[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Alan Eugene Davis) writes: > I don't understand why latex of teTeX can't see any files I have > placed into /usr/lib/texmf/tex/latex/misc. Also, there seems to be > no provision for placing new files in > /usr/local/lib/texmf/tex/latex/misc. If this is true, this is a > major weakness. > Don't blame teTeX for not having read the documentation provided! The point you are rising is one of the configurable aspects of teTeX which is well documented. Actually one of teTeX's strenght's is the very complete documentation coming with it.
I suggest that you start the program 'texconfig' (it even has a small man page explaining what it is) and simply press enter on the menu entry "FAQ frequently asked questions + answers". Then read and most troubles will be resolved if you take this information for granted. To make things short: you have to add an entry for "$TEXMFL" in your "$TEXMF/texmf.cnf" file pointing to "/usr/local/lib/texmf/" directory and run 'texhash' if you want your additions to be considered when running TeX/LaTeX. And never forget to execute 'texhash' when you've changed anything in your teTeX setup. This is all very well documented. > Another teTeX problem that many people have possibly given the wrong > answer for: there are no page numbers in the article style, as far as > I can tell! This isn't an xdvi problem. > I don't know how the preamble of your documents look like therefore i can't help you with this. I get page numbers with the following minimal preamble: ----------bite-here-------------------------- \documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article} \begin{document} Some silly text\ldots \end{document} ----------bite-here-------------------------- > So far, I don't see the significant benefits from using teTeX, and > there have been a lot of users' complaints. > Well, i doubt that. Not only for me teTeX has made the use of TeX/LaTeX pretty troublefree and administration of the TeX setup has become quite transparent even for a non TeXpert like me. Compared with the former Debian TeX/LaTeX system or the NTeX i used to use with Slackware teTeX is a piece of cake if not even the cake itself. But a tool is only as good as your own intimate knowledge of how to handle it. So just read some of the provided fine documentation and rejoice about Thomas Esser's (and Christoph Martin's!!) great work. Cheers, P. *8^) -- Paul Seelig [EMAIL PROTECTED] African Music Archive - Institute for Ethnology and Africa Studies Johannes Gutenberg-University - Forum 6 - 55099 Mainz/Germany My Homepage in the WWW at the URL http://www.uni-mainz.de/~pseelig -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .