|
|
last edited 17 years ago |
1 | ||
Editor:
Time: 2007/11/17 22:16:37 GMT-8 |
||
Note: |
changed: - On Saturday, January 15, 2005 10:41 AM you wrote: > ... > No, I am not able to get graphics to appear in an X-window > from inside TeXmacs. That's what I *want* to be able to do. > > I have TeXmacs 1.0.4.4 (latest being 1.0.4.5). I know the > plugin calls AXIOMsys, and I tried to make it call "axiom" > or "sman" with no immediate success. Ok great. You are obviously on the right track. If you compiled TeXmacs from source then to make tm_axiom call "axiom", the simplest thing to do is to modify the souce file tm_axiom.c by replacing "AXIOMsys" with "axiom" and then recompile it. It is a simple C program with no dependencies and can be compiled separately. Move the tm_axiom.exe file to the appropriate place in the TeXmacs installation directory. If you didn't compile TeXmacs from source you can get just the tm_axiom.c file from the CVS, modify it and compile as above. > > My preliminary, high-level, thought is to go the postscript > way as you suggest. I've used the GnuPlot plugin for TeXmacs, > that's what it does. > Yes, exactly.
On Saturday, January 15, 2005 10:41 AM you wrote: > ... > No, I am not able to get graphics to appear in an X-window > from inside TeXmacs. That's what I *want* to be able to do. > > I have TeXmacs 1.0.4.4 (latest being 1.0.4.5). I know the > plugin calls AXIOMsys, and I tried to make it call "axiom" > or "sman" with no immediate success. Ok great. You are obviously on the right track. If you compiled TeXmacs from source then to make tm_axiom call "axiom", the simplest thing to do is to modify the souce file tm_axiom.c by replacing "AXIOMsys" with "axiom" and then recompile it. It is a simple C program with no dependencies and can be compiled separately. Move the tm_axiom.exe file to the appropriate place in the TeXmacs installation directory. If you didn't compile TeXmacs from source you can get just the tm_axiom.c file from the CVS, modify it and compile as above. > > My preliminary, high-level, thought is to go the postscript > way as you suggest. I've used the GnuPlot plugin for TeXmacs, > that's what it does. > Yes, exactly.