preserve as much structure of your document as possible. When enabling the Expand user-dened macros
option, all macro denitions in your document will be ignored and all macro applications will be expanded.

19.1 Converters for LATEX

203

Export bibliographies as links.
In order to produce stand-alone LATEX les whenever possible, it is assumed that
you generate your bibliographies from within TEXMACS. When exporting to LATEX,
the generated bibliography will be directly included into your LATEX le. In some
cases however, the user might wish to regenerate the bibliography from the LATEX
and the bibliography les, using BibTEX. In this case, you need to enable the Export
bibliographies as links option.
Allow for macro denitions in preamble.
Certain TEXMACS macros like strong have no direct LATEX analogues. For a certain
number of frequently used macros, TEXMACS automatically generates macro denitions in the preamble of the LATEX target le. This allows you to preserve as much
structure as possible of your document, which is for instance useful if you import
the document back into TEXMACS.

However, certain journals instruct authors to refrain from the denition of additional macros in the preamble. When disallowing for macro denitions in preambles,
TEXMACS will automatically expand all corresponding macro applications.
Dump TEXMACS document into LATEX code.
When this option is set, a copy of the TEXMACS document is appended to the
LATEX export in a lossless kind. This allows to re-import the document with as few
conversion artifacts as possible .
Character encoding.
This option denes the behavior of the converter with respect to character encoding.
There are three possible choices:
Utf-8 with inputenc. This will generate utf-8 document with the package
inputenc loaded. If for any reason you don't want to rely on inputenc, you
should consider other options.
Cork with catcodes. Keeps accented characters as is. This can be achieved
by allowing TEXMACS to put additional catcode definitions into your preamble.
This provides a good trade-off between readability (accented characters
are kept in an 8 bit charset) and simplicity (you don't need the inputenc
package).
Ascii. This will generate pure ascii characters, using plain TEX sequences to
compose non-ascii symbols.
Sometimes, the converter does not produce a satisfactory LATEX le even after some tinkering with the above preferences. The most frequent problem concerns bad line breaks.
Occasionally, certain document fragments are also better converted by hand. In order
to minimize the need for corrections in the generated LATEX le (which would be lost
when re-exporting the TEXMACS source le after some modications), TEXMACS provides
a mechanism to specify manual conversions to LATEX in the TEXMACS source le: using
Format!Specic!Texmacs and Format!Specic!Latex, you may force certain document
fragments to appear only in the source le or the LATEX target.
For instance, assume that the word blauwbilgorgel is hyphenated correctly in the TEXMACS
source, but not in the LATEX conversion. Then you may proceed as follows:
1. Select blauwbilgorgel.

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Compatibility with other formats

2. Click on Format!Specic!Texmacs to make the text blauwbilgorgel TEXMACSspecic.
3. Click on Format!Specic!Latex.
4. Type the latex code blauw\-bil\-gor\-gel with the correct hyphenation.
5. Press ↩ to activate the LATEX-specic text.
In a similar fashion, you may insert LATEX-specic line breaks, page breaks, vertical space,
style parameter modications, etc. You may also force arbitrary content to be exported as
an image using Format!Specic!Image.

19.1.3. Conversion from LATEX to TEXMACS
In order to import a LATEX document into TEXMACS, you may use File!Import!Latex.
Don't forget to save the le under a new name with the .tm extension, if you want to edit it.
As explained in the introduction, the conversion of LATEX documents into TEXMACS is
more problematic than conversions the other way around. As long as you restrict yourself
to using the most common LATEX commands, the conversion process should not give rise
to any major diculties. However, as soon as your documents contain weird TEX primitives (think about \csname...), then the converter may get confused. We also notice that
TEXMACS is currently unable to convert LATEX style les and no plans exist to enhance the
converter in this direction.
There are two major reasons for LATEX documents to get imported in an inappropriate way,
and which can easily be corrected by the user. First of all, the parser may get confused
because of some exotic syntactic construct. This typically happens in presence of catcodes
or uncommon styles of macro denitions. Sometimes, the parser may also be mistaken
about the current mode, in which case text gets parsed as a mathematical formula or vice
versa. In both cases, the imported document usually becomes weird at a certain point. In
order to solve the problem, we suggest you to identify the corresponding point in the LATEX
source le and to make an appropriate change which avoids the parser of getting confused.
A second common error is that certain LATEX macros are not recognized by the converter,
in which case they will appear in red. This typically happens if you use one of the hundreds
additional LATEX packages or if you dened some additional macros in another document.
In the case when the troublesome macro occurs only a few times, then we suggest you
to manually expand the macro in the LATEX source le before importation. Otherwise,
you may try to put the denitions of the missing macros in the preamble of the LATEX
document. Alternatively, you may create a small style package with TEXMACS counterparts
for the macros which were not recognized.
The behaviour of the converter may be customized using several user preferences in the
Edit!Preferences!Converters!LaTeX!LaTeX>TeXmacs menu:
Import sophisticated objects as pictures.
This option allows TEXMACS to compile the LATEX document in a temporary directory, with the package preview installed, in order to import some macros or environments as pictures. The source of each picture is also imported in order to be reexported if needed. Currently, the following macros are imported as pictures when
this option is set: \xymatrix, pspicture, tikzpicture.

19.1 Converters for LATEX

205

Keep track of the LATEX source code.
One should be interested in this option in order to use TEXMACS to make small or
isolated modications into a LATEX le (e.g. for a proofreading). This option allows
TEXMACS to import the LATEX document with added markup in order to track the
original sources of the document paragraphs. These tracked sources are, as far as
possible, re-used during a LATEX re-export.
Ensure transparent tracking.
This option, subject to the above, verify that the added markup does not change
the result of the conversion. It has been added for testing purpose and may strongly
increase the time of the import process (at least it double it).

19.1.4. Limitations of the current LATEX converters
Limitations of the TEXMACS to LATEX converter.
Some of the TEXMACS primitives have no analogues in LATEX. When converting such primitives from TEXMACS into LATEX, they will usually be either ignored or replaced by an
approximative translation. A (probably incomplete) list of TEXMACS features with no LATEX
counterparts is as follows:


Left primes.



Big separators between big parentheses.



Trees.



Certain features of tables (background color, cell span, vertical alignment, etc.).



Complex user macros.



Vertical spaces before and after.



Indentation ags before and after.



Most types of interactive content: hyperlinks, actions, sessions, tags for the presentation mode, animations and sounds, etc.

In addition, several issues are only partially implemented:


Non standard fonts.



Certain table properties



Style parameters.

Of course, there are also dierences between the typesetting algorithms used by TEXMACS
and TEX/LATEX, so the TEXMACS to LATEX is not intended to be wysiwyg.
Limitations of the LATEX to TEXMACS converter.
As explained in the introduction, the conversion of LATEX documents into TEXMACS is
more problematic than conversions the other way around. Only a subset of LATEX can be
converted to TEXMACS in a fully reliable way. This subset comprises virtually all common
constructs, including macro denitions and the additional macros uses by the TEXMACS
to LATEX converter. However, the converter has no knowledge about style parameters. In
particular, it cannot be used for the conversion of LATEX style les.

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Compatibility with other formats

19.2. Converters for Html and MathML
Html generation.
TEXMACS supports reasonably good converters to Html and MathML. A document can
be exported to Html using File!Export!Html. TEXMACS makes moderate use of Css in
order to improve the presentation of the generated Html.
By default, TEXMACS does its best in order to render formulas using existing Html/Css
primitives. When selecting Edit!Preferences!Converters!TeXmacs->Html!Use MathML,
all formulas will be exported as MathML. Notice that this requires you to save the
generated documents using the .xhtml extension.
Similarly, the user may force TEXMACS to export all mathematical formulas as images
using Edit!Preferences!Converters!TeXmacs->Html!Export formulas as images. If your
destination le is called name.html, then the images are stored in the same directory in
les name-1.png, name-2.png and so on. Even when formulas are not exported as images,
notice that all graphics drawn using TEXMACS are exported in this way. In particular, the
exportation of a TEXMACS le with pictures may give rise to the creation of additional
image les. You may also force arbitrary content to be exported as an image using Format!
Specic!Image.
TEXMACS also provides a facility for the creation of entire websites. For this, you just have to
regroup the les for your website into a single directory. Using Tools!Web!Create website
you may now convert all TEXMACS les in this directory to Html les in a new directory.
The conversion procedure recursively traverses all subdirectories and all non-TEXMACS les
are simply copied.
Customized Html generation.
The following TEXMACS environment variables can be used to customize the Html generation:
html-title. The title of your exported document.
html-css. A cascaded style sheet for your exported document.
html-head-javascript-src. An external Javascript le to be executed before the
body.
html-head-javascript. A Javascript script to be executed before the body.
You may also use the following macros:
hhtml-classjclassjbodyi
hhtml-div-classjclassjbodyi

Associate a CSS class to the content body, optionally inside a separate div tag.

hhtml-stylejstylejbodyi
hhtml-div-stylejclassjbodyi

Associate a CSS style to the content body, optionally inside a separate div tag.

hhtml-javascript-srcjsrci

Execute a Javascript script from the le src.

19.2 Converters for Html and MathML

207

hhtml-javascriptjcodei

Execute the Javascript script code.

In addition, given a macro my-tag, you may customize the rendering of the tag when
exporting to Html by dening a macro tmhtml-my-tag with the same number of arguments.
For instance, by putting the declaration
hassignjtmhtml-strongjhmacrojbodyjhwithjcolor jredjfont-seriesjboldjbodyiii
inside your style le, all strong text will be exported to Html using a bold red font.
Html importation.
TEXMACS also contains a rudimentary input converter for Html in File!Import!Html.
Most of HTML 2.0 and parts of HTML 3.0 are currently supported. However, no browsing
facilities have been added yet. The converter also contains a reasonably complete input
converter for embedded MathML fragments.
When importing HTML documents, les whose names start with http: or ftp: will be
downloaded from the web using wget. If you compiled TEXMACS yourself, then you can
download wget from
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/wget/
In the binary distributions, we have included wget.

Adding new data formats and converters
Using the Guile/Scheme extension language, it is possible to add new data formats and
converters to TEXMACS in a modular way. Usually, the additional formats and converters
are declared in your personal ~/.TeXmacs/progs/my-init-texmacs.scm or a dedicated
plug-in. Some examples may be found in the directory $TEXMACS_PATH/progs/convert,
like init-html.scm.
Declaring new formats.
A new format is declared using the command
(define-format format
(:name format-name)
options)
Here format is a symbol which stands for the format and format-name a string which
can be used in menus. In fact, a data format usually comes in several variants: a format
format -file for les, a format format-document for entire documents, a format formatsnippet for snippets, like selections, and format -object for the preferred internal scheme
representation for doing conversions (i.e. the parsed variant of the format). Converters
from format -file to format -document and vice versa are provided automatically.
The user may specify additional options for the automatic recognition of formats by their
le sux and contents. The possible suxes for a format, with the default one listed rst,
may be specied using
(:suffix default-suffix other-suffix-1 ... other-suffix-n)

208

Compatibility with other formats

A (heuristic) routine for recognizing whether a given document matches the format can be
specied using either one of the following:
(:recognize predicate)
(:must-recognize predicate)
In the rst case, sux recognition takes precedence over document recognition and in the
second case, the heuristic recognition is entirely determined by the document recognition
predicate.
A format can be removed from menus using the following:
(:hidden)
Declaring new converters.
New converters are declared using
(converter from to
options)
The actual converter is specied using either one of the following options:
(:function converter)
(:function-with-options converter-with-options)
(:shell prog prog-pre-args from progs-infix-args to prog-post-args)
In the rst case, the converter is a routine which takes an object of the from format and
returns a routine of the to format. In the second case, the converter takes an additional
association list as its second argument with options for the converter. In the last case, a
shell command is specied in order to convert between two le formats. The converter is
activated only then, when prog is indeed found in the path. Also, auxiliary les may be
created and destroyed automatically.
TEXMACS automatically computes the transitive closure of all converters using a shortest
path algorithm. In other words, if you have a converter from x to y and a converter from
y to z, then you will automatically have a converter from x to z. A distance between two
formats via a given converter may be specied using
(:penalty floating-point-distance)
Further options for converters are:
(:require cond)
(:option option default-value)
The rst option species a condition which must be satised for this converter to be used.
This option should be specied as the rst or second option and always after the :penalty
option. The :option option species an option for the converter with its default value.
This option automatically become a user preference and it will be passed to all converters
with options.

Appendix A
Configuration of TEXMACS
A.1. User preferences
For an optimal typing experience, you may wish to congure TEXMACS in a way which
suits your needs best. This can be done from within the Edit!Preferences menu. Most
importantly, you should choose a look and feel in Edit!Preferences!Look and feel. This
will enable you for instance to let the keyboard shortcuts used by TEXMACS be similar to
what you are used to in other applications.
The following user preferences are available:
Look and feel. This preference controls the general look and feel of TEXMACS, and
mainly aects the behaviour of the keyboard. The default look and feel depends
on your system (Gnome, KDE or Emacs under Linux, Mac OS under Mac OS, and
Windows under Windows). The Emacs look and feel can be used as an alternative
on all systems; it has been the default for all TEXMACS versions prior to 1.0.7.6.

More details on the keyboard conguration on dierent systems can be found below.
Interactive questions. This preference species how the user will be prompted for input
when required. Questions may either be displayed in separate windows or on the
status bar of TEXMACS.
Details in menus. This preference specify the level of detail in the menus. The less
frequently used features will be left out when selecting Simplied menus.
View. The preference corresponds to the same viewing options as in the top-level
View menu.
Language. Your preferred language for the TEXMACS interface.
Keyboard. In addition to the general look and feel, a few additional settings determine
the behaviour of the keyboard:



The Cyrillic input method species how to type text in Cyrillic languages.



Quotes can be automatically closed according to the Automatic quotes style.



Brackets can be automatically closed by enabling Automatically close brackets.

Printer. The printer setup can be congured from this submenu.
Security. In theory, TEXMACS documents may embed macros or hyperlinks which give
rise to the execution of arbitrary commands (as specied by the author). In practice,
this feature may involve a security risk,. Therefore, the Security preference allows
the user to specify what should be done with untrusted executable code.

209

210

Configuration of TEXMACS

Converters. The behaviour of converters between TEXMACS various other data formats
may be congured from this menu. For more details, we refer to the chapter on
compatibility with other formats.
Scripts. Specify a default scripting language for all external scripts.
Tools. TEXMACS features a few additional tools which the user may wish to work under
certain circumstances:



A debugging tool for TEXMACS developers.



A linking tool for entering typed hyperlinks and complex annotations.



A versioning tool for comparing two versions of a TEXMACS document.



A remote connection tool (which currently does not work anymore).

Autosave. This preference species how often documents will be autosaved. Any edits
to a le which was not autosaved will be lost on undesired termination of TEXMACS.
This typically occurs after an erroneous manipulations by the user, certain bugs in
TEXMACS, or a power problem.
Bibtex command. The user may specify an alternative to bibtex for the compilation
of bibliographies using BibTEX. Notice that recent versions of TEXMACS integrate
a native alternative tool for the compilation of bibliographies.

A.2. Keyboard configuration
The behaviour of keyboard inside TEXMACS depends on a few user preferences, as specied
in the menu Edit!Preferences:


The Look and feel determines the main rules for keyboard shortcuts and attempts to
make the behaviour as close as possible to the standards for the selected look and
feel.



Some minor customizations are possible via Edit!Preferences!Keyboard.

We will now detail specic issues related to the keyboard conguration on various systems.
Please refer to the section on general conventions for explanations on the way keyboard
shortcuts are printed in this manual. For more information on keyboard shortcuts, we refer
to the general section on how the master the keyboard.
Standard conformance.
TEXMACS attempts to be as standard-conformant regarding the various look and feels.
However, there are a few general situations in which TEXMACS reserves some keyboard
shortcuts for the sake of user-friendliness:


The function keys F5  F12 are reserved for special actions.



Most standards admit a principal modier key for forming keyboard shortcuts
( ⌃ for your look and feel) and sometimes another modier key for other shortcuts
(e.g. the Windows key under Windows and ⌥ under Mac OS). The remaining free
modier ( ⌥ for your look and feel) is reserved for TEXMACS.

A.2 Keyboard configuration



211

TEXMACS contains many keyboard macros involving one or more modier keys and
the special keys ← , → , ↑ , ↓ , ↖ , ↘ , ⇞ , ⇟ , ⌫ , ⌦ , ␣ , ⇥ and ↩ . The behaviour of shortcuts
of this kind is occasionally non standard.

Potential conicts.
The TEXMACS-specic shortcuts are rarely in conict with standard conventions. Nevertheless, in table A.1, we have displayed some more or less standard shortcuts, which might
work in other applications, but which will usually not work inside TEXMACS.
Look and feel Shortcut
F10
Emacs
⌘!
Emacs
⌘' / ⌘` / ⌘^
Emacs
⌘/ / ⌘\ / ⌘: / ⌘;
Emacs
⌘← / ⌘→
Emacs
⌘A / ⌘E
Emacs
⌘B / ⌘F
Emacs
⌘L / ⌘T
Emacs
F5
Windows
F6 / ⌃F6 / ⌃⇧F6
Windows
⌃␣
Windows
⌃⇥
Windows
⌃⌫ / ⌃⌦
Windows
⌃F5 / ⌃F6 / ⌃⇧F6
Mac OS
⌃F7
Mac OS
F9 / F10
Mac OS
F11 / F12
Mac OS
⇥ / ⇧⇥
Mac OS
⌃⇥ , ⌃⇧⇥
Mac OS
⌃␣ / ⌘⌃␣
Mac OS
⌃← / ⌃→
Mac OS
⌃↑ / ⌃↓
Mac OS
↖/↘
Mac OS
⌥⇞ , ⌃↑ , ⌃⇞
Mac OS
⌥⇟ , ⌃↓ , ⌃⇟
Mac OS
⌃A / ⌃E
Mac OS

Alternative Meaning
Show menu bar in window
Shell command
Needed for TEXMACS accents
⌃← / ⌃→
⌃↑ / ⌃↓
⌃← / ⌃→

⌘⌥← / ⌘⌥→
⌘⌥↑ / ⌘⌥↓
⌘↑ / ⌘↓
⇞
⇟
⌥↑ / ⌥↓

Move word back/forward
Move paragraph back/forward
Move word back/forward
Locase/transpose words (not impl.)
Refresh/Switch to next pane
Switch to next/previous pane/tab
Remove formatting
Switch to next child window
Delete word
Move focus to toolbar/panels
Override keyboard access mode
Tile or untile windows
Hide or show windows/dashboard
Navigate through controls
Move focus within control groups
Toggle between input sources
Move one cell left/right in table
Move one cell up/down in table
Move to start/end of document
Page up
Page down
Move to start/end of block

Table A.1. Some shortcuts that might work in other applications, but usually not in TEXMACS.

System-wide shortcuts which may take precedence.
In addition to the above standard shortcuts, some system-wide applications may define additional global shortcuts, which take precedence over the TEXMACS shortcuts. For instance,
under Mac OS X, the application Spaces uses the shortcuts ⌃← , ⌃→ , ⌃↑ , ⌃↓ , ⌃1 , ⌃2 ,
⌃3 and ⌃4 to switch between multiple screens.

One solution to the above problems is to change the problematic global shortcuts in the
responsible applications. For instance, Spaces can be congured to use ⌘⌥⌃ as a prex
instead of ⌃ (click on the popup menu behind To switch between spaces and simultaneously press ⌘ , ⌥ and ⌃ ). Notice that fn is another key which is not used by TEXMACS.

212

Configuration of TEXMACS

If you cannot or do not want to change the system-wide shortcuts, then you may use the
⎋ -key in order to produce equivalents for the modier keys ⌘ , ⌥ and ⌃ . For instance, under
Mac OS, ⌃ is equivalent to ⎋ ⎋ . Hence, the TEXMACS shortcut ⌃→ can also be obtained by
typing ⎋ ⎋ → , which may coexist with the Spaces shortcut ⌃→ . Table A.2 shows the modier
key combinations which can be obtained using ⎋ .
Shortcut Modier keys
⎋
⎋⎋
⎋⎋⎋

⌘
⌥
⌃

⇧⎋
⇧⎋ ⇧⎋
⇧⎋ ⇧⎋ ⇧⎋

⌘⌥
⌘⌃
⌥⌃

Table A.2. Keyboard shortcuts for modier keys or modier key combinations.

User-dened shortcuts.
If, for some reason, the standard TEXMACS shortcuts are not sucient or suitable for you,
then you may dene your own shortcuts.

A.3. Notes for users of Cyrillic languages
In order to type Russian (and similarly for other Cyrillic languages) text, you have several
options:


Select Russian as your default language in Edit!Preferences!Language!Russian. If
TEXMACS starts with Russian menus, then this is done automatically if the Russian
locale is set.



Select Russian for an entire document using Document!Language!Russian.



Select Russian for a portion of text in another document using Format!Language!
Russian.

If your X server uses the Xkb extension, and is instructed to switch between the Latin and
Russian keyboard modes, you need not do anything special. Just switch your keyboard to
the Russian mode, and go ahead. All the software needed for this is included in modern
Linux distributions, and the Xkb extension is enabled by default in XF86Config. With
the Xkb extension, keysyms are 2-byte, and Russian letters are at 0x6??. The keyboard
is congured by setxkbmap. When X starts, it issues this command with the system-wide
Xkbmap le (usually living in /etc/X11/xinit), if it exists; and then with the user's ~/
.Xkbmap, if it exists. A typical ~/.Xkbmap may look like
ru basic grp:shift_toggle
This means that the keyboard mode is toggled by l-shift r-shift . Other popular choices
are ⌃⇧ or ⌥⌃ , see /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/ for more details. This is the preferred keyboard setup for modern Linux systems, if you plan to use Russian often.

A.3 Notes for users of Cyrillic languages

213

In older Linux systems, the Xkb extension is often disabled. Keysyms are 1-byte, and
are congured by xmodmap. When X starts, it issues this command with the system-wide
Xmodmap (usually living in /etc/X11/xinit), if it exists; and then with the user's ~/
.Xmodmap, if it exists. You can congure the mode toggling key combination, and use a 1byte Russian encoding (such as koi8-r) in the Russian mode. It is easier to download the
package xruskb, and just run
xrus jcuken-koi8
at the beginning of your X session. This sets the layout jcuken (see below) and the
encoding koi8-r for your keyboard in the Russian mode. If you use such keyboard setup,
you should select Options ! international keyboard ! russian ! koi8-r.

It is also possible to use the Windows cp1251 encoding instead of koi8-r, though this is
rarely done in UNIX. If you do use xrus jcuken-cp1251, select cp1251 instead of koi8-r.
All the methods described above require some special actions to russify the keyboard.
This is not dicult, see the Cyrillic-HOWTO or, better, its updated version
http://www.inp.nsk.su/~baldin/Cyrillic-HOWTO-russian/Cyrillic-HOWTOrussian.html
Also, all of the above methods globally aect all X applications: text editors (Emacs,
Nedit, Kedit...), xterms, TEXMACS etc.
If you need to type Russian only once, or very rarely, a proper keyboard setup may be more
trouble than it's worth. For the benet of such occasional users, TEXMACS has methods
of Russian input which require no preliminary work. Naturally, such methods aect only
TEXMACS, and no other application.
The simplest way to type some Russian on the standard US-style keyboard with no software
setup is to select Edit!Preferences!Keyboard!Cyrillic input method!translit. Then, typing
a Latin letter will produce the most similar Russian one. In order to get some Russian
letters, you have to type 2- or 3-letter combinations:
Shorthand for
⌥" E
¼
YO
¼
ZH
æ
J⇥
æ
CH
÷
SH
ø
SCH
ù
E⇥
ý
YU
þ
YA
ÿ

Shorthand(s)

for
œ
⇧Y O ⇧Y ⇧O
œ
⇧Z H ⇧Z ⇧H
Æ
⇧J ⇥
Æ
⇧C H ⇧C ⇧H
×
⇧S H ⇧S ⇧H
Ø
⇧S C H ⇧S ⇧C ⇧H Ù
⇧E ⇥
Ý
⇧Y U ⇧Y ⇧U
Þ
⇧Y A ⇧Y ⇧A
ß
⌘" ⇧E

Table A.3. Typing Cyrillic text on a Roman keyboard.

If you want to get, e.g., ñõ, and not ø, you have to type S / H . Of course, the choice of
optimal mapping of Latin letters to Russian ones in not unique. You can investigate the
mapping supplied with TEXMACS and, if you don't like something, override it in your ~/
.TeXmacs/progs/my-init-texmacs.scm.

214

Configuration of TEXMACS

If you select jcuken instead of translit, you get the ocial Russian typewriter layout. It
is so called because the keys qwerty produce éöóêåí. This input method is most useful
when you have a Russian-made keyboard, which has additional Russian letters written on
the key caps in red, in the jcuken layout (a similar eect can be achieved by attaching
transparent stickers with red Russian letters to caps of a US-style keyboard). It is also
useful if you are an experienced Russian typist, and your ngers remember this layout.
Those who have no Russian letters indicated at the key caps often prefer the yawerty
layout, where the keys qwerty produce ÿâåðòû. Each Latin letter is mapped into a
similar Russian one; some additional Russian letters are produced by ⇧ -digits. TEXMACS
comes with a slightly modied yawerty layout, because it does not redene the keys $ , ¿ ,
\ , which are important for TEXMACS, are not redened. The corresponding Russian letters
are produced by some ⇧ -digit combinations instead.

A.4. Notes for users of oriental languages
In order to type oriental languages, you rst have to start a conversion server which
can be used in combination with the X input method and set the environment variables
accordingly. For instance, in the case of Japanese, one typically has to execute the following
shell commands:
kinput2 &
export LANG="ja_JP.eucJP"
export LC_ALL="ja_JP.eucJP"
export XMODIFIERS="@im=kinput2"
You also have to install Japanese fonts. For instance, you may download the Ipag fonts
ipam.ttf, ipag.ttf, ipamp.ttf, ipagm.ttf and ipagui.ttf and copy them to
~/.TeXmacs/fonts/truetype
After doing this, you may launch TEXMACS using
texmacs --delete-font-cache
and select Japanese from the
icon on the rst icon bar. If everything went allright, the
menus should now show up in Japanese and the current document is also in Japanese.
Notice that you may also select Japanese as your default language in Edit!Preferences!
Language!Japanese. It is also possible to select Japanese for a portion of text in a document
using Format!Language!Japanese.

Inside a Japanese portion of text, and depending on your input method, you usually have
to type ⇧␣ in order to start Kana to Kanji conversion. A small window shows up where you
can type phonetic characters and use ␣ in order to start conversion to Kanji characters.
When pressing ↩ , the text is inserted into the main TEXMACS window. Pressing ⇧␣ once
again returns to the classical TEXMACS input method.

Appendix B
About GNU TEXMACS-1.99.9
B.1. Summary
Installed version
Supported systems
Copyright
License
Web sites
Contact
Regular mail

GNU TEXMACS
1.99.9
Most GNU/Linux systems
© 19982017 by Joris van der Hoeven
GNU General Public License
http://www.texmacs.org
http://www.gnu.org/software/texmacs
contact@texmacs.org
Prof. dr. Joris van der Hoeven
Laboratoire d'informatique de l'École polytechnique
LIX, UMR 7161 CNRS
Campus de l'École polytechnique
1, rue Honoré d'Estienne d'Orves
Bâtiment Alan Turing, CS35003
91120 Palaiseau, France

Table B.1. Summary of the principal information about GNU TEXMACS .

Disclaimers.


TEXMACS includes the LibAes library with the following copyright notice:
Copyright (c) 1998-2013, Brian Gladman, Worcester, UK. All rights reserved.
The redistribution and use of this software (with or without changes)
is allowed without the payment of fees or royalties provided that:
source code distributions include the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following disclaimer;
binary distributions include the above copyright notice, this list
of conditions and the following disclaimer in their documentation.
This software is provided 'as is' with no explicit or implied warranties
in respect of its operation, including, but not limited to, correctness
and fitness for purpose.

B.2. The philosophy behind TEXMACS
B.2.1. A short description of GNU TEXMACS
GNU TEXMACS is a free wysiwyw (what you see is what you want) editing platform with
special features for scientists. The software aims to provide a unied and user friendly
framework for editing structured documents with dierent types of content (text, graphics,
mathematics, interactive content, etc.). The rendering engine uses high-quality typesetting
algorithms so as to produce professionally looking documents, which can either be printed
out or presented from a laptop.
215

216

About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9

The software includes a text editor with support for mathematical formulas, a small technical picture editor and a tool for making presentations from a laptop. Moreover, TEXMACS
can be used as an interface for many external systems for computer algebra, numerical
analysis, statistics, etc. New presentation styles can be written by the user and new features
can be added to the editor using the Scheme extension language. A native spreadsheet
and tools for collaborative authoring are planned for later.
TEXMACS runs on all major Unix platforms and Windows. Documents can be saved in
TEXMACS, Xml or Scheme format and printed as Postscript or Pdf les. Although
TEXMACS is not based on TEX/LATEX, high quality converters exist for LATEX. Documents
can also be exported to Html/Mathml for publication on the web.

B.2.2. Why freedom is important for scientists
One major objective of TEXMACS is to promote the development of free software for and
by scientists, by signicantly reducing the cost of producing high quality user interfaces. If
you plan to write an interface between TEXMACS and other software, then please contact us.
As a mathematician, I am deeply convinced that only free programs are acceptable from
a scientic point of view. I see two main reasons for this:


A result computed by a mathematical system, whose source code is not public,
can not be accepted as part of a mathematical proof.



Just as a mathematician should be able to build theorems on top of other theorems,
it should be possible to freely modify and release algorithms of mathematical software.

However, it is strange, and a shame, that the main mathematical programs which are
currently being used are proprietary. The main reason for this is that mathematicians often
do not consider programming as a full scientic activity. Consequently, the development
of useful software is delegated to engineers and the resulting programs are used as black
boxes.
This subdivision of scientic activity is very articial: it is often very important from a
scientic point of view to know what there is in the black box. Inversely, deep scientic
understanding usually leads to the production of better software. Consequently, I think
that scientists should advocate the development of software as a full scientic activity,
comparable to writing articles. Then it is clear too that such software should be diused
in a way which is compatible with the requirements of science: public availability, reproducibility and free usability.

B.3. The authors of TEXMACS
The GNU TEXMACS system, which is part of the GNU project, was designed and written
by Joris van der Hoeven. The system was inspired both by the TEX system, written by D.
Knuth, and by Emacs, written by R. Stallman. Special thanks goes to them, as well as
to the C.N.R.S. (the French national institute for scientic research), which employs me
and authorized me to freely distribute this program. Further thanks go to the contributors
below.

B.3 The authors of TEXMACS

217

B.3.1. Developers of TEXMACS


Massimiliano Gubinelli is responsible for the Qt port and several improvements for
the MacOS X platform.



Andrey Grozin has constantly helped us with many issues: interfaces to several
computer algebra systems, support for Cyrillic, tools for the manipulation of dictionaries, etc.



François Poulain has made signicant improvements in the LATEX import and export
converters and has contributed numerous other patches.



David Allouche replaced the gencc preprocessor by the more standard C++ template system. He also made many other patches, bug reports and he did a lot of the
administration of TEXMACS.



Denis Raux maintains the website, the mailing lists and the Windows version. He
also works on TEXMACS packages for various platforms.



Grégoire Lecerf helped us with many issues: document encryption, Pdf export,
extensive testing, bug reports and xes, etc.



Miguel de Benito Delgado works on the Qt port, the usage of TEXMACS to develop
and browse its Scheme code and general improvements to the user experience.



Henri Lesourd developed a native mode for drawing technical pictures inside
TEXMACS. He also xed a bug in the presentation mode.



Philippe Joyez provided help concerning the support of various image formats and
the compatability with Inkscape.



Darcy Shen is the main translator for Chinese. He also helped with the CJK support,
contributed various patches, and provided a lot of community work.



Dan Martens made a rst Windows port that is no longer maintained.



David Michel provided help concerning the Qt-based Windows port and several
portability issues.



Andreas Seidl has been helping with documentation, a Cygwin package and several
other things.



Dan Grayson helped me to implement communications with computer algebra systems via pipes. He also provided some money support for TEXMACS, and he made
many useful comments and suggestions.



Fabrice Rouillier provided help on a simplied TEXMACS installer based on Cygwin.



Nobuki Takayama invited me to Japan in order to add CJK support to TEXMACS.
He also provided a lot of help with this task.

218

About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9



Karim Belabas designed and developed with me the rst protocol for interfacing
TEXMACS with scientic computation or computer algebra systems. He also implemented the interface with the Pari system.



Felix Breuer helped with the support of Unicode and other character encodings. He
also made a donation to the project.



Norbert Nemec contributed a series of patches.



Josef Weidendorfer made several patches for improving the performance of TEXMACS.



Basile Audoly contributed a series of detailed bug descriptions and suggestions for
improvements.



Sam Liddicott for several patches, including hyperlink support for Pdf les.



Zou Hu for his help on CJK support and the Windows port.



Stéphane Payrard made an important bugx for destroying windows.



Bruno Rino has helperd us migrating from CVS to SVN.



Fabien Chéreau has helped us with the Qt port of TEXMACS.



Johann Dréo for the new TEXMACS icon and many other graphics.



Bill Page and David Mentré for the support of the free version of Axiom.



Chu-Ching Huang for writing CAS documentation and making a Knoppix CD for
TEXMACS.



Nelson Beebe helped with manifacturing a more robust configure.in.



Kai Krüger xed several details for the new Maple interface.



Mickael Floc'hlay and Arnaud Ébalard for their work on searching for help.



Gwenael Gabard for some xes in the LATEX to TEXMACS converter.



Igor V. Kovalenko and Teemu Ikonen for their help on debugging TeXmacs and a
few patches.



Gareth McCaughan made several patches and comments.



Immanuel Normann is working on an OpenMath converter.



Jonas Lööf for a precise installation procedure on Cygwin.



Rob Clark made a patch which improves the system time support.

B.3 The authors of TEXMACS

219



Stanislav Brabec for several patches so as to increase portability.



Bruno Haible helped coining the name TEXMACS, thereby acknowledging some initial
inspiration from both TEX and Emacs.

B.3.2. Authors and maintainers of plugins for TEXMACS
Asymptote  Yann Dirson and Emmanuël Corcelle.
Axiom  Andrey Grozin, Bill Page, David Mentré and Tim Daly.
Cadabra  Kasper Peeters.
CLisp  Michael Graam.
CMucl  Michael Graam.
DraTeX  Nicolas Ratier.
Eukleides  Mark Arrasmith.
Feynmf  Maarten Wegewijs.
Giac  Bernard Parisse.
GNUplot  Stephan Mucha.
Graphviz  Jorik Blaas.
GTybalt  Stefan Weinzierl.
Lush  Michael Graam.
Macaulay 2  Dan Grayson.
Maple  Joris van der Hoeven.
Mathemagix  Joris van der Hoeven and Grégoire Lecerf.
Matlab  Michael Graam.
Maxima  Andrey Grozin and James Amundson.
Mupad  Christopher Creutzig and Andrey Grozin.
Octave  Michael Graam.
Pari  Karim Belabas.
Python  Ero Carrera.

220

About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9

Qcl  Andrey Grozin.
R  Michael Lachmann.
Reduce  Andrey Grozin.
Scilab  François Poulain, Serge Steer and Claude Gomez.
Shell  Joris van der Hoeven.
TeXgraph  Emmanuël Corcelle.
XYpic  Nicolas Ratier.
Yacas  Ayal Pinkus.

B.3.3. Administration of TEXMACS and material support


Rennes Métropôle and the C.N.R.S. for nancially supporting the development of
TEXMACS.



Christoph Benzmueller and his team for nancially supporting the development of
TEXMACS.



Springer-Verlag for their nancial support for making a better Windows version.



Jean-Claude Fernandez, Fabien Salvi and the other persons from the CRI host and
administrate the TEXMACS website.



Álvaro Tejero Cantero maintains up the TEXMACS Wiki.



Loic Dachary made TEXMACS accessible on Savannah.

B.3.4. Porting TEXMACS to other platforms


Dan Martens is working on a the experimental Windows port.



Marciano Siniscalchi ported TEXMACS to Cygwin. His work was further perfected
by Loïc Pottier. Andreas Seidl made a the standard Cygwin package.



Martin Costabel ported TEXMACS to MacOSX.



Ralf Treinen and others has been ensuring the portability of TEXMACS to all architectures supported by Debian Gnu/Linux.



Bruno Haible and Gregory Wright helped with porting TEXMACS to the SUN system
and maintaining it.



Philipp Tomsich and Chuck Sites for their help with the IRIX port.

B.3 The authors of TEXMACS

221

B.3.5. Contributors to TEXMACS packages


Atsuhito Kohda and Kamaraju Kusumanchi maintain the Debian package for
TEXMACS.



Christophe Merlet and Bo Forslund helped with making a portable RPM package.



Lenny Cartier maintains the TEXMACS RPM for Mandrake Cooker.



Jean Pierre Demailly and Yves Potin made TEXMACS part of the CNDP project to
support free software.

B.3.6. Internationalization of TEXMACS
Chinese. Chu-Ching Huang, Zou-Hu, Darcy Shen.
Croatian. Luka Marohni¢.
Czech. David Rezac.
Danish. Magnus Marius Rohde.
Dutch. Joris van der Hoeven.
Finnish. Teemu Ikonen.
French. Michèle Garoche, Joris van der Hoeven.
German. Dietmar Jung, Hans Dembinski, Jan Ulrich Hasecke, Christoph Strobel,
Joris van der Hoeven, Thomas Langen, Ralf Treinen.
Greek. Alkis Akritas.
Hungarian. András Kadinger.
Italian. Andrea Centomo, Lucia Gecchelin, Xav and Daniele Pighin, Gian Luigi Gragnani.
Japanese. Nobuki Takayama.
Korean. Karnes Kim.
Polish. Robert Janusz, Emil Nowak, Jan Alboszta.
Portuguese. Ramiro Brito Willmersdorf, Márcio Laurini, Alexandre Taschetto de
Castro.
Romanian. Dan Ignat.
Russian. Andrey Grozin.
Slovene. Ziga Kranjec.
Spanish. Álvaro Cantero Tejero, Pablo Ruiz Múzquiz, David Moriano Garcia, Oray
Vladimir Luna Cárdenas.

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About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9

Swedish. Harald Ellmann.
Taiwanese. Chu-Ching Huang.
Ukrainian. Volodymyr Lisivka.

B.3.7. Other contributors
Final thanks go to all others who have contributed to TEXMACS, for instance by sending
bug reports or by giving suggestions for future releases: Alexandre Abbes, Alessio Abogani, Aaron Acton, Till Adam, Murali Agastya, Eizo Akiyama, Javed Alam, Doublet
Alban, Michele Alessandrin, Guillaume Allègre, Andreas Almroth, Tom Alsberg, James
Amundson, Piero D'Ancona, Daniel Andor, Ayal Anis, Larry D'Anna, Javier Arantegui
Jimenez, André Arnold, Uwe Assmann, Philippe Audebaud, Daniel Augot, Olaf Bachmann,
Franky Backeljauw, Nick Bailey, Adrian Soto Banuelos, Pierre Barbier de Reuille, Marc
Barisch, Giovanni Maniscalco Basile, Claude Baudouin, Marten Bauer, Luc Béhar, Roman
Belenov, Odile Bénassy, Paul Benham, Roy C. Bentley, Attila Bergou, Christophe Bernard,
Konrad Bernloehr, Karl Berry, Matthias Berth, Matteo Bertini, Cédric Bertolini, Matthew
Bettencourt, Raktim Bhattacharya, Giovanni Biczó, Anne-Laure Biolley, Benedikt Birkenbach, Jim Blandy, Sören Blom, François Bochatay, Christof Boeckler, Anton Bolng,
Robert Borys, Didier Le Botlan, Mohsen Bouaissa, Thierry Bouche, Adrien Bourdet, Michel
Brabants, Didier Bretin, Jean-Yves Briend, Henrik Brink, Simon Britnell, Alexander M.
Budge, Daniel Bump, Yoel Callev, José Cano, Charles James Leonardo Quarra Cappiello, Patrick Cardona, Niclas Carlsson, Dominique Caron, António Carvalho, Michel
Castagner, Topher Cawleld, Carlo Cecati, Beni Cherniavsky, Kuo-Ping Chiao, Teddy
Fen-Chong, Henri Cohen, Johann Cohen-Tanugi, Dominique Colnet, Vincenzo Colosimo,
Claire M. Connelly, Christoph Conrad, Riccardo Corradini, Paulo Correia, Olivier Cortes,
Robert J. Cristel, Maxime Curioni, Allan Curtis, Jason Dagit, Stefano Dal Pra, Thierry
Dalon, François Dausseur, Jon Davidson, Mike Davidson, Thomas Delzant, Jean-Pierre
Demailly, Peter Denisevich, Alessio Dessi, Benno Dielmann, Lucas Dixon, Mikael Djurfeldt,
Gabriel Dos Reis, Alban Doublet, Steingrim Dovland, Michael John Downes, Benjamin
Drieu, Jose Duato, Amit Dubey, Daniel Duparc, Guillaume Duval, Tim Ebringer, Dirk
Eddelbuettel, Magnus Ekdahl, Ulf Ekström, Sreedhar Ellisetty, Luis A. Escobar, Thomas
Esser, Stephan Fabel, Robin Fairbairns, Tony Falcone, Vladimir Fedonov, Hilaire Fernandes, Ken Feyl, Jens Finke, Thomas Fischbacher, Juan Flynn, Cedric Foellmi, Enrico
Forestieri, Ted Forringer, Christian Forster, Charlie Fortner, Stefan Freinatis, Michael
P Friedlander, Nils Frohberg, Rudi Gaelzer, Maciej Gajewski, Lionel Garnier, Philippe
Gogol, Björn Gohla, Patrick Gonzalez, Nirmal Govind, Albert Graef, Michael Graam,
Klaus Graichen, Ian Grant, Frédéric Grasset, Guido Grazioli, Wilco Greven, Cyril Grunspan, Laurent Guillon, Yves Guillou, Tae-Won Ha, Harri Haataja, Sébastien Hache, Irwan
Hadi, James W. Haefner, Sam Halliday, Ola Hamfors, Aaron Hammack, Guillaume Hanrot,
Alexander K. Hansen, Peter I. Hansen, Zaid Harchaoui, Jesper Harder, Philipp Hartmann,
P. L. Hayes, Karl M. Hegbloom, Jochen Heinloth, Gunnar Hellmund, Ralf Hemmecke,
Roy Henk, John Hernlund, Alain Herreman, Alexander Heuer, Johannes Hirn, Santiago
Hirschfeld, Andreas Horn, Peter Horn, Chu-Ching Huang, Sylvain Huet, Ed Hurst, Karl
Jarrod Hyder, Richard Ibbotson, Benjamin T. Ingram, Alexander Isacson, Michael Ivanov,
Vladimir G. Ivanovic, Maik Jablonski, Frederic de Jaeger, Pierre Jarillon, Neil Jerram,
Paul E. Johnson, Pierre-Henri Jondot, Peter Jung, Mukund S. Kalisi, Antoun Kanawati,
Yarden Katz, Tim Kaulmann, Bernhard Keil, Samuel Kemp, Jeremy Kephart, Michael
Kettner, Salman Khilji, Iwao Kimura, Simon Kirkby, Ronny Klein, Peter Koepke, Matthias
Koeppe, John Kollar, Denis Kovacs, Je Kowalczyk, Dmitri Kozionov, Ralph Krause,

B.3 The authors of TEXMACS

223

Neel Krishnaswami, Friedrich Laher, Winter Laite, Anthony Lander, Russell Lang, David
Latreyte, Christopher Lee, Milan Lehocky, Torsten Leidig, Patrick Lenz, Kalle Lertola,
Tristan Ley, Joerg Lippmann, Marc Longo, Pierre Lorenzon, Ralph Lõvi, V. S. Lugovsky,
Gregory Lussiana, Bud Maddock, Duraid Madina, Camm Maguire, Yael Maguire, Paul
Magwene, Jeremiah Mahler, Vincent Maillot, Giacomo Mallucci, Lionel Elie Mamane,
Sourav K. Mandal, Andy P. Manners, Yun Mao, Chris Marcellin, Sylvain Marchand,
Bernd Markgraf, Eric Marsden, Chris Marston, Evan Martin, Carlos Dehesa Martínez,
Paulo Jorge de Oliveira Cantante de Matos, Tom McArdell, Alisdair McDiarmid, Bob
McElrath, Robert Medeiros, Phil Mendelsohn, Sébastien de Menten, Jean-Michel Mermet,
Jon Merriman, Herve le Meur, Ingolf Meyer, Amir Michail, Franck Michel, Arkadiusz
Mi±kiewicz, Sasha Mitelman, Dirk Moebius, Jack Mott, Jan David Mol, Klaus-Dieter
Möller, Harvey Monder, Juan Fresneda Montano, André Moreau, Guillaume Morin, Julian
Morrison, Bernard Mourrain, Stephan Mucha, Toby Muhlhofer, Vijayendra Munikoti,
Nathan Myers, Norbert Nemec, Thomas Neumann, Thien-Thi Nguyen, Han-Wen Nienhuys,
Nix N. Nix, Eduardo Nogueira, Immanuel Normann, Jean-Baptiste Note, Ralf Nuetzel,
Kostas Oikonomou, Ondrej Pacovsky, Bill Page, Santtu Pajukanta, Pierre Pansu, Ilya Papiashvili, Bernard Parisse, Frédéric Parrenin, André Pascual, Fernández Pascual, Yannick
Patois, Alen L. Peacock, François Pellegrini, Antonio Costa Pereira, Enrique Perez-Terron,
Jacob Perkins, Bernard Perrot, Jan Peters, Jean Peyratout, Jacques Peyriere, Valery
Pipin, Dimitri Pissarenko, Yves Pocchiola, Benjamin Podszun, Martin Pollet, Benjamin
Poussin, Isaías V. Prestes, Rui Prior, Julien Puydt, Nguyen-Dai Quy, Manoj Rajagopalan,
Ramakrishnan, Adrien Ramparison, Nicolas Ratier, Olivier Ravard, Leo Razoumov, Kenneth Reinhardt, Cesar A. Rendon, Christian Requena, Diego Restrepo, Chris Retford,
Robert Ribnitz, Thomas CLive Richards, Staffan Ringbom, Eric Ringeisen, Christian
Ritter, William G. Ritter, Will Robinson, Juan Pablo Romero, Pascal Romon, Juergen
Rose, Mike Rosellini, Mike Rosing, Bernard Rousseau, Eyal Rozenberg, Olivier Ruatta,
Filippo Rusconi, Gaetan Ryckeboer, Philippe Sam-Long, John Sandeman, Duncan Sands,
Breton Saunders, Claire Sausset, David Sauzin, Gilles Schaeer, Guido Schimmels, Rainer
Schöpf, David Schweikert, Stefan Schwertheim, Rui Miguel Seabra, Chung-Tsun Shieh,
Sami Sieranoja, Vasco Alexandre da Silva Costa, Marciano Siniscalchi, Daniel Skarda,
Murray Smigel, Václav ’milauer, Dale P. Smith, Luke Snow, René Snyders, Pekka Sorjonen, Kasper Souren, Rodney Sparapani, Bas Spitters, Ivan Stanisavljevic, Starseeker,
Harvey J. Stein, Peter Sties, Bernard Stloup, Peter Stoehr, Thierry Stoehr, James Su, Przemyslaw Sulek, Ben Sussman, Roman Svetlov, Milan Svoboda, Dan Synek, Pan Tadeusz,
Luca Tagliacozzo, Sam Tannous, John Tapsell, Dung TaQuang, Gerald Teschl, Laurent
Thery, Eric Thiébaut, Nicolas Thiery, Helfer Thomas, Reuben Thomas, Dylan Thurston,
Kurt Ting, Janus N. Tøndering, Philippe Trébuchet, Marco Trevisani, Boris Tschirschwitz,
Elias Tsigaridas, Michael M. Tung, Andreas Umbach, Miguel A. Valle, Rémi Vanicat,
Harro Verkouter, Jacques Vernin, Sawan Vithlani, Philip A. Viton, Marius Vollmer, Guy
Wallet, Adam Warner, Thomas Wawrzinek, Maarten Wegewijs, Duke Whang, Lars Willert,
Grayson Williams, Barton Willis, Claus-Peter Wirth, Ben Wise, Wiebe van der Worp,
Pengcheng Wu, Damien Wyart, Wang Yin, Lukas Zapletal, Volker Zell, Oleg Zhirov, Vadim
V. Zhytnikov, Richard Zidlicky, Sascha Ziemann, Reinhard Zierke, Paul Zimmermann.

