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This package provides a kind of counter that provides unique number values. Several counters can be created with different names. The numeric values are not limited.
The command \url is a form of verbatim command that allows linebreaks at certain characters or combinations of characters, accepts reconfiguration, and can usually be used in the argument to another command. (The \urldef command provides robust commands that serve in cases when \url doesn't work in an argument.) The command is intended for email addresses, hypertext links, directories/paths, etc., which normally have no spaces, so by default the package ignores spaces in its argument. However, a package option "allows spaces", which is useful for operating systems where spaces are a common part of file names. date: 2013-12-31 15:02:54 +0100
The command \url is a form of verbatim command that allows linebreaks at certain characters or combinations of characters, accepts reconfiguration, and can usually be used in the argument to another command. (The \urldef command provides robust commands that serve in cases when \url doesn't work in an argument.) The command is intended for email addresses, hypertext links, directories/paths, etc., which normally have no spaces, so by default the package ignores spaces in its argument. However, a package option "allows spaces", which is useful for operating systems where spaces are a common part of file names.
This package contains TeXLive utilities using ghostscript and metafont with X support.
The Adobe Standard Encoding set (upright and italic shapes, medium and bold weights) of the Utopia font family, which Adobe donated to the X Consortium. Macro support, and maths fonts that match the Utopia family, are provided by the Fourier and the Mathdesign font packages.
The varwidth environment is superficially similar to minipage, but the specified width is just a maximum value -- the box may get a narrower "natural" width. date: 2010-11-26 12:00:18 +0100
The varwidth environment is superficially similar to minipage, but the specified width is just a maximum value -- the box may get a narrower "natural" width.
This font contains all lasy characters (by L.Lamport, copyright notice in lasychr.mf), and a lot more symbols. Provided are the Metafont files for 5-10pt, and bold and slanted 10pt fonts, together with a .tex and .pdf documentation, and a file for using the fonts in a PLAIN-TeX document. Type-1 fonts by Michael Sharpe and Taco Hoekwater are available as separate package wasy-type1. Support under LaTeX is provided by Axel Kielhorn's wasysym package.
Converted (Adobe Type 1) outlines of the wasy fonts.