Package: auctex;
Reported by: Markus Pötzlberger <M.Poetzlberger <at> physik.uni-muenchen.de>
Date: Tue, 26 May 2015 15:38:02 UTC
Severity: normal
Tags: moreinfo
Done: Arash Esbati <arash <at> gnu.org>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
View this message in rfc822 format
From: Reinhard Kotucha <reinhard.kotucha <at> googlemail.com> To: Arash Esbati <esbati <at> gmx.de> Cc: 20661 <at> debbugs.gnu.org Subject: bug#20661: What prevents me from getting a preview? Date: Sun, 31 May 2015 00:38:01 +0200
On 2015-05-27 at 23:31:09 +0200, Arash Esbati wrote: > Reinhard Kotucha <reinhard.kotucha <at> googlemail.com> writes: > > first of all Reinhard, a big thank you for providing and maintaining > this bundle. > > > Instead of assembling emacs, auctex, and a bunch of libraries > > yourself, you could also try > > > > http://ctan.org/tex-archive/support/win32-emacs-auctex > > > > This is hopefully easier to install, especially since it already > > contains all the necessary libraries (.DLLs). I strongly encourage > > Windows users to give it a try. I need more feedback in order to > > maintain it properly. ATM I have the impression that only very few > > people are aware of this distribution. > > IIRC correctly this bundle was assembled together some years ago by the > AUCTeX team. It was a good idea then, but in the meanwhile, do you > think it is still worth the effort? Dear Aresh, thank you very much for your response. First of all, a few words about the history of the bundle. A few years ago there was a "support" directory on the TeX Collection DVD which contained a few TeX shells. Packages in this directory were not installed, but they had been on the DVD at least. It was an arbitrary collection, I don't even know who put the packages into this directory. It turned out that some TeX users assumed that these TeX shells were recommended by the TeX Live team, just because they were on the DVD. At this time Ralf Angeli maintained the wonderful emacs+auctex package you mentioned, at alpha.gnu.org. I thougt that when people believe that these programs are recommended, then the program *I* recommend should be available too. Hence I pushed Ralf's emacs+auctex package to the support directory. Later I found out that everything in the support directory except emacs+auctex were old versions of packages available at CTAN already. When I removed all stale packages from the directory, emacs+auctex was the only one left over. This wasn't a good situation either, so I moved it to CTAN in the hope that it gets more attention there and deleted the support directory completely. When Ralf Angeli discontinued his work at alpha.gnu.org, I took over. Maintaining emacs and auctex it isn't much work, I just assemble stuff from gnu.org. I don't compile anything myself. The nasty thing was to keep the image-libs up-to-date. There are many sites providing libraries compiled with MinGW but nobody seems to update his stuff regularly. In this respect, I'm very grateful for the link > Required libs (not only for image support) and other bins (e.g., > hunspell) are available from here: > > http://sourceforge.net/projects/ezwinports/files/ Not all the libs I need are available there, but it's great to hear that it's maintained by Eli Zaretskii. He's one of the major texinfo developers and I know that he works continuously on his projects. You asked whether it's still worth the effort to maintain the bundle. Actually, I'm mirroring emacs and auctex now and for the latest release I wrote a script which creates a .tar file ready for upload to CTAN. The mirror allows me to react faster than in the past, I just have to change version numbers of packages in my script in order to create a new release. Only the libs need extra work, but if I mirror ezwinports too, I suppose that I can save even more time. Thanks again for the link. > A 64-bit version with all required dll's is available here: > > http://sourceforge.net/projects/emacsbinw64/ I deliberately provide 32-bit binaries because I don't want to exclude people with older machines. The benefit of 64-bit systems is rather small. If speed matters: In a virtual machine running Linux on top of Windows I could compile a LaTeX file five times faster than on Windows itself. A colleague could confirm it on his machine. > I think that most users would go a route mentioned above and leave > your package alone since they have to grab other libs from other > sources anyways (and they also get the latest version). Well, you might be right. On the other hand I'm convinced that there are many Windows users who don't want to go this route and I wouldn't go this route either. The reason is that ezwinports, for example, has a directory structure which is appropriate for MSYS/MinGW but not for a standalone, portable emacs distribution. I need the DLLs in the same directory as the emacs binary in order to make installation as easy as possible. An important feature is that one can extract emacs-24.4+auctex-11.88-w32.zip in an arbitrary directory, either on a disk or on a USB stick. Another point is that "TeX Collection" DVDs contain a CTAN excerpt. Recent editions don't include my package due to lack of space. But TeX Live is growing rapidly, so it's foreseeable that either two DVDs will be needed in the near future or a media with more capacity. Then there should be enough space to provide the package again. > Again, please don't get me wrong, I do appreciate your work on > this. I am just asking if users honor this enough. I didn't get you wrong at all. I really appreciate your feedback. Thank you very much. Regards, Reinhard -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Reinhard Kotucha Phone: +49-511-3373112 Marschnerstr. 25 D-30167 Hannover mailto:reinhard.kotucha <at> web.de ------------------------------------------------------------------
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