B.3.8. Contacting us
You can either contact us by email at
contact@texmacs.org
or by regular mail at

224

About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9

Joris van der Hoeven
Laboratoire d'informatique de l'École polytechnique
Campus de l'École polytechnique
1, rue Honoré d'Estienne d'Orves
Bâtiment Alan Turing, CS35003
91120 Palaiseau, France
There are also several TEXMACS mailing lists:
dtexmacs-users@texmacs.org
texmacs-info@texmacs.org
texmacs-dev@gnu.org

B.4. Important changes in TEXMACS
Below, we briey describe the most important changes which have occurred in TEXMACS
since version 0.3.3.15. We also maintain a more detailed change log.
In general, when upgrading to a new version, we recommend you to make backups of your
old TEXMACS les before opening them with the newer version of TEXMACS. In the unlikely
case when your old le does not open in the correct way, please send a bug report to
bugs@texmacs.org
and send your old document as an attached le. Do not forget to mention your version of
TEXMACS and the system you are using.

B.4.1. Improved spacing inside formulas (1.0.7.10)
In the new version, the spacing around mathematical operators has been made dependent
on the semantic context. For instance, when used as an inx operator in a subtraction
x ¡ y, there are small spaces around the minus sign ¡; this is no longer the case in ¡x,
where we use the minus as a prex. Similarly, the spacing inside lists of operators +; ¡; 
is now correct. However, the modication may alter the spacing inside some formulas in
existing documents. For critical documents, you may thus want to review the line breaking.
Some of the keyboard shortcuts inside formulas have also been modied. For instance, ^
and _ are now obtained by typing & resp. % . The shortcuts for 2,  and j have also been
changed. For more information, please refer to the documentation on editing mathematical
formulas. At this place, you will also nd more information about the newly added semantic
editing features.

B.4.2. Auto-matching brackets (1.0.7.9)
From now on, inside mathematical formulas, all brackets have to match and all big operators should admit well-specied scopes. To this eect, the way parenthesized expressions
are edited has changed, although the old non-matching editing style can be restored using
Edit!Preferences!Keyboard!Automatic brackets!Disable.
Documents for previous versions of TEXMACS will be upgraded automatically in order to
make all brackets match and determine the scopes of big operators. Although this task is
accomplished using heuristics, the result should be correct most of the time. In any case,
from the typesetting point of view, the upgraded documents will always look the same.

B.4 Important changes in TEXMACS

225

B.4.3. More context dependent interface (1.0.7.8)
The interface of the new version of TEXMACS is more context dependent. On the one hand,
the menus and toolbars have been reorganized. Several items from the Insert menu have
been moved to the Format menu, whereas the context dependent menus Text, Mathematics,
Table, Session, etc. have disappeared, their contents being moved to the Insert menu.
On the other hand, a new top-level Focus menu has been created. Its contents is highly
context dependent and determined as a function of the current focus. Similarly, a third
focus toolbar has been introduced. For more information, we refer to the section on typing
structured text.
TEXMACS developers should also notice that the introduction of the focus has modied the
way contextual overloading is done. For more details, we refer to the sections on contextual
overloading and the TEXMACS editing model.

B.4.4. Default look and feel (1.0.7.7)
From this version on, the default look and feel of TEXMACS depends on your operating system
and environment. The implemented look and feels (Emacs, Gnome, KDE, MacOS, Windows) attempt to be as compatible as possible with the look and feel of other applications
on your system. You may choose an alternative look and feel in Edit!Preferences!Look
and feel.

In order to make the TEXMACS keyboard shortcuts as compatible as possible with the
standards on your system, we have redened many of the keyboard shortcuts. Although
these changes will only marginally aect the Emacs look and feel, there will be substential
changes for all other look and feels.
If you upgrade from a previous TEXMACS version with the Emacs look and feel , then
you will be able to keep most of your habits. In all contrary cases, including installation
of TEXMACS on a new computer, you probably need to retake a look at our sections on
keyboard conguration and mastering the keyboard. In cases of doubt, please refer to the
user manual; the keyboard shortcuts in the manual are automatically adapted to the active
look and feel .

B.4.5. Linking tool (1.0.6.3)
From this version on, TEXMACS includes a linking tool, as well as a tool for remote connections to a TEXMACS server. In the 1.0.6.* series, these tools are still under development, so
we ask users for their kind feedback. In order to enable the tools, you have to activate them
in Edit!Preferences!Utilities. Notice that the linking tool replaces the Proclus plug-in.
If you were a user of this plug-in, then please check with its author Alain Herreman
whether an automatic upgrade facility is available.

B.4.6. Type 1 fonts become the default (1.0.5.10)
From now on, TEXMACS uses Type 1 fonts by default, which enable you to generate higher
quality Pdf les. The basic TEXMACS distribution (for Unix) comes with a minimal set of
EC fonts for European languages, but an additional font package can be downloaded from
our web site (the additional fonts are directly included in the Windows version). Whenever a given font is not available as a type 1 font, then TEXMACS falls back on Metafont
in order to generate a Type 3 substitute. This behaviour can be further customized in
Edit!Preferences!Printer!Font type.

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About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9

B.4.7. New multi-part document mechanism (1.0.5.6  1.0.5.7)
Previous versions of TEXMACS provided the project mechanism for dealing with large
documents like books. In the new version, any large structured document can be transformed into a multi-part document whose individual parts can be viewed and edited in
an ecient way (see Document!Part). Former multi-le projects are deprecated although
still supported. They can be transformed into multi-part documents using Tools!Project!
Expand inclusions. A new multi-part document corresponds to a single le.

B.4.8. Improved scheme interface (1.0.5.1  1.0.5.6)
The Scheme interface has been further improved and stabilized. For those users who customized the behaviour of TEXMACS using a personal initialization le, it may be necessary
to make a few corrections. Some information about the new Scheme interface can be found
in Scheme!Extensions. Further documentation will be written later.

B.4.9. Improved titles (1.0.4.1)
From now on, titles of documents are more structured. This makes it easier to render
the same title information in the appropriate ways for dierent styles. Old-style titles are
automatically upgraded, but the result is only expected to be correct for documents with
a single author. For documents with multiple authors, you may have to re-enter the title
using our new interface.

B.4.10. Improved style sheets and source editing mode (1.0.3.5)
We are making it easier for users to edit style sheets. This improvement made it necessary
to simplify many of the standard TEXMACS styles and packages, so that it will be easier to
customize them. However, if you already designed some style les, then this may break
some of their features. We mainly redesigned the list environments, the section environments and automatic numbering. Please report any problems to us.

B.4.11. Renaming of tags and environment variables (1.0.2.7 -1.0.2.8)
Most environment variables and some tags have been renamed, so that these names no
longer contain whitespace and only dashes (and no underscores) as separators.

B.4.12. Macro expansion (1.0.2.3  1.0.2.7)
An important internal change concerning the data format has been made: macro expansions and function applications like
(expand tag arg-1 ... arg-n)
(apply tag arg-1 ... arg-n)
are now replaced by hard-coded tags

B.4 Important changes in TEXMACS

227

(tag arg-1 ... arg-n)
Moreover, functions have systematically been replaced by macros. The few built-in functions which may take an arbitrary number of arguments have been rewritten using the new
xmacro construct. If you ever wrote such a function yourself, then you will need to rewrite
it too.
The new approach favorites a uniform treatment of macros and functions and makes the
internal representation match with the corresponding Scheme representation. More and
more information about tags will gradually be stored in the D.R.D. (Data Relation Denition). This information is mostly determined automatically using heuristics.
Notice that some perverse errors might arise because of the above changes. Please keep
copies of your old les and report any suspicious behaviour to us.

B.4.13. Formatting tags (1.0.2  1.0.2.1)
All formattings constructs without arguments (like line breaks, indentation directives, etc.)
have been replaced by tags of arity zero. This makes most new documents badly unreadable
for older versions of TEXMACS and subtle errors might occasionnaly occur when saving or
loading, or during other editing operations.

B.4.14. Keyboard (1.0.0.11  1.0.1)
The TEXMACS keybindings have been rationalized. Here follows a list of the major changes:


The E- prex has been renamed to ⌘ .



⌘



Mode dependent commands are now prexed by ⌥ . In particular, accents are typed
using ⌥ instead of E- .



Variants are now obtained using ⇥ instead of * and you can circle back using ⇧⇥ .



Greek characters are now typed using ⌥⌃ , ⇧F7 , or the hyper modier, which can be
congured in Edit!Preferences. You may also obtain Greek characters as variants
of Latin characters. For instance, P ⇥ yields .



The signication of the cursor keys in combination with control, alt and meta has
changed.

is equivalent to ⌘ and ⌘ - ⌘ to ⌥ .

You may choose between several look and feels for the keyboard behaviour in Edit!
Preferences!Look and feel. The default is Emacs, but you may choose Old style if you want
to keep the behaviour to which you may be used now.

B.4.15. Menus (1.0.0.7  1.0.1)
Several changes have been made in the menus. Here follows a list of the major changes:


Buer has been renamed as Go.

228

About GNU TEXMACS -1.99.9



Several items from File have been moved to View.



The Edit!Import and Edit!Export items have been moved to Tools!Selections.



The Insert menu has been split up into the menus Insert, Text and Mathematics.



The Text and Paragraph menus have been merged together in one Format menu.



Options has been spread out across Document, View, Tools and Edit!Preferences.

B.4.16. Style les (1.0.0.4)
Many changes have been made in the organization of the TEXMACS style les. Personal style
les which depend on intermediate TEXMACS packages may require some slight adaptations.
We are working towards a stabilization of the standard style les and packages. At the end
of this process, it should be easy to adapt existing LATEX style les for journals to TEXMACS
by customizing these standard style les and packages. As soon as we have time, we plan
to provide online documentation on how to do this at Help!Online documentation.

B.4.17. Tabular material (0.3.5)
The way tabular material is treated has completely changed. It has become much easier to
edit tables, matrices, equation arrays, etc. Also, many new features have been implemented,
such as background color, border, padding, hyphenation, subtables, etc. However, the
upgrading of old tabular material might sometimes be erroneous, in which case we invite
you to submit a bug report.

B.4.18. Document format (0.3.4)
The TeXmacs document format has profoundly changed in order to make TeXmacs compatible with XML in the future. Most importantly, the old style environments like
>,
which are applied via matching pairs text, have been replaced by
macros
close>>,
which are applied via single macro expansions . Similarly, matching
pairs text of environment variable changes are replaced by a
 construct (close to XML attributes). From a technical point of view,
these changes lead to several complications if the text body consists of several paragraphs.
As a consequence, badly structured documents may sometimes display dierently in the
new version (although I only noticed one minor change in my own documents). Furthermore, in order to maintain the higher level of structure in the document, the behaviour of
the editor in relation to multiparagraph environments has slightly changed.

Appendix C
Contributing to GNU TEXMACS
C.1. Use TEXMACS
One of the best ways to contribute to GNU TEXMACS is by using it a lot, talk about it
to friends and colleagues, and to report me about bugs or other unnatural behaviour.
Please mention the fact that you wrote articles using TEXMACS when submitting them.
You can do this by putting the made-by-TeXmacs tag somewhere inside your title using
Insert!Title!TeXmacs notice.

Besides these general (but very important) ways to contribute, your help on the more
specic subjects below would be appreciated. Don't hesitate to contact us if you want
to contribute to these or any other issues. In the Help menu you can nd documentation
about the source code of TEXMACS, its document format, how to write interfaces with other
formats, and so on.

C.2. Making donations to the TEXMACS project
Making donations to TeXmacs through the SPI organization.
One very important way to support TEXMACS is by donating money to the project. TEXMACS
is currently one of the projets of SPI (Software in the Public Interest; see http://
www.spi-inc.org). You may make donations of money to TeXmacs via this organization,
by noting on your check or e-mail for wire transfers that your money should go to the TeXmacs project. You may also make donations of equipment or services or donations through
vendors. See the SPI website for more information. The list of donators is maintained at
our website.
Details on how to donate money.
To make a donation, write a check or money order to:
Software in the Public Interest, Inc.
and mail it to the following address:
Software in the Public Interest, Inc.
P.O. Box 502761
Indianapolis, IN 46250-7761
United States
To make an electronic transfer (this will work for non-US too), you need to give your bank
the routing number and account number as follows:
The SPI bank account is at American Express Centurion Bank.
229

230

Contributing to GNU TEXMACS

R o u t i n g N u m b e r : 124071889
A c c o u n t N u m b e r : 1296789
Don't forget to note on your check or e-mail for wire transfers that the money should be
spent on the TeXmacs projet. In addition you may specify a more specic purpose on
which you would like us to spend the money. You may also contact us for a more detailed
discussion on this issue.
Important notes.
Let the SPI Treasurer (treasurer@spi-inc.org) know if you have problems. When you
have completed the electronic wire, please send a copy of the receipt to the above address
so there is a copy of your donation. The copy you send to the treasurer is important. You
may also want to contact the TeXmacs team in order to make sure that the money arrived
on the TeXmacs account.
Note: The SPI address and account numbers may change from time to time. Please do
not copy the address and account numbers, but rather point to the page http://www.spiinc.org/donations to ensure that donors will always see the most current information.
Donations in Europe can be done through our partner in Germany, s e.V. If you are
interested in using their bank account (to save international money transfer costs), please
check the instructions on http://www.ffis.de/Verein/spi-en.html.

C.3. Contribute to the GNU TEXMACS documentation
There is a high need for good documentation on TEXMACS as well as people who are willing
to translate the existing documentation into other languages. The aim of this site is to
provide high quality documentation. Therefore, you should carefully read the guide-lines
on how to write such documentation.

C.3.1. Introduction on how to contribute
High quality documentation is both a matter of content and structure. The content itself
has to be as pedagogic as possible for the targeted group of readers. In order to achieve
this, you should not hesitate to provide enough examples and illustrative screen shots
whenever adequate. Although the documentation is not necessarily meant to be complete,
we do aim at providing relatively stable documentation. In particular, you should have
checked your text against spelling errors.
It is also important that you give your documentation as much structure as possible,
using special markup from the tmdoc style le. This structure can be used in order to
automatically compile printable books from your documentation, to make it suitable for
dierent ways of viewing, or to make it possible to eciently search a certain type of
information in the documentation. In particular, you should always provide copyright and
license information, as well as indications on how to traverse your documentation, if it
contains many les.
When selecting the tmdoc document style, the top level Manual menu will appear automatically, together with some additional icons. The most important tags for documentation
purposes can be found in this menu.

C.3 Contribute to the GNU TEXMACS documentation

231

Warning C.1. Don't forget to select Document!Language!Your language for each translated le. This will cause some content to be translated automatically, like the menus
or some names of keys. Also, we recommend to run the TEXMACS spell checker on each
translated document; this also requires the prior selection of the right document language.

C.3.2. Using SVN
The present TEXMACS documentation is currently maintained on texmacs.org using SVN.
In order to contribute, you should rst create an account as explained on
http://www.texmacs.org/tmweb/download/svn.en.html
In fact, SVN is not ideal for our documentation purpose, because it is not very dynamic.
In the future, we plan to create a dedicated publication website, which will allow you to
save documents directly to the web. It should also allow the automatic conversion of the
documentation to other formats, the compilation of books, etc.

C.3.3. Conventions for the names of les
Most documentation should be organized as a function of the topic in a directory tree. The
subdirectories of the top directory are the following:
about. Various information about the TEXMACS system (authors, changes, etc.).
devel. Documentation for developers.
main. The main documentation.
Please try to keep the number of entries per directory reasonably small.
File names in the main directory should be of the form type-name.language.tm. In the
other directories, they are of the form name.language.tm. Here type is a major indication
for the type of documentation; it should be one of the following:
man. For inclusion in the TEXMACS manual.
tut. For inclusion in the TEXMACS tutorial.
You should try to keep the documentation on the same topic together, regardless of the
type. Indeed, this allows you to nd more easily all existing documentation on a particular
topic. Also, it may happen that you want to include some documentation which was
initially meant for the tutorial in the manual. The language in which is the documentation has been written should be a two letter code like en, fr, etc. The main name of
your le should be the same for the translations in other languages. For instance, mankeyboard.en.tm should not be translated as man-clavier.fr.tm.

C.3.4. Specifying meta information for documentation les
Appropriate meta data for TEXMACS documentation can be entered from the Manual!Meta
data menu. In particular, you should specify a title for each documentation le using
Manual!Meta data!Title, or by directly clicking on the Title button on the focus bar after
creating a new document with the tmdoc style.

