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Re: [TeXmacs] Typesetting Maltese documents using TeXmacs


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Massimiliano Gubinelli <address@hidden>
  • To: Peter Rapcan <address@hidden>
  • Cc: texmacs-users <address@hidden>, "Jarrad W." <address@hidden>
  • Subject: Re: [TeXmacs] Typesetting Maltese documents using TeXmacs
  • Date: Sun, 12 Jun 2016 09:47:11 +0200

Command+shift is not systemwide (and actually I never used it to type accented chars...). Does some alt+char combinations work for you? On my machine they work even in TeXmacs 1.99.3. I think that if you want to have more possibilities you should add more input methods, for example “ABC Extended”, this is how the keyboard layout looks like when I press Alt. As you can see you can type most of the symbols. If in any event you want some Unicode glyph your keyboard is not able to type, then you can use the Character palette which also come with the input method menu on the status bar. You have to enable it in “Keyboard preferences” pane of System preferences.

Best
max




On 12 Jun 2016, at 02:44, Peter Rapcan <address@hidden> wrote:

Hey Max,

I am using version texmacs  v. 1.99.4 with look and feel set to default. When I press alt, the keyboard viewer shows the symbols you can see in the enclosed photo.

When I press command+shift (the combination I have to use in texmacs instead of alt), the keyboard viewer shows just unaltered US keyboard layout…

Best,
Peter.


On 12 Jun 2016, at 00:21, Massimiliano Gubinelli <address@hidden> wrote:

Which version of TeXmacs are you using? I think you also have to set up the default look and feel in TeXmacs’ preferences.

On my machine  the behaviour of the dead keys does not depends on TeXmacs, as far as I understand. Input methods are a feature of the OS (at the same level of input of chinese or japanese character). If you manage to have the Keyboard Viewer on (a small window with the current keyboard layout, see attached image) you can see what are the dead keys when you hold Alt down. The choice of these keys are made at the OS level and in my opinion TeXmacs should not interfere with this.

Best
Max
<keyboard-viewer-and-tm.jpg>

On 11 Jun 2016, at 23:53, Peter Rapcan <address@hidden> wrote:

Max, thanks for checking this. Is there a way how to make this work the same way on the Mac? As I said, I have to use shift+command+char on my Mac and the shift part is killing a correct functionality. 

An additional comment: Is there a reason why the creators of texmacs did not choose Alt+. for ȧ and perhaps Alt+ctrl+. for ạ ? Would be more intuitive and in line with how other accents are intuitively typed this way...

Peter.

On 11 Jun 2016, at 23:37, Massimiliano Gubinelli <address@hidden> wrote:

I tried on the current svn texmacs on the Mac and one can typeset any accented character as expected. I’m using "ABC Extended” keyboard layout (I have an english keyboard) and accents can be produced via Alt+Char for the accent and then the character one wants accented. Eg. for ȧ one need to type Alt+w a, for ạ type Alt+x a, all the deadkeys can be found showing the keyboard viewer (to be set up in the Keyboard system preferences)

Max


On 11 Jun 2016, at 23:29, Peter Rapcan <address@hidden> wrote:

I remember that, some time ago, an alternative method to input accented characters worked in texmacs. Now I tried it and it seems to work only partially, at least for the current version of texmacs on a Mac. For example, shift+command+’ followed by o produces ó, shift+command+v followed by c produces č, etc. The trouble is that now I don’t know how to type e.g. ä using this method, since I would need to type shift+command+” followed by a, but the shift, being a part of the shortcut for ‘ , does not rise ‘ to “ as it normally would. Maybe this is a problem with standard Mac shortcuts taking precedence over texmacs shortcuts? 

I remember this used to work nicely though (and I remember the shortcuts did not include shift on my mac, so shift could be used normally to choose different accents, like ‘ or “). Maybe on Linux or Windows the shortcuts are different, so you could try typing something like alt+. followed by c to type ċ (if alt does not work try other special keys, maybe with shift also).

Anyway, this used to be a really nice and handy method to input accented characters, even in situations when you don’t have access to an international keyboard layout on some machine you were working on. 

Cheers,
Peter.



On 11 Jun 2016, at 01:57, Jarrad W. <address@hidden> wrote:

When typesetting non-ASCII characters into TeXmacs, I just use my normal input method, same as any other program on my PC. This works fine (I'm on Linux using US alt-intl with dead keys), though I have seen issues when I try to do this on Windows. How do you normally type Maltese characters in other apps?

Jarrad

On 11/06/16 05:25, Karl Hegbloom wrote:
I just successfully pasted those letters into TeXmacs and they appear with
the correct glyphs. Thus, it must be possible to typeset Maltese.

On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 7:30 PM Tae Wong <address@hidden> wrote:

I found a typesetting package for Maltese by Paulseph-John Farrugia,
dated 2005-04-24.

How can I get TeXmacs to typeset Maltese documents?

According to the documentation for this package, Maltese uses ċ ġ ħ ż
as the letters with diacritics.



I just successfully pasted those letters into TeXmacs and they appear with the correct glyphs. Thus, it must be possible to typeset Maltese.

On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 7:30 PM Tae Wong <address@hidden> wrote:
I found a typesetting package for Maltese by Paulseph-John Farrugia,
dated 2005-04-24.

How can I get TeXmacs to typeset Maltese documents?

According to the documentation for this package, Maltese uses ċ ġ ħ ż
as the letters with diacritics.






<kbviewer.jpeg>

TIFF image




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