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-------------------------------------------------------------------------- September 6, 2008 Version 1.70 m i m e T e X R e a d m e F i l e Copyright(c) 2002-2008, John Forkosh Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- by: John Forkosh [email protected] www.forkosh.com This file is part of mimeTeX, which is free software. You may redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 3 or later, as published by the Free Software Foundation. See http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html MimeTeX is discussed and illustrated online at its homepage http://www.forkosh.com/mimetex.html Or you can follow the Quick Start instructions below (or the more detailed instructions in Section III) to immediately install mimeTeX on your own machine. Then point your browser to http://www.yourdomain.com/mimetex.html for a demo/tutorial and reference. Installation problems? Point your browser to mimeTeX's homepage http://www.forkosh.com/mimetex.html then click its "full mimeTeX manual" link and see Section II. I. QUICK START ------------------------------------------------------------------------ To compile and install mimeTeX * unzip mimetex.zip in any convenient working directory * to produce an executable that emits anti-aliased gif images (recommended) cc -DAA mimetex.c gifsave.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi -or- for gif images without anti-aliasing cc -DGIF mimetex.c gifsave.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi -or- to produce an executable that emits mime xbitmaps cc -DXBITMAP mimetex.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi (For Windows, see "Compile Notes" in Section III below.) * mv mimetex.cgi to your server's cgi-bin/ directory * mv mimetex.html to your server's htdocs/ directory * if the relative path from htdocs to cgi-bin isn't ../cgi-bin then edit mimetex.html and change the few dozen occurrences as necessary. Then, to quickly learn more about mimeTeX * point your browser to www.yourdomain.com/mimetex.html Any problems with the above? * read the more detailed instructions below, or see http://www.forkosh.com/mimetex.html II. INTRODUCTION ------------------------------------------------------------------------ MimeTeX, licensed under the gpl, lets you easily embed LaTeX math in your html pages. It parses a LaTeX math expression and immediately emits the corresponding gif image, rather than the usual TeX dvi. And mimeTeX is an entirely separate little program that doesn't use TeX or its fonts in any way. It's just one cgi that you put in your site's cgi-bin/ directory, with no other dependencies. So mimeTeX is very easy to install. And it's equally easy to use. Just place an html <img> tag in your document wherever you want to see the corresponding LaTeX expression. For example, <img src="../cgi-bin/mimetex.cgi?f(x)=\int_{-\infty}^x~e^{-t^2}dt" border=0 align=absmiddle> generates and displays the corresponding gif image on-the-fly, wherever you put that <img> tag. MimeTeX doesn't need intermediate dvi-to-gif conversion, and it doesn't clutter your filesystem with separate little gif files for each converted expression. (Optional image caching does store gif files, and subsequently reads them as needed, rather than re-rendering the same images every time a page is reloaded.) III. COMPILATION AND INSTALLATION ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I've built and run mimeTeX under Linux and NetBSD using gcc. The source code is ansi-standard C, and should compile and execute under all environments without any change whatsoever. Build instructions below are for Unix. Modify them as necessary for your particular situation. Note the -DWINDOWS switch if applicable. Unzip mimetex.zip in any convenient working directory. Your working directory should now contain mimetex.zip your gnu zipped mimeTeX distribution containing... README this file (see mimetex.html for demo/tutorial) COPYING GPL license, under which you may use mimeTeX mimetex.c mimeTeX source program and all required functions mimetex.h header file for mimetex.c (and for gfuntype.c) gfuntype.c parses output from gftype -i and writes bitmap data texfonts.h output from several gfuntype runs, needed by mimetex.c gifsave.c gif library by Sverre H. Huseby <[email protected]> mimetex.html sample html document, mimeTeX demo and tutorial Note: all files in mimetex.zip use Unix line termination, i.e., linefeeds (without carriage returns) signal line endings. Conversion for Windows, Macs, VMS, etc, can usually be accomplished with unzip's -a option, i.e., unzip -a mimetex.zip Now, to compile a mimeTeX executable that emits anti-aliased gif images (recommended for most uses), type the command cc -DAA mimetex.c gifsave.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi Or, for an executable that emits gif images without anti-aliasing, cc -DGIF mimetex.c gifsave.