232

Contributing to GNU TEXMACS

All TEXMACS documentation falls under the GNU Free Documentation License. If you
want your documentation to be included in TEXMACS, then you have to agree that it will
be distributed under this license too. The license information
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover
Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license
is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation
License".
should be specied at the end of each le. This can be done by clicking on Manual!Meta
data!GNU FDL.
In a similar manner, you may add a copyright notice by clicking on Manual!Meta data!
Copyright. You keep (part of) the copyright of any documentation that you will write for
TEXMACS. When you or others make additions to (or modications in, or translations of)
the document, then you should add your own name (at an appropriate place, usually at
the end) to the existing copyright information. The rst argument of the tmdoc-copyright
macro contains a year or a period of years. Each remaining argument indicates one of the
copyright holders. When combining (pieces of) several documents into another one, you
should merge the copyright holders. For cover information (on a printed book for instance),
you are allowed to list only the principal authors, but a complete list should be given at a
clearly indicated place.

C.3.5. Traversing the TEXMACS documentation
As a general rule, you should avoid the use of sectioning commands inside the TEXMACS
documentation and try to write small help pages on well identied topics. At a second
stage, you should write recursive meta help les which indicate how to traverse the
documentation in an automatic way. This allows the reuse of a help page for dierent
purposes (a printed manual, a web-oriented tutorial, etc.).
The tmdoc style provides three markup macros for indicating how to traverse documentation. The traverse macro is used to encapsulate regions with traversal information. It can
be inserted using the Traverse entry in the Manual!Traversal or
menu. The branch and
extra-branch macros indicate help pages which should be considered as a subsection and
an appendix respectively, whereas the continue macro indicates a follow-up page. Each of
these macros should be used inside a traverse environment and each of these macros takes
two arguments. The rst argument describes the link and the second argument gives the
physical relative address of the linked le.
Typically, at the end of a meta help le you will nd several branch or continue macros,
inside one traverse macro. At the top of the document, you should also specify a title for
your document using the tmdoc-title macro, as described before. When generating a printed
manual from the documentation, a chapter-section-subsection structure will automatically
be generated from this information and the document titles. Alternatively, one might
automatically generate additional buttons for navigating inside the documentation using
a browser.

C.3 Contribute to the GNU TEXMACS documentation

233

C.3.6. Using the tmdoc style
Besides the copyright information macros and traversal macros, which have been documented before, the tmdoc style comes with a certain number of other macros and functions,
which you should use whenever appropriate.
Notice that the tmdoc style inherits from the generic style, so you should use macros
like em, verbatim, itemize, etc. from this style whenever appropriate. In particular, when
documenting program code, you should use Insert!Program!Inline code and Insert!Program!Block of code in order to mark such pieces of code.
C.3.6.1. Explanations of macros, environment variables, and so on
The main environment which is used for explanations of macros, environment variables,
Scheme functions, etc. is inserted using the Explanatory item entry of the Manual!Explain
and menus. The environment comes with two arguments: the rst argument consists of
the concept or concepts to be explained, and the second one contains the actual explanation. A typical example would be the following:
hdemo-tagjbodyi
hdemo-tagjextrasjbodyi

(short and long versions of a demo tag)

The demo-tag is used for demonstration purposes and decorates the body argument. An
optional argument extras can be given with details on the way to decorate the body.

In this example, we used Manual!Explain!TeXmacs macros twice in order to insert the
macros to be described. We also used Manual!Explain!Synopsis in order to give a short
description of the tags (in grey). In a similar way, one may use Manual!Explain!Environment variable in order to describe an environment variable. Another example is:
(foo-bar K x)
The function foo-bar computes the foo-bar transform of the operator K and applies it
to x.
In this example, we notice that all Scheme code was encapsulated into scm tags (see
Insert!Program!Inline code!Scheme) and arguments were tagged using scm-arg.
C.3.6.2. Graphical user interface related markup
The following markup elements can be used in order to describe various graphical user
interface elements, such as keyboard shortcuts, menus or icons.
shortcut

This macro is used to indicate a keyboard shortcut for a Scheme command. For
instance, the shortcut for (new-buffer) is ? .
key

This unary macro is used for explicit keyboard input. For instance, when giving
A C-b return as argument, the result is ⇧A ⌃B ↩ .
menu

This function with an arbitrary number of arguments indicates a menu like File or
Document!Language. Menu entries are automatically translated by this function.

234

Contributing to GNU TEXMACS

submenu

Consider the following sentence:
You may use the Load and Save entries of the File menu in order to load
and save les.
In this example, the menu entries Load and Save were marked using the submenu tag,
which takes the implicit File menu as its rst invisible argument. This invisible argument
is still taken into account when building the index (for instance). In a similar way, we
provide subsubmenu and subsubsubmenu tags.
icon

Can be used in order to specify one of the TEXMACS icons, such as and . The macro
takes one argument with the le name of the icon (the full path is not needed).
screenshot

Similar to the icon tag, but for screenshots.
cursor

This macro can be used to indicate a cursor position, as in a2 + b2j = c2.
small-focus, small-envbox

This macro can be used for indicating the visual aids around the current focus and the
b
further outer context (e.g. a + c ), in the case of inline elements.
big-focus, big-envbox

Block versions of small-focus and small-envbox.
Notice that the contents of none of the above tags should be translated into foreign languages. Indeed, for menu tags, the translations are done automatically, so as to keep the
translations synchronized with the translations of the actual TEXMACS menus. In the cases
of markup, styles, packages and d.t.d.s, it is important to keep the original name, because
it often corresponds to a le name.
C.3.6.3. Common annotations
The Manual!Annotate and
menus contain the following useful macros for common
annotations. You should use them whenever appropriate.
markup

This macro is used in order to indicate a macro or a function like section.
src-arg

This macro should be used in order to indicate macro arguments such as body.
src-var

This macro is used for the indication of environment variables such as font-size.

C.4 Internationalization

235

src-length

This macro is used in order to indicate a length such as 12em.
tmstyle

This macro indicates the name of a TEXMACS style le or package like article.
tmpackage

This macro indicates the name of a TEXMACS package like std-markup.
tmdtd

This macro indicates the name of a TEXMACS d.t.d. like number-env.
C.3.6.4. Miscellaneous markup
Some other potentially useful macros are the following:
tm-fragment

For indicating some TEXMACS document fragment. This macro is especially useful for
TEXMACS source code, as in
hassignjred-textjhmacrojbodyjhwithjcolor jredjbodyiii
In this example, we used the keyboard shortcut ⌘- in order to deactivate the source
code inside an active outer document.
descriptive-table

For descriptive tables; such tables can be used to document lists of keyboard shortcuts,
dierent types of markup, etc.

C.4. Internationalization
The support of a maximal number of foreign languages is another major challenge in
which your help would be appreciated. Making the translations to support a new language
usually requires several days of work. We therefore recommend you to nd some friends
or colleagues who are willing to help you.
The procedure for adding a new language is as follows


You copy the file english-new.scm to english-yourlanguage .dic in langs/
natural/dic and ll out the corresponding translations. You may want to use
Andrey Grozin's dictionary tool at

http://www.texmacs.org/Data/dictool.py.gz
In order to use it, may sure that Python is installed on your system, download the
le, gunzip it, make it executable and run it.


You tell me about any special typographical rules in your language and handy
keystrokes for producing special characters.



I take care of the hyphenation and typographical issues, but you test them.

236

Contributing to GNU TEXMACS



If you have enough time, you may also consider the translation of (part of) the
existing documentation.

Of course, the support for languages get out of date each time that new features are added
to TEXMACS. For this reason, we also maintain a le miss-english-yourlanguage .dic
with all missing translation for your language, once that it has been added. Please do not
hesitate to send inclomplete versions of english-yourlanguage .dic or miss-englishyourlanguage .dic; someone else may be willing to complete them.

C.5. Writing data converters
If you are familiar with TEX, LATEX, Html, Xml, Sgml, Mathml, Pdf, Rtf, or any other
frequently used data format, please consider contributing to writing good converters for one
or more of these formats. In Help!Source code!Data format you will nd details about the
TEXMACS data format and in Help!Source code!Data conversion we give some suggestions
which might be helpful for these projects.

C.6. Porting TEXMACS to other platforms
Currently, TEXMACS is supported on most major Unix/X-Window platforms and a Windows port should be ready soon. Nevertheless, your help is appreciated in order to keep
the existing ports working. Some remaining challenges for porting TEXMACS are:


A native port for MacOS-X.



Ports to PDAs, rst of all those which run Linux. It should be noticed that, with
the current support for Freetype, TEXMACS no longer depends on TEX/LATEX for
its fonts. We expect it to be possible to obtain a reasonable ports for TEXMACS on
PDAs with 32Mb and at least 100MHz clock-speed. Of course, one also needs to
customize the menus and/or icon bars, but this should not be hard.
TEXMACS ports to PDAs would be particularly interesting in combination with the
available plug-ins for doing scientic computations.

C.7. Interfacing TEXMACS with other systems
It is quite easy to write interfaces between TEXMACS and computer algebra systems or other
scientic programs with structured output. Please consider writing interfaces between
TEXMACS and your favorite system(s). TEXMACS has already been interfaced with several
other free systems, like Giac, Macaulay 2, Maxima, GNU Octave, Pari, Qcl, gTybalt, Yacas.
Detailed documentation on how to add new interfaces is available in the Help!Interfacing
menu.

C.8. TEXMACS over the network and over the web
It should be quite easy to write a plug-in for TEXMACS for doing instant messenging or liveconferencing. We are very interested in people who would like to help with this. The same
techniques might be used for collaborative authoring and educational purposes.

C.9 Become a TEXMACS developer

237

Besides live conferencing, we are also interested by people who are willing to program better
integration of TEXMACS with the web. As a rst step, this would require an internal C++
plug-in based on Wget or Curl for accessing web-pages, which supports cookies, security,
etc. At a second stage, these features should be exploited by the Html converters. At the
last stage, one might develop more general web-based services.

C.9. Become a TEXMACS developer
Apart from the kind of contributions which have been described in more detail above,
there are many more issues where your help would be appreciated. Please take a look at
our plans for the future for more details. Of course, you should feel free to come up with
your own ideas and share them with us on the texmacs-dev@gnu.org mailing list!

Appendix D
Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs
D.1. Introduction
In this chapter we describe how to interface TEXMACS with an extern application. Such
interfaces should be distributed in the form of plugins. The plug-in may either contain the
extern application, or provide the glue between TEXMACS and the application. Usually,
interfaces are used interactively in shell sessions (see Insert!Session). But they may also
be designed for background tasks, such as spell checking or typesetting.
The communication between TEXMACS and the application takes place using a customizable
input format and the special TEXMACS meta-format for output from the plug-in. The metaformat enables you to send structured output to TEXMACS, using any common format like
verbatim, LATEX, Postscript, HTML, or TEXMACS itself. This is useful when adding a
TEXMACS interface to an existing system, since LATEX or Postscript output routines are
often already implemented. It will then suce to put the appropriate markers in order to
make a rst interface with TEXMACS.
As soon as basic communication between your application and TEXMACS is working, you
may improve the interface in many ways. Inside shell sessions, there is support for prompts,
default inputs, tab-completion, mathematical and multi-line input, etc. In general, your
application may take control of TEXMACS and modify the user interface (menus, keyboard,
etc.) or add new Scheme routines to TEXMACS. Your application may even extend the
typesetter.
In the directory $TEXMACS_PATH/examples/plugins, you can nd many examples of simple
plug-ins. In the next sections, we will give a more detailed explanation of the interfacing
features of TEXMACS on the hand of these examples. In order to try one of these examples,
we recall that you just have to copy it to either one of the directories
$TEXMACS_PATH/plugins
$TEXMACS_HOME_PATH/plugins
and run the Makefile (if there is one).

D.2. Basic input/output using pipes
The conguration and the compilation of the minimal plug-in is described in the chapter
about plug-ins. We will now study the source le minimal/src/minimal.cpp. Essentially,
the main routine is given by
239

240

Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

int
main () {
display-startup-banner
while (true) {
read-input
display-output
}
return 0;
}
By default, TEXMACS just send a '\n'-terminated string to the application as the input.
Consequently, the code for read-input is given by
char buffer[100];
cin.getline (buffer, 100, '\n');
The output part is more complicated, since TEXMACS needs to have a secure way for
knowing whether the output has nished. This is accomplished by encapsulating each piece
of output (in our case both the display banner and the interactive output) inside a block
of the form
DATA_BEGIN format :message DATA_END

Here DATA_BEGIN and DATA_END stand for special control characters:
#define DATA_BEGIN
#define DATA_END
#define DATA_ESCAPE

((char) 2)
((char) 5)
((char) 27)

The DATA_ESCAPE is used for producing the DATA_BEGIN and DATA_END characters in the
message using the rewriting rules
DATA_ESCAPE DATA_BEGIN
DATA_ESCAPE DATA_END
DATA_ESCAPE DATA_ESCAPE

¡!
¡!
¡!

DATA_BEGIN
DATA_END
DATA_ESCAPE

The format species the format of the message. For instance, in our example, the code
of display-startup-banner is given by
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << "Hi there!";
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();
Similarly, the code of display-output is given by
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << "You typed " << buffer;
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();

D.3 Formatted and structured output

241

Remark D.1. For synchronization purposes, TEXMACS will assume that the output is
nished as soon as it encounters the DATA_END which closes the initial DATA_BEGIN . So all
output has to be inside one single outer DATA_BEGIN - DATA_END block: if you send more blocks,
then TEXMACS will retake control before reading all your output. For certain formats (such
as verbatim), it is possible to nest DATA_BEGIN - DATA_END blocks though, as we will see below.
Remark D.2. In our example, the C++ code for the application is included in the plug-in.
In the case when you are writing a TEXMACS interface for an existing application myapp , the
convention is to create a --texmacs option for this program. Then it is no longer necessary
to have myapp/src and myapp /bin directories for your plug-in and it suces to congure
the plug-in by putting something like the following in myapp/progs/init-myapp.scm:
(plugin-configure myapp
(:require (url-exists-in-path? "myapp"))
(:launch "myapp --texmacs")
(:session "Myapp"))
In the case when you do not have the possibility to modify the source code of myapp, you
typically have to write an input/output lter tm_myapp for performing the appropriate
rewritings. By looking at the standard plug-ins distributed with TEXMACS in
$TEXMACS_PATH/plugins
you can nd several examples of how this can be done.

D.3. Formatted and structured output
In the previous section, we have seen that output from applications is encapsulated in
blocks of the form
DATA_BEGIN format :message DATA_END

Currently implemented formats include verbatim, latex, html, ps, and scheme. Certain
formats, such as verbatim, allow the message to recursively contain blocks of the same
form. The scheme format is used for sending TEXMACS trees in the form of Scheme expressions.
The f o r m u l a plug-in.
The formula plug-in demonstrates the use of LATEX as the output format. It consists of
the les
formula/Makefile
formula/progs/init-formula.scm
formula/src/formula.cpp
The body of the main loop of formula.cpp is given by

242

Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

int i, nr;
cin >> nr;
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "latex:";
cout << "$";
for (i=1; i TeXmacs converter";
next_input ();
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();
and in the body of the main loop
char buffer[100];
cin.getline (buffer, 100, '\n');
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << DATA_BEGIN;
cout << "latex:$" << buffer << "$";
cout << DATA_END;
next_input ();
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();

D.5. Sending commands to TEXMACS
The application may use command as a very particular output format in order to send
Scheme commands to TEXMACS. In other words, the block
DATA_BEGIN command:cmd DATA_END

will send the command cmd to TEXMACS. Such commands are executed immediately after
reception of DATA_END . We also recall that such command blocks may be incorporated
recursively in larger DATA_BEGIN - DATA_END blocks.
The m e n u s plug-in.
The nested plug-in shows how an application can modify the TEXMACS menus in an interactive way. The plug-in consists of the les
menus/Makefile
menus/progs/init-menus.scm
menus/src/menus.cpp
The body of the main loop of menus.cpp simply contains
char buffer[100];
cin.getline (buffer, 100, '\n');
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "command:(menus-add ""
<< buffer << "")" << DATA_END;
cout << "Added " << buffer << " to menu";
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();
The Scheme macro menus-add is dened in init-menus.scm:

D.6 Background evaluations

245

(define menu-items '("Hi"))
(tm-menu (menus-menu)
(for (entry menu-items)
((eval entry) (insert entry))))
(tm-define (menus-add entry)
(set! menu-items (cons entry menu-items)))
(plugin-configure menus
(:require (url-exists-in-path? "menus.bin"))
(:launch "menus.bin")
(:session "Menus"))
(menu-bind plugin-menu
(:require (in-menus?))
(=> "Menus" (link menus-menu)))
The conguration of menus proceeds as usual:
(plugin-configure menus
(:require (url-exists-in-path? "menus.bin"))
(:launch "menus.bin")
(:session "Menus"))

D.6. Background evaluations
Until now, we have always considered interfaces between TEXMACS and applications which
are intended to be used interactively in shell sessions. But there also exists a Scheme
command
(plugin-eval plugin session expression)
for evaluating an expression using the application. Here plugin is the name of the plug-in,
session the name of the session and expression a Scheme expression which represents
a TEXMACS tree.
The s u b s t i t u t e plug-in.
Background evaluations may for instance be used in order to provide a feature which
allows the user to select an expression and replace it by its evaluation. For instance,
the substitute plug-in converts mathematical LATEX expressions into TEXMACS, and it
provides the ? keyboard shortcut for replacing a selected text by its conversion. The plugin consists of the following les
substitute/Makefile
substitute/progs/init-substitute.scm
substitute/src/substitute.cpp
The main evaluation loop of substitute.cpp simply consists of

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Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

char buffer[100];
cin.getline (buffer, 100, '\n');
cout << DATA_BEGIN;
cout << "latex:$" << buffer << "$";
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();
Moreover, the conguration le init-substitute.scm contains the following code for
replacing a selected region by its evaluation
(define (substitute-substitute)
(import-from (texmacs plugin plugin-cmd))
(if (selection-active-any?)
(let* ((t (tree->stree (the-selection)))
(u (plugin-eval "substitute" "default" t)))
(clipboard-cut "primary")
(insert (stree->tree u)))))
as well as the keyboard shortcut for ? :
(kbd-map
("C-F12" (substitute-substitute)))
Notice that these routines should really be dened in a separate module for larger plug-ins.
The s e c u r e plug-in.
Another example of using an interface in the background is the secure plug-in which
consists of the les
secure/Makefile
secure/packages/secure.ts
secure/progs/init-secure.scm
secure/progs/secure-secure.scm
secure/src/secure.cpp
Just as substitute.cpp above, the main program secure.cpp just converts mathematical LATEX expressions to TEXMACS. The secure-secure.scm module contains the secure
Scheme routine latexer:
(tm-define (latexer s)
(:type (tree -> object))
(:synopsis "convert LaTeX string to TeXmacs tree using plugin")
(:secure #t)
(plugin-eval "secure" "default" (tree->string s)))
It is important to dene latexer as being secure, so that it can be used in order to dene
additional markup using the extern primitive. This is done in the style le secure.ts:
See a LaTeX math command as a TeXmacs expression via plug-in
hassignjlatexer jhmacrojx jhexternjlatexerjx iii

D.7 Mathematical and customized input

247

After compilation, installation, relaunching TEXMACS and selecting Document!Use package!
secure, you will now be able to use latexer as a new primitive. The primitive takes a
mathematical LATEX expression as its argument and displays its TEXMACS conversion.

D.7. Mathematical and customized input
The TEXMACS meta-format allows application output to contain structured text like mathematical formulas. In a similar way, you may use general TEXMACS content as the input
for your application. By default, only the text part of such content is kept and sent to the
application as a string. Moreover, all characters in the range 031 are ignored, except for
'\t' and '\n' which are transformed into spaces. There are two methods to customize
the way input is sent to your application. First of all, the conguration option
(:serializer ,routine)
species a scheme function for converting TEXMACS trees to string input for your application, thereby overriding the default method. This method allows you for instance to treat
multi-line input in a particular way or the perform transformations on the TEXMACS tree.
The :serialize option is a very powerful, but also a very abstract way to customize input:
it forces you to write a complete input transformation function. In many circumstances,
the user really wants to rewrite two dimensional mathematical input to a more standard
a
form, like rewriting b to ((a)/(b)). Therefore, a second way for customizing the input is
to use the command
(plugin-input-converters myplugin
rules)
This command species input conversion rules for myplugin for mathematical input and
reasonable defaults are provided by TEXMACS. Each rule is of one of the following two forms:
Leaf transformation rules.
Given two strings symbol and conversion , the rule
(symbol conversion)
species that the TEXMACS symbol symbol should be converted to conversion .
Tag transformation rules.
Given a symbol tag and a Scheme function routine, the rule
(tag routine)
species that routine will be used as the conversion routine for tag . This routine
should just write a string to the standard output. The Scheme function plugininput may be used for the recursive transformation of the arguments of the tag.
The i n p u t plug-in.

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Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

The input plug-in demonstrates the use of customized mathematical input. It consists of
the les
input/Makefile
input/packages/session/input.ts
input/progs/init-input.scm
input/progs/input-input.scm
input/src/input.cpp
The Scheme conguration code in init-input.scm is given by
(plugin-configure input
(:require (url-exists-in-path? "input.bin"))
(:launch "input.bin")
(:session "Input"))
(when (supports-initialize?)
(lazy-input-converter (input-input) input))
The predicate supports-initialize? tests whether the plug-in is indeed operational (that
is, whether input.bin exists in the path). The conversion rules in the module (input
input) are added in a lazy manner. In other words, the le input-input.scm will only be
loaded when we explicitly request to make a conversion. The conversion rules in inputinput.scm are given by
(plugin-input-converters input
(frac input-input-frac)
(special input-input-special)
("" "||")
("" "&&"))
This will cause _ and ^ to be rewritten as || and && respectively. Fractions
as ((a):(b)) using the routine

a
b

are rewritten

(define (input-input-frac t)
(display "((")
(plugin-input (car t))
(display "):(")
(plugin-input (cadr t))
(display "))"))
In the additional style le input.ts we also dened some additional markup special:
hassignjspecial j
hmacrojbodyj
hblockj
htformatj
hcwithj1j1j1j1jcell-backgroundjpastel greenij
htablej
hrowjhcelljbodyiiiiiii

D.8 Tab-completion

249

This tag is rewritten using the special conversion rule
(define (input-input-special t)
(display "[[[SPECIAL:")
(plugin-input (car t))
(display "]]]"))
As to the C++ code in input.cpp, the startup banner automatically puts the shell session
in mathematical input mode:
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "command:(session-use-math-input #t)"
<< DATA_END;
cout << "Convert mathematical input into plain text";
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();
In the main loop, we content ourselves the reproduce the input as output:
char buffer[100];
cin.getline (buffer, 100, '\n');
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << buffer;
cout << DATA_END;
cout.flush ();

D.8. Tab-completion
By default, TEXMACS looks into your document for possible tab-completions. Inside sessions
for your application, you might wish to customize this behaviour, so as to complete builtin commands. In order to do this, you have to specify the conguration option
(:tab-completion #t)
in your init-myplugin .scm le, so that TEXMACS will send special tab-completion requests
to your application whenever you press ⇥ inside a session. These commands are of the form
DATA_COMMAND (complete

input-string cursor-position ) ↩

Here DATA_COMMAND stands for the special character '\20' (ASCII 16). The input-string
is the complete string in which the ⇥ occurred and the cursor-position is an integer
which species the position of the cursor when you pressed ⇥ . TEXMACS expects your
application to return a tuple with all possible tab-completions of the form
DATA_BEGIN scheme:(tuple root completion-1  completionn) DATA_END

250

Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

Here root corresponds to a substring before the cursor for which completions could be
found. The strings completion-1 until completion-n are the list of completions as they
might be inserted at the current cursor position. If no completions could be found, then
you may also return the empty string.
Remark D.4. In principle, the tab-completion mechanism should still work in mathematical input mode. In that case, the input-string will correspond to the serialization
of the TEXMACS input.
Remark D.5. The way TEXMACS sends commands to your application can be customized
in a similar way as for the input: we provide a :commander conguration option for this,
which works in a similar way as the :serializer option.
The c o m p l e t e plug-in.
A very rudimentary example of how the tab-completion mechanism works is given by the
complete plug-in, which consists of the following les:
complete/Makefile
complete/progs/init-complete.scm
complete/src/complete.cpp
The startup banner in complete.cpp takes care of part of the conguration:
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
format_plugin ();
cout << "We know how to complete 'h'";
cout << DATA_END;
fflush (stdout);
Here format_plugin is given by
void
format_plugin () {
// The configuration of a plugin can be completed at startup time.
// This may be interesting for adding tab-completion a posteriori.
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "command:";
cout << "(plugin-configure complete (:tab-completion #t))";
cout << DATA_END;
}
In the main loop, we rst deal with regular input:
char buffer[100];
cin.getline (buffer, 100, '\n');
if (buffer[0] != DATA_COMMAND) {
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "verbatim:";
cout << "You typed " << buffer;
cout << DATA_END;
}
We next treat the case when a tab-completion command is sent to the application:

D.9 Dynamic libraries

251

else {
cout << DATA_BEGIN << "scheme:";
cout << "(tuple "h" "ello" "i there" "ola" "opsakee")";
cout << DATA_END;
}
cout.flush ();
As you notice, the actual command is ignored, so our example is really very rudimentary.

D.9. Dynamic libraries
Instead of connecting your system to TEXMACS using a pipe, it is also possible to connect
it as a dynamically linked library. Although communication through pipes is usually easier
to implement, more robust and compatible with gradual output, the second option is faster.
In order to dynamically link your application to TEXMACS, you should follow the TEXMACS
communication protocol, which is specied in the following header le:
$TEXMACS_PATH/include/TeXmacs.h
In this le it is specied that your application should export a data structure
typedef
char*
char*
char*

struct package_exports_1 {
version_protocol; /* "TeXmacs communication protocol 1" */
version_package;
(*install) (TeXmacs_exports_1* TeXmacs,
char* options, char** errors);
char* (*evaluate) (char* what, char* session, char** errors);
} package_exports_1;
which contains an installation routine for your application, as well as an evaluation routine
for further input (for more information, see the header le). TEXMACS will on its turn export
a structure
typedef struct TeXmacs_exports_1 {
char* version_protocol; /* "TeXmacs communication protocol 1" */
char* version_TeXmacs;
} TeXmacs_exports_1;
It is assumed that each application takes care of its own memory management. Hence,
strings created by TEXMACS will be destroyed by TEXMACS and strings created by the
application need to be destroyed by the application.
The string version_protocol should contain "TeXmacs communication protocol 1" and
the string version_package the version of your package. The routine install will be
called once by TEXMACS in order to initialize your system with options options. It communicates the routines exported by TEXMACS to your system in the form of a pointer
to a structure of type TeXmacs_exports_1. The routine should return a status message like
"yourcas-version successfully linked to TeXmacs"
If installation failed, then you should return NULL and *errors should contain an error
message.

252

Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

The routine evaluate is used to evaluate the expression what inside a TEXMACS-session
with name session. It should return the evaluation of what or NULL if an error occurred.
*errors either contains one or more warning messages or an error message, if the evaluation failed. The formats being used obey the same rules as in the case of communication
by pipes.
Finally, the conguration le of your plug-in should contain something as follows:
(plugin-configure myplugin
(:require (url-exists? (url "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" "libmyplugin.so")))
(:link "libmyplugin.so" "myplugin_exports" "")
further-configuration)
Here myplugin _exports is a pointer to a structure of the type package_exports_1.
Remark D.6. It is possible that the communication protocol changes in the future. In that
case, the data structures TeXmacs_exports_1 and package_exports_1 will be replaced by
data structures TeXmacs_exports_n and package_exports_n, where n is the version of the
protocol. These structures will always have the abstract data structures TeXmacs_exports
and package_exports in common, with information about the versions of the protocol,
TEXMACS and your package.
The d y n l i n k plug-in.
The dynlink plug-in gives an example of how to write dynamically linked libraries. It
consists of the following les:
dynlink/Makefile
dynlink/progs/init-dynlink.scm
dynlink/src/dynlink.cpp
The Makefile contains
tmsrc = /home/vdhoeven/texmacs/src/TeXmacs
CXX = g++
LD = g++
lib/libtmdynlink.so: src/dynlink.cpp
$(CXX) -I$(tmsrc)/include -c src/dynlink.cpp -o src/
dynlink.o
$(LD) -shared -o lib/libtmdynlink.so src/dynlink.o

so that running it will create a dynamic library dynlink/lib/libdynlink.so from
dynlink.cpp. The tmsrc variable should contain $TEXMACS_PATH, so as to nd the include
le TeXmacs.h. The conguration le init-dynlink.scm simply contains
(plugin-configure dynlink
(:require (url-exists? (url "$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"
"libtmdynlink.so")))
(:link "libtmdynlink.so" "dynlink_exports" "")
(:session "Dynlink"))
As to the C++ le dynlink.cpp, it contains a string

D.10 Miscellaneous features

253

static char* output= NULL;
with the last output, the initialization routine
char*
dynlink_install (TeXmacs_exports_1* TM, char* opts, char** errs) {
output= (char*) malloc (50);
strcpy (output, "\2verbatim:Started dynamic link\5");
return output;
}
the evaluation routine
char*
dynlink_eval (char* what, char* session, char** errors) {
free (output);
output= (char*) malloc (50 + strlen (what));
strcpy (output, "\2verbatim:You typed ");
strcat (output, what);
strcat (output, "\5");
return output;
}
and the data structure with the public exports:
package_exports_1 dynlink_exports= {
"TeXmacs communication protocol 1",
"Dynlink 1",
dynlink_install,
dynlink_eval
};
Notice that the application takes care of the memory allocation and deallocation of output.

D.10. Miscellaneous features
Several other features are supported in order to write interfaces between TEXMACS and
extern applications. Some of these are very hairy or quite specic. Let us briey describe
a few miscellaneous features:
Interrupts.
The stop icon can be used in order to interrupt the evaluation of some input. When
pressing this button, TEXMACS will just send a SIGINT signal to your application. It expects
your application to nish the output as usual. In particular, you should close all open
DATA_BEGIN -blocks.

254

Interfacing TEXMACS with other programs

Testing whether the input is complete.
Some systems start a multiline input mode as soon as you start to dene a function or
when you enter an opening bracket without a matching closing bracket. TEXMACS allows
your application to implement a special predicate for testing whether the input is complete.
First of all, this requires you to specify the conguration option
(:test-input-done #t)
As soon as you will press ↩ in your input, TEXMACS will then send the command
DATA_COMMAND (input-done?

input-string ) ↩

Your application should reply with a message of the form
DATA_BEGIN scheme:done DATA_END

where done is either #t or #f. The multiline plug-in provides an example of this mechanism (see in particular the le multiline/src/multiline.cpp).

D.11. Writing documentation
Documentation for your plug-in myplugin should be put in the doc subdirectory of the
main directory myplugin. We recommend to write at least the following three documentation les:

myplugin.en.tm.
This le should mainly contain a traverse tag with links to the other documentation
les, as described in the section traversing the TEXMACS documentation.
myplugin-abstract.en.tm.
This le should contain a short description of the purpose of the plugin-in. If
appropriate, then you should also describe how to get the plug-in and how to install
it. The contents of this le should also be suitable for publication on the web site
of TEXMACS.
myplugin-demo.en.tm.
This le should contain a short demonstration of your plug-in, such as an example
session.
The rst two les are mandatory, if you want your plug-in to show up in the Help!Plugins menu. Please refrain from putting too many images in the documentation les, so as
to keep the size of the documentation reasonable when integrated into the main TEXMACS
distribution.

D.12. Plans for the future
There are many improvements to be made in the TEXMACS interface to computer algebra
systems. First of all, the computer algebra sessions have to be improved (better hyphenation, folding, more dynamic subexpressions, etc.).
As to interfaces with computer algebra systems, out main plans consist of providing tools
for semantically safe communication between several system. This probably will be implemented in the form of a set of plug-ins which will provide conversion services.

Index

abbr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
above . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
acmconf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
acronym . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
active . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
active* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
Add . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
add-to-counter-group . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186
aip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
Algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
algorithm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
aligned-item . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
allouche . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
Allow for macro denitions in preamble . . . . 203
alt-colors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
amsart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
and . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163
appendix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
aps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
arg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156157, 161
article . . . . . . 17, 79, 90, 131, 171172, 235
assign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
associate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112, 168
attr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
author-aliation . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194, 196
author-by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
author-data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194195
author-email . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194, 196
author-homepage . . . . . . . . . . . . 194, 196
author-name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
author-note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
author-render-name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
Automatic quotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
Automatically close brackets . . . . . . . . . . 209
Autosave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
auxiliary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
axiom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
backup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
beamer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17, 65, 68, 171
below . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
bib-list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
Bibtex command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
big . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
big-gure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
big-table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
binom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178
blanc-page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
Block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176

block content . . .
block context . . .
block* . . . . . . .
body . . . . . . . .
book . . . . . . . .
bpr . . . . . . . .
case . . . . . . . .
cell . . . . . . . .
center . . . . . . .
chapter . . . . . .
choice . . . . . . .
choose . . . . . . .
cite . . . . . . . .
cite* . . . . . . . .
cite-detail . . . . .
clipped . . . . . . .
close-tag . . . . . .
code . . . . . . . .
code* . . . . . . .
collection . . . . .
compact-item . . .
compound . . . . .
concat . . . . . . .
Converters . . . . .
counter-in-g . . . .
counter-x . . . . .
cwith . . . . . . .
Cyrillic input method
date . . . . . . . .
datoms . . . . . .
dbox . . . . . . . .
Debug
keyboard . . . .
default . . . . . . .
demo-tag . . . . .
description . . . . .
description-align . .
description-compact
description-dash . .
description-long . .
det . . . . . . . .
Detailed . . . . . .
Details in menus . .
dfn . . . . . . . .
display-in-g . . . .
display-x . . . . . .
div . . . . . . . . .
dlines . . . . . . .
doc-author . . . . .
doc-author-block . .
doc-author-main . .

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65
209
233
179
179
179
179
179
178
62
209
174
186
186
163
147
193194
. . . 196
. . . 195

256
doc-author-note . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195, 197
doc-data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
doc-data-abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
doc-data-hidden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
doc-data-main . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
doc-data-main* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
doc-data-note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
doc-date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 196
doc-keywords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 197
doc-make-title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
doc-msc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 197
doc-note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
doc-render-title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
doc-running-author . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
doc-running-title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
doc-subtitle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 196
doc-title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
doc-title-block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
doc-title-note . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13, 17
document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
Beamer theme . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Bluish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Ice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Metal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Reddish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Ridged paper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Color
Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Foreground . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Font . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21, 126
Dpi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Informative ags . . . . . . . . . . . 125, 167
Detailed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
Language . . . . . 15, 17, 24, 125, 162, 233
Russian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Your language . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231
Magnication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Breaking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Screen layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Margins as on paper . . . . . . . . 15
Screen margins
Margins as on paper . . . . . . . . 134
Show header and footer . . . . . . 134
Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15, 133
Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21, 42, 134
Paper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Part . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 226
Scripts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Maxima . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Source . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80, 112
Closing style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
Compactication . . . . . . . . . . 81, 140
Edit source tree . . . . . . . . . . 80, 125
Source tags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
Source tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Special . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81, 140

Index
Style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140
Style . . . . . . . . . . . 15, 17, 77, 106, 171
Add package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171
beamer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
source . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Update
All . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42, 44
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Table of contents . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Use package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78, 106
Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
secure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
document style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Downwards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
dpages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
drd-props . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
dueto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
Dynamic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
dynamic scoping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
Edit
Copy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Copy to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55, 201
Scheme . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
Correct
Correct all . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Correct manually . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Cut . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Paste . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Paste from . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55, 201
LaTeX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Scheme . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
Preferences . . . . . . 14, 22, 101, 209210
Converters
LaTeX
LaTeX>TeXmacs . . . . . . . 204
TeXmacs>LaTeX . . . . . . . 202
TeXmacs->Html
Export formulas as images . . . 206
Use MathML . . . . . . . . . . 206
Keyboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
Automatic brackets
Disable . . . . . . . . . . . 29, 224
Automatic quotes . . . . . . . . . . 24
Cyrillic input method
translit . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
Remote control . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Language
Japanese . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
Russian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Look and feel . . . . . . . . . . . 209, 225
Mathematics
Automatic correction . . . . . . . . 34
Manual correction . . . . . . . . . 33
Semantic editing . . . . . . . . . . 32
Printer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15, 133
Font type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
Type 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
Accept all scripts . . . . . . . . . . 167
Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225

Index
Versioning tool .
Redo . . . . . . . . . .
Replace . . . . . . . .
Search . . . . . . . . .
Spell . . . . . . . . . .
Undo . . . . . . . . . .
elsart . . . . . . . . . .
em . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Emacs . . . . . . . . . . .
enumerate . . . . . . . . .
enumerate-alpha . . . . . .
enumerate-Alpha . . . . . .
enumerate-numeric . . . .
enumerate-roman . . . . .
enumerate-Roman . . . . .
enunciation-name . . . . .
enunciation-sep . . . . . .
env . . . . . . . . . . . .
env . . . . . . . . . . . .
env-base . . . . . . . . .
env-base . . . . . . . . .
env-float . . . . . . . .
env-float . . . . . . . .
env-math . . . . . . . . .
env-math . . . . . . . . .
env-theorem . . . . . . .
env-theorem . . . . . . .
environments . . . . . . .
eqnarray . . . . . . . . . .
eqnarray* . . . . . . . . .
equal . . . . . . . . . . .
Equation . . . . . . . . . .
equation . . . . . . . . . .
equation* . . . . . . . . .
equation-lab . . . . . . . .
error . . . . . . . . . . . .
errput . . . . . . . . . . .
eval . . . . . . . . . . . .
eval-args . . . . . . . . . .
Evaluate . . . . . . . . . .
evens . . . . . . . . . . .
exam . . . . . . . . . . . .
exercise-name . . . . . . .
exercise-sep . . . . . . . .
Expand user-dened macros
Export bibliographies as links
extend . . . . . . . . . . .
extern . . . . . . . . . . .
gure-name . . . . . . . .
gure-sep . . . . . . . . .
File . . . . . . . . . . . .
Export . . . . . . . . .
Html . . . . . . . .
LaTeX . . . . . . .
Pdf . . . . . . . . .
Postscript . . . . .
Scheme . . . . . .
XML . . . . . . . .
Import . . . . . . . . .
Html . . . . . . . .

257

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61
57
56
56
57
57
172
173
209
178
179
179
179
179
179
191
191
90
188
90
188
90
192
90
189
90
190
17
189
190
163
18
189
189
189
168
187
160161
. . . 157
. . . 73
. . . 158
. 17, 172
. . . 191
. . . 191
. . . 202
. . . 203
. . . 176
. . . 166
. . . 192
. . . 192
233234
. . . 201
. . . 206
201202
. . . 15
. . . 15
. . . 116
. . . 115
. . . 201
. . . 207

LaTeX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
Latex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204
Scheme . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
XML . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
Load . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13, 15, 234
New . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14, 77
Print
Print all . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Print all to le . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Save . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15, 234
Save as . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
lter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
ag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
Flexibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
oat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
Focus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15, 18, 225
Allowed positions . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Insert above . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Insert argument after . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
Insert argument before . . . . . . . . . . . 66
Insert below . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Line arrows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Line dashes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
European numbering . . . . . . . . . . 171
Highlight incorrect formulas . . . . . . 33
Style options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171
Screens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
folded . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177
foo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
footnote . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
footnote-sep . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1718, 225
Adjust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30, 61
Color . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
Condensed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
Display style . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128, 149
on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Font . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21, 126
Font shape
Italic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Index level . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24, 125
Japanese . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
Russian . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
Page insertion
Footnote . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Size . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Space . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25, 6061
Specic
Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 204, 206
Latex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203204
Texmacs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203204
Formula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
frac . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
framed-session . . . . . . . . . . 72, 173, 188
From center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
generic . . . . . . . . . . 17, 131, 171172, 233
get-arity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
get-label . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158

258
giac . . . . . . . . . .
glossary . . . . . . . .
glossary-1 . . . . . . .
glossary-2 . . . . . . .
glossary-dots . . . . . .
glossary-dup . . . . . .
glossary-explain . . . .
glossary-line . . . . . .
Gnome . . . . . . . . .
Go . . . . . . . . . . .
greater . . . . . . . . .
greatereq . . . . . . .
group-common-counter
group-individual-counters
header . . . . . . . .
header-article . . .
header-author . . . . .
header-book . . . . .
header-primary . . . . .
header-secondary . . .
header-title . . . .
header-title . . . . . .
Help . . . . . . . . . .
Interfacing . . . . .
Plug-ins . . . . . .
Source code
Data conversion
Data format . .
hush . . . . . . . . .
higher-level macro . .
hlink . . . . . . . . . .
Homoglyph substitutions
hrule . . . . . . . . . .
hspace . . . . . . . . .
htab . . . . . . . . . .
html-class . . . . . . .
html-div-class . . . . .
html-div-style . . . . .
html-javascript . . . . .
html-javascript-src . . .
html-style . . . . . . .
huge . . . . . . . . . .
hybrid . . . . . . . . .
identity . . . . . . . .
ieeeconf . . . . . . .
if . . . . . . . . . . .
if* . . . . . . . . . . .
inactive . . . . . . . .
inactive* . . . . . . . .
inc-x . . . . . . . . . .
include . . . . . . . . .
indent . . . . . . . . .
indent-both . . . . . .
indent-left . . . . . . .
indent-right . . . . . .
index . . . . . . . . .
index-1 . . . . . . . .
index-1* . . . . . . . .
index-2 . . . . . . . .
index-2* . . . . . . . .

Index

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90,
90,

..

90,

71,

173
183
183
183
183
183
183
183
209
15
163
163
186
187
197
171
197
171
197
197
193
197
229
236
254

236
236
183
158
153, 164
. . . 34
. . . 177
. . . 143
143144
. . . 206
. . . 206
. . . 206
. . . 207
. . . 206
. . . 206
. . . 175
. . . 165
. . . 169
. . . 172
. . . 159
. . . 147
. . . 164
. . . 164
. . . 186
. . . 153
166, 187
. . . 184
. . . 184
. . . 184
. . . 182
. . . 182
. . . 182
. . . 182
. . . 182

index-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-3* . . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-4 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-4* . . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-5* . . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-complex . . . . . . . . . .
index-dots . . . . . . . . . . . .
index-line . . . . . . . . . . . .
initial . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
initial environment . . . . . . .
inline content . . . . . . . . . .
inline-tag . . . . . . . . . . . .
input . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Insert . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Animation
Animation . . . . . . . .
Compose . . . . . . . . .
Fixed . . . . . . . . . . .
Progressive . . . . . . . .
Repeat . . . . . . . . . .
Sound . . . . . . . . . .
Translate . . . . . . . . .
Arc . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Automatic
Bibliography . . . . . . .
Index . . . . . . . . . . .
Table of contents . . . . .
Circle . . . . . . . . . . . .
Closed spline . . . . . . . . .
Content tag . . . . . . . . .
Abbreviation . . . . . . .
Acronym . . . . . . . . .
Cite . . . . . . . . . . .
Code . . . . . . . . . . .
Denition . . . . . . . .
Emphasize . . . . . . . .
Keyboard . . . . . . . . .
Name . . . . . . . . . .
Person . . . . . . . . . .
Sample . . . . . . . . . .
Strong . . . . . . . . . .
Variable . . . . . . . . .
Verbatim . . . . . . . . .
content tags . . . . . . . . .
Database entry . . . . . . . .
Description . . . . . . . . . .
Enumerate . . . . . . . . . .
Roman . . . . . . . . . .
Enunciation . . . . . . . . .
Environment . . . . . . . . .
Fold . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Executable . . . . . . . .
Maxima . . . . . . .
Folded . . . . . . . . . .
Overlay . . . . . . . . . .
Alternate except here .
Alternate from here on
Alternate only here . .
Alternate until here . .

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182
182
182
182
182
182
182
182
182
112
155
152
164
187
18, 225
68
68
68
68
68
68
68
48

4344
. 43
. 42
. 48
. 48
. 173
. 174
. 174
. 174
. 174
. 174
. 173
. 174
. 174
. 174
. 174
. 173
. 174
. 174
. 18
. 43
. 19
17, 19
. . 19
. . 17
20, 190
. . 60
66, 73
. . 73
. . 66
. . 67
. . 67
. . 67
. . 67
. . 67

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Index

Specify color alternation
Visible except here . .
Visible from here on .
Visible only here . . .
Visible until here . . .
Overlays
Standard . . . . . . .
Summarize . . . . . . . .
Switch
Screens . . . . . . . .
Standard . . . . . . .
Traversal . . . . . . . . .
Unroll . . . . . . . . . .
Fraction . . . . . . . . . . .
Geometry
Crop . . . . . . . . . . .
Size . . . . . . . . . . .
Unit . . . . . . . . . . .
Zoom . . . . . . . . . .
Grid . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Type
Cartesian . . . . . . .
Group/ungroup . . . . . . .
Image . . . . . . . . . . . .
Draw image . . . . . . .
Draw over selection . . .
Small gure . . . . . . .
Itemize . . . . . . . . . . . .
Last name . . . . . . . . . .
Line . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Link
Action . . . . . . . . . .
Alternate
Bibliography . . . . .
Citation . . . . . . . . .
Executable input eld . .
Field reference . . . . . .
Hyperlink . . . . . . . . .
Include . . . . . . . . . .
Index entry . . . . . . . .
Input eld . . . . . . . .
Invisible citation . . . . .
Label . . . . . . . . . . .
Reference . . . . . . . .
Mathematics . . . . . . . . .
Displayed formula . . . .
Equation . . . . . . . . .
Equations . . . . . . . .
Inline formula . . . . . .
Several equations . . . . .
Move objects . . . . . . . . .
Note
Floating gure . . . . . .
Floating object . . . . . .
Floating table . . . . . .
Particle . . . . . . . . . . .
Point . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Polygon . . . . . . . . . . .
Program
Block of code . . . . . .

259

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67
67
67
67
67

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. . . . . . . 66
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65
66
66
66
55

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47
47
47
47
47

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47
51
41
47
47
53
17, 19
. 43
. 47

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. . 44

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41, 45
4344
. 74
. 43
. 41
. 41
. 48
. 27
. 41
37, 41
. 27
. 27
. 51

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4344

. . 74
. . 74
. . 41
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53
53
53
43
47
47

. . . . . . . 233

Inline code . . . . . . .
Scheme . . . . . . .
Resize objects . . . . . . .
Rotate objects . . . . . . .
Section . . . . . . . . . . .
Semantics . . . . . . . . .
Other . . . . . . . . .
Session . . . . . . . . . . .
Markup . . . . . . . . .
Minimal . . . . . . . .
Other . . . . . . . . .
Remote . . . . . . . . .
Scheme . . . . . . . .
Shell . . . . . . . . . .
Set properties . . . . . . .
Size tag . . . . . . . . . .
Space . . . . . . . . . . .
Spline . . . . . . . . . . .
Switch
Fold . . . . . . . . . .
Unfold . . . . . . . . .
Table . . . . . . . . . . .
Big table . . . . . . . .
Numeric spreadsheet . .
Small table . . . . . . .
Textual spreadsheet . .
Text . . . . . . . . . . . .
Title . . . . . . . . . . . .
Author . . . . . . . . .
Insert author . . . .
Insert title . . . . . . .
TeXmacs notice . . . .
Title sux . . . . . . . . .
Insert missing invisible operators
Interactive questions . . . . . .
is-tuple . . . . . . . . . . . .
itemize . . . . . . . . . . . . .
itemize-arrow . . . . . . . . .
itemize-dot . . . . . . . . . .
itemize-minus . . . . . . . . .
Japanese . . . . . . . . . . . .
kbd . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
KDE . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Keyboard . . . . . . . . . . .
label . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Language . . . . . . . . . . .
large . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
larger . . . . . . . . . . . . .
latex . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
LaTeX . . . . . . . . . . . . .
left . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
left-ush . . . . . . . . . . . .
Leftwards . . . . . . . . . . .
length . . . . . . . . . . . . .
less . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
lesseq . . . . . . . . . . . . .
letter . . . . . . . . . . . .
Limits . . . . . . . . . . . . .
line content . . . . . . . . . .
line context . . . . . . . . . .

