You can also add the following after \usepackage{titlesec} to only apply
the patch when you're on the specific version of titlesec (which is what
I did on a shared project). Remove the \makeatletter and \makeatother
and change \usepackage to \RequirePackage when you're adding it to your
classfile r
Hi Michael, that is perfectly possible, I have actually adopted it in a
class-file, so I have not tested it with the \makeatletter and
\makeatother commands myself. I tried to (apparently incorrectly) adapt
the code to the use-case of Frédéric. Please try for yourself what
works, thank you for your
I experienced the same problem, I think it has been invoked by not first
updating + upgrading + dist-upgrading to the latest version of 14.04 (.3
at the time of writing) before running do-release-upgrade
Besides resetting the /etc/apt/sources.list file to trusty, as suggested
earlier, "pinning" to
I can confirm that this bug also appears when connecting to a Windows
file server. However, in retrospect to #9, at file copy no error is
thrown, but it silently overrides the alteration and created timestamps
with the current time as in #5.
The problem perseveres both with
$gvfs-copy --preserve T