On Fri, 19 Dec 2003, John Forkosh wrote:
- what you've uploaded mimetex.zip version 1.30, to replace support/mimetex/mimetex.zip
- which CTAN node you've uploaded to ftp.dante.de
- where you want the files to go support/mimetex
- what licensing conditions you apply to your software GNU GPL
- brief summary of what your upload is intended to do. (a) Improved LaTeX compatibility, e.g., left(...
ight) now works
in addition to mimeTeX's abbreviation (...) (and ditto for other sized delimiters). Similarly, {...atop...} works as expected, and ditto for various other commands that weren't precisely compatible in earlier versions. (b) Improved anti-aliasing. (c) New commands
aisebox{}{} and otatebox{}{} to afford users
better control over rendered images, extit{} and {it...}, lim_ and all other functions and r for trace, hspace{} and other new math spaces, various other new commands like fbox{}, and several minor bug fixes. (d) Recognizes html special characters like < and > since some web tools cause problems by translating < to < and > to > etc. Also translates %xx url-encoded charcaters for essentially the same reason. (e) Thoroughly updated documentation. ---------------------------------------------------- From the original submission... MimeTeX parses LaTeX math expressions, emitting either gif images or mime xbitmaps of them, rather than the usual TeX dvi's. MimeTeX images are therefore easily inserted directly into html documents using a standard html <img> tag, e.g., <img src=../cgi-bin/mimetex.cgi?f(x)=int_{-infty}^xe^{-t^2}dt border=0 align=absmiddle> without intermediate dvi-to-gif conversion, and without storing lots of little gif image files, one file for each converted expression. This makes your web site and html documents more easily maintained. See http://www.forkosh.com/mimetex.html#examples for many examples demonstrating mimeTeX's features and usage.
Thanks for the update, I installed it in
support/mimetex
For the CTAN Team Rainer Schöpf