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233
233
51
51
17
36
35
71, 109, 239
. . . . . 243
. . . . . 108
. . . . . 71
. . . . . 76
. . . . . 71
. . . . . 71
. . . . . 51
. . . . . 175
. . . . . 20
. . . . . 48
177
177
37
37
74
37, 53
. . 74
. . 48
. . 193
. . 194
. . 194
. . 193
. . 229
. . 43
. . 34
. . 209
. . 163
. . 178
. . 178
. . 178
. . 178
. . 214
. . 174
. . 209
. . 209
. . 152
. . 209
. . 175
. . 175
. . 165
. . 177
. . 148
. . 183
. . 68
161, 163
. . . 163
. . . 163
17, 131, 172
. . . . . 53
. . . . . 154
. . 152, 154

260
line-break . . . . . . . . .
list . . . . . . . . . . . .
list-of-gures . . . . . . . .
list-of-tables . . . . . . . .
localize . . . . . . . . . .
logical paragraphs . . . .
Look and feel . . . . . . .
look-up . . . . . . . . . .
lprime . . . . . . . . . . .
lsub . . . . . . . . . . . .
lsup . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mac OS . . . . . . . . . .
macaulay2 . . . . . . . .
macro . . . . . . . . . . .
made-by-TeXmacs . . . . .
Manual . . . . . . . . . .
Annotate . . . . . . . .
Explain . . . . . . . . .
Environment variable
Explanatory item . .
Synopsis . . . . . .
TeXmacs macros . .
Meta data . . . . . . .
Copyright . . . . .
GNU FDL . . . . .
Title . . . . . . . .
Traversal . . . . . . . .
Traverse . . . . . .
map . . . . . . . . . . . .
map-args . . . . . . . . .
margin-rst-other . . . . .
markup.ts . . . . . . . .
math . . . . . . . . . . .
Mathematics . . . . . . . .
matrix . . . . . . . . . . .
Maxima . . . . . . . . . .
maxima . . . . . . . . . .
meaning . . . . . . . . . .
merge . . . . . . . . . . .
mid . . . . . . . . . . . .
middle-tag . . . . . . . . .
minus . . . . . . . . . . .
mod . . . . . . . . . . . .
move . . . . . . . . . . .
multi-paragraph cell . . .
name . . . . . . . . . . .
neg . . . . . . . . . . . .
new-counter . . . . . . . .
new-counter-group . . . . .
new-dpage . . . . . . . . .
new-dpage* . . . . . . . .
new-env . . . . . . . . . .
new-exercise . . . . . . . .
new-gure . . . . . . . . .
new-line . . . . . . . . . .
new-list . . . . . . . . . .
new-page . . . . . . . . .
new-page* . . . . . . . . .
new-remark . . . . . . . .
new-theorem . . . . . . . .

Index

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144
90
198
198
185
144
209210
. . . 164
. . . 150
. . . 149
. . . 149
. . . 209
. . . 173
. . . 156
. . . 177
. . . 230
. . . 234
. . . 233
. . . 233
. . . 233
. . . 233
. . . 233
. . . 231
. . . 232
. . . 232
. . . 231
. . . 232
. . . 232
. . . 185
. . . 157
. . . 184
242243
. . . 175
. . . 225
. . . 178
. . . 73
. . . 77
. . . 168
162, 164
. . . 148
. . . 164
. . . 162
. . . 163
. . . 146
. . . 152
. . . 174
. . . 150
. . . 185
. . . 186
. . . 168
. . . 168
. . . 189
. . . 188
. . . 188
. . . 144
. . . 93
. . . 146
. . . 146
. . . 188
. . . 188

next-line . . . . . . . . . . . . .
next-x . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
no-break . . . . . . . . . . . . .
no-indent . . . . . . . . . . . .
no-indent* . . . . . . . . . . . .
no-page-break . . . . . . . . . .
no-page-break* . . . . . . . . .
nocite . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
normal-size . . . . . . . . . . .
not . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
number . . . . . . . . . . . . .
number-env . . . . . . . . . . .
number-europe . . . . . . . . .
number-long-article . . . . .
number-us . . . . . . . . . . .
Ok . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
op . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
open-tag . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Options
Security . . . . . . . . . . .
or . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
orphans and widows . . . . . .
output . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
over . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
overline . . . . . . . . . . . . .
padded-bothlined . . . . . . . .
padded-centered . . . . . . . . .
padded-normal . . . . . . . . . .
padded-std-bothlined . . . . . .
page lling . . . . . . . . . . .
page-break . . . . . . . . . . . .
page-break* . . . . . . . . . . .
pageref . . . . . . . . . . . . .
paragraph . . . . . . . . . . . .
Number of columns . . . . .
part . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
pdf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
person . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
phantom . . . . . . . . . . . . .
plus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Preferences
Converters
TeXmacs->Pdf/Postscript
Expand beamer slides .
Printer . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
program . . . . . . . . . . . . .
project . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
provides . . . . . . . . . . . . .
quasi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
quasiquote . . . . . . . . . . . .
quotation . . . . . . . . . . . .
quote . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
quote-arg . . . . . . . . . . . .
quote-env . . . . . . . . . . . .
quote-value . . . . . . . . . . .
range . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
raw-data . . . . . . . . . . . . .
really-huge . . . . . . . . . . . .
really-large . . . . . . . . . . . .

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144
186
144
145
145
146
146
180
175
163
162
235
77, 173, 188
. . 171172
. . . . . 173
. . . . . 22
. . . . . 175
. . 164165
41
163
145
187
163
177
184
184
184
184
145
146
146
153
141, 197
. . . 53
. . . 197
. . . 15
. . . 174
. . . 177
. . . 162

69
209
187
112
190
156
161
160161
. . . 176
. . . 160
. . . 161
. . . 176
. . . 161
161, 164
. . . 154
. . . 175
. . . 175

Index
really-small . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
really-tiny . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152
references . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
remark-name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
remark-sep . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
Remove . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Remove superuous invisible operators . . . . . 33
render-bibitem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
render-big-gure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
render-cite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
render-cite-detail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
render-doc-author . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
render-doc-authors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
render-enunciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
render-exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
render-list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
render-proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
render-remark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
render-small-gure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
render-theorem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
repeat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
Replace unrecognized macros . . . . . . . . . 202
Replace unrecognized styles . . . . . . . . . . 202
reset-x . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
resize . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
rewrite-inactive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
right . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
right-ush . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
rightush . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166
Rightwards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
rigid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
Rough . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
row . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152
rprime . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
rsub . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
rsup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
samp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
Scheme
Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 226
Scripts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
section . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
section-article . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
section-base . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90, 96
section-base . . . . . . . . . . 180, 197199
sectional-centered . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-centered-bold . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-centered-italic . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-normal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-normal-bold . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-normal-italic . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-sep . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
sectional-short . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
sectional-short-bold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-short-italic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
sectional-short-style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
seminar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17, 172
session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225

261
Close session . . . . .
Evaluate
Evaluate above . .
Evaluate all . . .
Evaluate below . .
Field . . . . . . . . .
Input
Mathematical input
Input mode
Mathematical input
Multiline input . .
Interrupt execution . .
Session
Clear all elds . .
Create subsession .
Fold all elds . . .
Unfold all elds . .
Split session . . . . .
session . . . . . . . . .
session . . . . . . . . . .
set-footer . . . . . . . .
set-header . . . . . . . .
shift . . . . . . . . . . .
shrink-inline . . . . . . .
simple-page . . . . . . .
Simplied menus . . . . .
small . . . . . . . . . . .
small-gure . . . . . . .
small-table . . . . . . . .
smaller . . . . . . . . . .
smash . . . . . . . . . .
smash-bottom . . . . . .
smash-top . . . . . . . .
source . . . . . . . . .
Source . . . . . . . . . .
Activation . . . . . .
Activate . . . . .
Activate once . . .
Arithmetic . . . . . .
Condition . . . . . .
Dene . . . . . . . .
Evaluation . . . . . .
Flow control . . . . .
Macro . . . . . . . .
Presentation . . . . .
Apply macro . . .
Apply macro once
Compact . . . . .
Stretched . . . . .
Text . . . . . . . . .
Tuple . . . . . . . .
Source macros tool . . .
Source tags . . . . . . .
space . . . . . . . . . .
specic . . . . . . . . .
sqrt . . . . . . . . . . .
src-arg . . . . . . . . . .
src-error . . . . . . . . .
src-integer . . . . . . . .
src-length . . . . . . . .

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71
72

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. . . . . . . . . . . 72
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72
72
72
72
72
187
187
185
185
146
178
185
209
175
192
192
175
176
176
176
17, 77, 91, 172
. . . . . . 84
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 89
. . . . . . 89
. . . . . . 84
. . . . . . 87
. . . . . . 88
. . . . . . 84
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 83
. . . . . . 89
. . . . . . 89
. . . . . . 84
. . . . . . 80
. . . . . . 143
. . . . . . 154
. . . . . . 149
. . . . . . 166
. . . . . . 166
. . . . . . 166
. . . . . . 166

262
src-macro . . . . . . . . . .
src-package . . . . . . . . .
src-package-dtd . . . . . . .
src-style-le . . . . . . . . .
src-title . . . . . . . . . . .
src-tt . . . . . . . . . . . .
src-var . . . . . . . . . . . .
std . . . . . . . . . . . . .
std . . . . . . . . . . . . .
std-automatic . . . . . . .
std-automatic . . . . . . .
std-counter . . . . . . . .
std-latex . . . . . . . . .
std-list . . . . . . . . . .
std-list . . . . . . . . . .
std-markup . . . . . . . . .
std-markup . . . . . . . . .
std-math . . . . . . . . . .
std-math . . . . . . . . . .
std-symbol . . . . . . . . .
std-symbol . . . . . . . . .
std-utils . . . . . . . . .
std-utils . . . . . . . . .
strong . . . . . . . . . . . .
structured-list . . . . . .
structured-list . . . . . .
structured-section . . . .
style . . . . . . . . . . . . .
style-only . . . . . . . . . .
style-only* . . . . . . . . . .
style-with . . . . . . . . . .
style-with* . . . . . . . . . .
subindex . . . . . . . . . . .
subparagraph . . . . . . . .
subsection . . . . . . . . . .
subsubindex . . . . . . . . .
subsubsection . . . . . . . .
subtable . . . . . . . . . . .
surround . . . . . . . . . . .
svjour . . . . . . . . . . .
swell . . . . . . . . . . . . .
swell-bottom . . . . . . . . .
swell-top . . . . . . . . . . .
switch . . . . . . . . . . . .
symbol . . . . . . . . . . . .
table . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Table . . . . . . . . . . . .
Cell background color . .
Cell border . . . . . . . .
Cell height
Set height . . . . . .
Cell operation mode . . .
Cell width
Set width . . . . . . .
Horizontal cell alignment .
Horizontal table alignment
Special cell properties
Distribute unused space
Hyphenation
Multi-paragraph .

Index

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166
166
166
166
166
166
166
90
173
90
180
90
91
90
93, 178179
. . . 90, 235
. . . 90, 173
. . . . . 90
. . . . . 178
. . . . . 90
. . . . . 177
. 90, 99, 197
. . 183, 185
. . . . . 173
. . . . . 173
. . . . . 179
95, 173, 198
. . . . . 112
. . . . . 165
. . . . . 165
. . . . . 165
. . . . . 165
. . . . . 182
. . . . . 197
. . . . . 197
. . . . . 182
. . . . . 197
. . . . . 152
. . . . . 142
. . . . . 172
. . . . . 176
. . . . . 176
. . . . . 176
. . . . . 177
. . . . . 165
. . . . . 152
. . . . . 225
. . . . . 39
. . . . . 39

. . . . . . . . . 39
. . . . . . . . . 38
. . . . . . . . . 39
. . . . . . . . . 38
. . . . . . . . . 38
. . . . . . . . 39
. . . . . . . . . 139

Special table properties
Border . . . . . .
Extract format . .
Vertical cell alignment
Vertical table alignment
table-of-contents . . . . .
tabular . . . . . . . . . .
tabular* . . . . . . . . .
tag . . . . . . . . . . .
TeX . . . . . . . . . . .
TeXmacs . . . . . . . .
TeXmacs-version . . . . .
Text . . . . . . . . . . .
textput . . . . . . . . .
Texts . . . . . . . . . .
tformat . . . . . . . . .
the-glossary . . . . . . .
the-index . . . . . . . .
the-x . . . . . . . . . .
theorem-name . . . . . .
theorem-sep . . . . . . .
times . . . . . . . . . .
tiny . . . . . . . . . . .
Title . . . . . . . . . . .
title-base . . . . . . .
title-generic . . . . .
tmarker . . . . . . . . .
tmarticle . . . . . . .
tmbook . . . . . . . . .
tmdoc . . . . . . . . . .
tmlen . . . . . . . . . .
toc-1 . . . . . . . . . .
toc-2 . . . . . . . . . .
toc-3 . . . . . . . . . .
toc-4 . . . . . . . . . .
toc-5 . . . . . . . . . .
toc-dots . . . . . . . . .
toc-main-1 . . . . . . . .
toc-main-2 . . . . . . . .
toc-normal-1 . . . . . . .
toc-normal-2 . . . . . . .
toc-normal-3 . . . . . . .
toc-small-1 . . . . . . .
toc-small-2 . . . . . . .
toc-strong-1 . . . . . . .
toc-strong-2 . . . . . . .
Tools . . . . . . . . . .
Debugging tool . . .
Miscellaneous
Export selections as
Import selections as
Project
Attach master... .
Expand inclusions
Update
Inclusions . . . . .
Web
Create website . .
transform-bibitem . . . .
translate . . . . . . . . .

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39
39
40
38
38
198
152
176
168
177
112, 177
. . . 177
. . . 225
. . . 187
. . . 77
. . . 151
. . . 198
. . . 198
. . . 185
. . . 191
. . . 191
. . . 163
. . . 175
. . . 231
. 90, 99
. . . 90
. . . 152
. . . 172
. . . 172
172, 230233
. . . . . 121
. . . . . 181
. . . . . 181
. . . . . 181
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. . . . . 181
. . . . . 181
. 65, 84, 210
. . . . . 65

. . . . . . . . 55, 201
. . . . . . . . 55, 201
. . . . . . . . . . . 45
. . . . . . . . . . . 226
. . . . . . . . . . . 45
. . . . . . . . . . . 206
. . . . . . . . . . . 181
. . . . . . . . . . . 162

Index
tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
tt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
tuple . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
twith . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
underline . . . . . . . . . . . .
unequal . . . . . . . . . . . .
unfolded . . . . . . . . . . . .
uninit . . . . . . . . . . . . .
unknown . . . . . . . . . . . .
unquote . . . . . . . . . . . .
unquote* . . . . . . . . . . .
Update . . . . . . . . . . . .
Upwards . . . . . . . . . . . .
value . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
var . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
vdh . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
verbatim . . . . . . . . . . . .
verse . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Version . . . . . . . . . . . .
Commit . . . . . . . . . .
Compare
With current user version
With newer version . . .
With older version . . .
File
Compare . . . . . . . .
Grain . . . . . . . . . . . .
History . . . . . . . . . . .
Move . . . . . . . . . . .
Register . . . . . . . . . .
Retain . . . . . . . . . . .
Current version . . . . .
Show . . . . . . . . . . . .
Update . . . . . . . . . . .
very-large . . . . . . . . . . .

263

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. . . . . . 175
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112113, 163
. . . . 151
. . . . 177
. . . . 163
. . . . 177
. . . . 167
. . . . 167
. . . . 160
. . . . 160
. . . . 76
. . . . 68
. 156, 161
. . . . 174
. . . . 173
. 174175
. . . . 176
. . 6162
. . . . 62

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. . . . . . . . 62
. . . . . . . . 61
. . . . . . . . 61
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62
62
62
61
62
62
62
61
63
175

very-small . . . . . . .
View . . . . . . . . . .
Presentation mode .
Remote control . .
vspace . . . . . . . . .
vspace* . . . . . . . .
while . . . . . . . . . .
wide . . . . . . . . . .
wide* . . . . . . . . .
wide-bothlined . . . . .
wide-centered . . . . .
wide-framed . . . . . .
wide-framed-colored . .
wide-normal . . . . . .
wide-std-bothlined . . .
wide-std-framed . . . .
wide-std-framed-colored
wide-std-underlined . .
wide-underlined . . . .
Windows . . . . . . . .
with . . . . . . . . . .
World . . . . . . . . .
write . . . . . . . . . .
x -clean . . . . . . . .
x -display-numbers . . .
x -header . . . . . . . .
x -numbered-title . . . .
x -sep . . . . . . . . .
x -text . . . . . . . . .
x -title . . . . . . . . .
x -toc . . . . . . . . .
xmacro . . . . . . . .
xor . . . . . . . . . . .
yes-indent . . . . . . .
yes-indent* . . . . . .

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. . 175
. . 209
65, 172

. . 65

142143
. . 143
. . 159
. . 150
. . 150
. . 184
183184
. . . 184
. . . 184
183184
. . . 184
. . . 184
. . . 184
. . . 184
. . . 184
. . . 209
. . . 155
. . . 107
. . . 167
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 199
. . . 157
. . . 163
. . . 145
. . . 145

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File Type                       : PDF
File Type Extension             : pdf
MIME Type                       : application/pdf
PDF Version                     : 1.4
Linearized                      : No
Page Count                      : 263
Title                           : Adding new data formats and converters
Author                          : Joris van der Hoeven
Creator                         : TeXmacs 1.99.9
Producer                        : TeXmacs 1.99.9 + Hummus 4.0
Create Date                     : 2019:06:01 11:51:55+02:00
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