Typos from KB
[latex2e.git] / latex2e-20150101 / doc / ltnews03.tex
blobd7c8ff0b2057ca338c4f6ea79a7d08f80055b59b
1 % \iffalse meta-comment
3 % Copyright 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
4 % The LaTeX3 Project and any individual authors listed elsewhere
5 % in this file.
6 %
7 % This file is part of the LaTeX base system.
8 % -------------------------------------------
9 %
10 % It may be distributed and/or modified under the
11 % conditions of the LaTeX Project Public License, either version 1.3c
12 % of this license or (at your option) any later version.
13 % The latest version of this license is in
14 % http://www.latex-project.org/lppl.txt
15 % and version 1.3c or later is part of all distributions of LaTeX
16 % version 2005/12/01 or later.
18 % This file has the LPPL maintenance status "maintained".
20 % The list of all files belonging to the LaTeX base distribution is
21 % given in the file `manifest.txt'. See also `legal.txt' for additional
22 % information.
24 % The list of derived (unpacked) files belonging to the distribution
25 % and covered by LPPL is defined by the unpacking scripts (with
26 % extension .ins) which are part of the distribution.
28 % \fi
29 % Filename: ltnews03.tex
31 % This is issue 3 of LaTeX News.
33 \documentclass
34 % [lw35fonts]
35 {ltnews}
37 \publicationmonth{June}
38 \publicationyear{1995}
39 \publicationissue{3}
41 \begin{document}
43 \maketitle
45 \section{Welcome to \LaTeXNews~3}
47 An issue of \emph{\LaTeXNews} will accompany every future release of
48 \LaTeX. It will tell you about important events, such as major bug
49 fixes, newly available packages, or any other \LaTeX{} news.
51 \section{June 1995 release of \LaTeX}
53 June 1995 sees the third release of \LaTeXe. We are on schedule
54 to deliver a release of \LaTeX{} every six months, in December and
55 June.
57 In the last \emph{\LaTeXNews}, we said ``we don't expect so much
58 activity in the next six months,'' which has turned out not to be
59 true!
61 \section{Additional input encodings}
63 In the last release of \LaTeX{} we distributed a test version of the
64 \texttt{inputenc} package which allows the use of input characters
65 other than just a--z and A--Z. The package has proved to be robust,
66 so we are now distributing an expanded version.
67 The new release comes with a number of input encodings:
69 \begin{itemize}
70 \item \texttt{ascii} the standard encoding,
71 \item \texttt{latin1} the ISO Western European alphabet,
72 \item \texttt{latin2} the ISO Eastern European alphabet,
73 \item \texttt{cp437} the IBM codepage 437,
74 \item \texttt{cp850} the IBM codepage 850, and
75 \item \texttt{applemac} the Apple Macintosh encoding.
76 \end{itemize}
77 These can be used by specifying an option to the \texttt{inputenc}
78 package, for example:
79 \begin{verbatim}
80 \usepackage[latin1]{inputenc}
81 \end{verbatim}
82 The new input encodings are currently being tested, but we don't
83 expect any major changes.
85 \section{\LaTeX\ getting smaller}
87 In the past releases of \LaTeXe, the amount of memory \LaTeX{}
88 requires has increased, but we are pleased to say that this trend has
89 been reversed. We hope that future releases of \LaTeX{} will continue
90 to get smaller.
92 For example, on this document, the December 1994 release used 52,622
93 words of memory, and the June 1995 release uses 51,216 words of
94 memory, which is a 2.7\% reduction.
96 We are currently experimenting with other ways of reducing the size of
97 \LaTeX. For example, we are experimenting with an option to remove
98 the \texttt{picture} and \texttt{tabbing} environments from the
99 \LaTeX{} kernel, and to load them from a file the first time they are
100 used. This should help \LaTeX{} to run on machines with limited
101 memory. See \texttt{autoload.txt} for details.
103 \section{Distribution and modification}
105 One topic of discussion that has kept us busy is the distribution and
106 modification conditions of \LaTeX. We are committed to keeping
107 \LaTeX{} as free reliable software, and ensuring that (as far as
108 possible) \LaTeX{} documents will produce the same results on all
109 systems.
111 The modification conditions are currently under discussion, and we
112 would like to hear from anyone interested. Please read
113 \texttt{modguide.tex} for more information.
115 \section{AMS-\LaTeX\ full release}
117 The AMS-\LaTeX\ packages were still in beta test in the December 1994
118 release of \LaTeX, and the full release came out in January 1995.
120 AMS-\LaTeX\ is described in the \emph{User's Guide}
121 (\texttt{amsldoc.tex}) and in \emph{The \LaTeX{} Companion}.
123 \section{PostScript fonts}
125 There is a new test release of the PSNFSS packages for accessing
126 PostScript fonts in \LaTeXe. This includes an update to all of the
127 fonts, to remove many of the underfull and overfull \verb|\hbox|
128 warnings, and improve the setting of non-English languages.
130 The new release of \LaTeX{} removes all of the `hidden' uses of
131 Computer Modern mathematics. For example, the footnote markers used
132 to use math mode, so always used Computer Modern digits rather than
133 ones from the current text font. This has now been fixed.
135 \section{Further information}
137 For more information on \TeX{} and \LaTeX, get in touch with your local
138 \TeX{} Users Group, or the international \TeX{} Users Group,
139 P.~O.~Box~869, Santa~Barbara, CA~93102-0869, USA, Fax:~+1~805~963~8358,
140 EMail:~tug@tug.org.
142 The \LaTeX{} home page is \verb|http://www.tex.ac.uk/ctan/latex/|
143 and contains links to other WWW resources for \LaTeX.
145 \end{document}