@include macros.texi @ifset rawfile @c documentencoding is used by makeinfo in our --no-headers output. @documentencoding ISO-8859-1 @node Known problems,,(dir),(dir) @top Known problems with preview-latex @end ifset @c ----------------------- @c @cindex @kbd{M-x preview-report-bug @key{RET}} @c @cindex @code{preview-report-bug} @c @cindex Report a bug A number of issues are known concerning the interoperation with various other software. Some of the known problems can be solved by moving to newer versions of the problematic software or by simple patches. @menu * Font problems with Dvips:: * Too small bounding boxes:: * x-symbol interoperation:: * Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling:: * No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier:: @end menu If you find something not mentioned here, please send a bug report using @kbd{M-x preview-report-bug @key{RET}}, which will fill in a lot of information interesting to us and send it to the @email{bug-auctex@@gnu.org} list. Please use the bug reporting commands if at all possible. @ifset rawfile @node Font problems with Dvips @chapter Font problems with Dvips @raisesections @end ifset @ifclear rawfile @node Font problems with Dvips @section Font problems with Dvips @end ifclear Some fonts have been reported to produce wrong characters with @previewlatex{}. @previewlatex{} calls Dvips by default with the option @option{-Pwww} in order to get scalable fonts for nice results. If you are using antialiasing, however, the results might be sufficiently nice with bitmapped fonts, anyway. You might try @option{-Ppdf} for another stab at scalable fonts, or other printer definitions. Use @display @kbd{M-x customize-option @key{RET} preview-fast-dvips-command @key{RET}} @end display @noindent and @display @kbd{M-x customize-option @key{RET} preview-dvips-command @key{RET}} @end display @noindent in order to customize this. One particular problem is that several printer setup files (typically in a file called @file{/usr/share/texmf/dvips/config/config.pdf} if you are using the @option{-Ppdf} switch) contain the @option{G} option for `character shifting'. This option will result in @samp{fi} being rendered as @samp{@pounds{}} (British Pounds sign) in several fonts, unless your version of Dvips has a long-standing bug in its implementation fixed (only very recent versions of Dvips have). @node Too small bounding boxes @section Too small bounding boxes The bounding box of a preview is determined by the @LaTeX{} package using the pure @TeX{} bounding boxes. If there is material extending outside of the @TeX{} box, that material will be missing from the preview image. This happens for the label-showing boxes from the @code{showkeys} package. This particular problem can be circumvented by using the @code{showlabels} option of the preview package. In general, you should try to fix the problem in the @TeX{} code, like avoiding drawing outside of the picture with PSTricks. One possible remedy is to set @code{preview-fast-conversion} to `Off' @ifset rawfile (see the manual). @end ifset @ifclear rawfile (@pxref{The Emacs interface}). @end ifclear The conversion will take more time, but will then use the bounding boxes from @acronym{EPS} files generated by Dvips. Dvips generally does not miss things, but it does not understand PostScript constructs like @code{\resizebox} or @code{\rotate} commands, so will generate rather wrong boxes for those. Dvips can be helped with the @code{psfixbb} package option to preview @ifset rawfile (see the manual), @end ifset @ifclear rawfile (@pxref{The LaTeX style file}), @end ifclear which will tag the corners of the included @TeX{} box. This will mostly be convenient for @emph{pure} PostScript stuff like that created by PSTricks, which Dvips would otherwise reserve no space for. @c FIXME: It seems that x-symbol is much outdated. @node x-symbol interoperation @section x-symbol interoperation Thanks to the work of Christoph Wedler, starting with version @samp{4.0h/beta} of x-symbol, the line parsing of @AUCTeX{} and @previewlatex{} is fully supported. Earlier versions exhibit problems. However, versions before 4.2.2 will cause a drastic slowdown of @previewlatex{}'s parsing pass, so we don't recommend to use versions earlier than that. If you wonder what x-symbol is, it is a package that transforms various tokens and subscripts to a more readable form while editing and offers a few input methods handy especially for dealing with math. Take a look at @uref{http://x-symbol.sourceforge.net}. x-symbol versions up to 4.5.1-beta at least require an 8bit-clean @TeX{} implementation (meaning that its terminal output should not use @samp{^^}-started escape sequences) for cooperation with @previewlatex{}. Later versions may get along without it, like @previewlatex{} does now. If you experience problems with @file{circ.tex} in connection with both x-symbol and Latin-1 characters, you may need to change your language environment or, as a last resort, customize the variable @code{LaTeX-command-style} by replacing the command @code{latex} with @code{latex -translate-file=cp8bit}. @node Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling @section Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling This is probably the fault of your favorite package. @file{isearch.el} is known to be affected while searches are in progress, but the code is such a complicated mess that no patch is in sight. Better just end the search with @kbd{@key{RET}} before toggling and resume with @kbd{C-s C-s} or similar afterwards. Since previews over the current match will auto-open, anyway, this should not be much of a problem in practice. @node No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier @section No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier @previewlatex{} tries to adjust the foreground and background colors of generated images to those of Emacs. Unfortunately, incompatible changes introduced in Ghostscript 9.27 breaks the traditional method partially, and @previewlatex{} can display no images under certain circumstances. A new method implemented alternatively works only with Ghostscript > 9.27. If you are using Ghostscript 9.27 or earlier, customize the option @code{preview-pdf-adjust-color-method}. @defopt preview-pdf-adjust-color-method Method to adjust colors of images generated from @acronym{PDF}. It is not consulted when the @LaTeX{} command produces @acronym{DVI} files. When the option is @code{t} (default), @previewlatex{} adjusts the FG and BG colors of the generated images by the new method. This method requires that Ghostscript has working @code{DELAYBIND} feature, thus is invalid with gs 9.27 (and possibly < 9.27). When it is @code{compatible}, @previewlatex{} uses traditional method. This option is provided for backward compatibility with older gs. See the below explanation for detail. When @code{nil}, no adjustment is done and ``black on white'' image is generated regardless of Emacs color. This is provided for fallback for gs 9.27 users with customized foreground color. See the below explanation for detail. When the @LaTeX{} command produces @acronym{PDF} rather than @acronym{DVI} and Emacs has non-trivial foreground color, the traditional method (@code{compatible}) makes gs >= 9.27 to stop with error. Here, ``non-trivial foreground color'' includes customized themes. If you use such non-trivial foreground color and the version of Ghostscript equals to 9.27, you have two options: @enumerate @item Choose the value @code{compatible} and customize @code{preview-reference-face} to have default (black) foreground color. This makes the generated image almost non-readable on dark background, so the next option would be your only choice in that case. @item Choose the value @code{nil}, which forces plain ``black on white'' appearance for the generated image. You can at least read what are written in the image although they may not match with your Emacs color well. @end enumerate The default value used to be @code{compatible} for short period before Ghostscript 9.50 was released but now is @code{t}. @end defopt