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi Alternatively, to compile a mimeTeX executable that emits mime xbitmaps, just type the command cc -DXBITMAP mimetex.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi Compile Notes: * If (and only if) you're compiling a Windows executable with the -DAA or -DGIF option (but not -DXBITMAP), then add -DWINDOWS also. For example, cc -DAA -DWINDOWS mimetex.c gifsave.c -lm -o mimetex.cgi The above Unix-like syntax works with MinGW (http://www.mingw.org) and djgpp (http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/) Windows compilers, but probably not with most others, where it's only intended as a "template". * Several additional command-line options that you may find useful are discussed in Section IId (href="#options") of your mimetex.html page. That's all there is to building mimeTeX. You can now test your mimetex.cgi executable from the Unix command line by typing, e.g., ./mimetex.cgi "x^2+y^2" which should emit two ascii rasters something like the following Ascii dump of bitmap image... Hex dump of colormap indexes... ........**..................**.. .......1**1................1**1. .......*..*.....*..........*..*. .......*23*.....*..........*23*. ..........*.....*.............*. ..........*.....*.............*. .***......*.....*....**.*.....*. .***1....2*.....*....**3*....2*. .**.*....*......*....**.*....*.. .**.*...1*......*....**.*...1*.. ..*.....*.*..******...*.*...*.*. ..*....2*.*..******...*.*..2*.*. **.*...****.....*....*.*...****. **.*...****.....*....*.*2..****. ****............*.....**........ ****............*....1**........ ................*......*........ ................*......*........ ................*....**......... ................*....**1........ The 5 colormap indexes denote rgb... .-->255 1-->196 2-->186 3-->177 *-->0 The right-hand illustration shows asterisks in the same positions as the left-hand one, along with anti-aliased grayscale colormap indexes assigned to neighboring pixels, and with the rgb value for each index. Just typing ./mimetex.cgi without an argument should produce ascii rasters for the default expression f(x)=x^2. If you see the two ascii rasters then your binary's good, so mv it to your server's cgi-bin/ directory and set permissions as necessary. Once mimetex.cgi is working, mv it to your server's cgi-bin/ directory (wherever cgi programs are expected), and chmod/chown it as necessary. Then mv mimetex.html to your server's htdocs/ directory. Now point your browser to www.yourdomain.com/mimetex.html and you should see your mimeTeX user's manual reference page. Install Notes: * These two directories are typically of the form somewhere/www/cgi-bin/ and somewhere/www/htdocs/ so I set up mimtex.html to access mimetex.cgi from the relative path ../cgi-bin/ If your directories are non-conforming, you may have to edit the few dozen occurrences of ../cgi-bin/mimetex.cgi in mimetex.html Sometimes a suitable symlink works. If not, you'll have to edit. In that case, globally changing ../cgi-bin/mimetex.cgi often works. * Either way, once mimetex.html displays properly, you can assume everything is working, and can begin authoring html documents using mimetex.cgi to render your own math. IV. REVISION HISTORY ------------------------------------------------------------------------ A more detailed account of mimeTeX's revision history is maintained at http://www.forkosh.com/mimetexchangelog.html --- 09/06/08 J.Forkosh version 1.70 released. 11/30/04 J.Forkosh version 1.60 released 10/02/04 J.Forkosh version 1.50 released on CTAN with various new features and fixes, and updated documentation. 07/18/04 J.Forkosh version 1.40 re-released on CTAN with minor changes, e.g., \mathbb font and nested \array's now supported. 03/21/04 J.Forkosh version 1.40 released on CTAN, with improved LaTeX compatibility, various new features and fixes, including fix to work under Windows. 12/21/03 J.Forkosh version 1.30 released on CTAN, with improved LaTeX compatibility and anti-aliasing, various new features, and thoroughly updated documentation. 10/17/03 J.Forkosh version 1.20 released on CTAN, adding picture environment and various other changes (e.g., more delimiters arbitrarily sized) and fixes. 07/29/03 J.Forkosh version 1.10 released on CTAN, completely replacing mimeTeX's original built-in fonts with thinner and more pleasing fonts, and adding one larger size. 06/27/03 J.Forkosh version 1.01 released on CTAN, adding lowpass anti-aliasing for gifs, and http_referer checks, and fixing a few very obscure bugs. 12/11/02 J.Forkosh version 1.00 released on CTAN, fixing \array bug and adding various new features. 10/31/02 J.Forkosh version 0.99 released on CTAN 09/18/02 J.Forkosh internal beta test release V. CONCLUDING REMARKS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ I hope you find mimeTeX useful. If so, a contribution to your country's TeX Users Group, or to the GNU project, is suggested, especially if you're a company that's currently profitable. ========================= END-OF-FILE README ===========================