Spencer Graves wrote: > Hello, Göran: > > Have you considered the German solution: "Goeran"? (e.g., Wuertz > for Würtz)? > > Be thankful that you aren't Russian or Greek or Arabic or Chinese, > etc., for which there may be no standard transliteration into the Latin > alphabet.
Well, I have to live with that, being of one of the above mentioned catergories. Where it is important to have my own name in native form in documents, I keep around a png, a eps with postscript type 1 font embedded, and a pdf from the eps for the odd pdflatex occasions. It is going to be very hack-ish, but I wonder if it is possible to utilise the fact that latex comments (%) are not the same as html comments (<!-- -->) and vice versa, to make things work. I seems to recall somewhere in the R-extension manual about being about to do \alternatives{latex stuff}{ascii stuff} for alternatives which are destined to appear in different converted output types. (Prof Ripley at this point would probably tell me the exact page number and references...) Hin-Tak > > Sorry I can't be more helpful. > > Spencer Graves > p.s. When I'm with native Spanish speakers who don't know English, I > pronounce my name very differently, like "Espencer Gra-ve", to match how > they would pronounce my name when they see it written. Similarly, I > once heard a French Canadian take about his young son, Guillaume. If > you ask him in English, "What's your name?" he replies, "Bill". If you > ask the same question in French, he replies, "Guillaume". > > Hin-Tak Leung wrote: >> Göran Broström wrote: >>> On 6/27/06, Prof Brian Ripley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>>> On Tue, 27 Jun 2006, Göran Broström wrote: >>>> >>>>> I have been converting to utf8 from latin1, and this gives me >>>>> problems, some solved, but here is one unsolved: In my .Rd files, I >>>>> have included '\encoding{UTF-8}' at the top. Despite this, the HTML >>>>> help pages contains 'content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"', and my >>>>> name is mangled. What can I do about this? >>>> Reproducible example, please! (I've just tried this and it works >>>> for me.) >>>> >>>> As described in my talk at UseR 2006, you may well not want to do >>>> this if >>>> you intend to distribute the package. Your name contains characters >>>> that >>>> are not in the fonts used in UTF-8 in non-European locales, and Windows >>>> users do no have ready access to UTF-8 viewers (even if they know the >>>> files are UTF-8). >>> Thanks for your answer! So this means that 'latin1' does not cause >>> problems for non-European locales and Windows users, I take it. >>> >>> I really only need non-ascii to write the name ot the author (me) >>> correctly. I tried LaTeX code ({\"o}), but that didn't work. Is there >>> a way around this? >>> >>> Göran >> >> The \"o character in my latin1 (iso 8859-1) man page says it is 0xF6 >> F6 - LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS >> The capital version is >> D6 - LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS >> >> in html I think you need to do &#F6; or something for that character >> to appear? >> >> HTH >> >> HTL >> >> ______________________________________________ >> R-devel@r-project.org mailing list >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel