~ruther/guix-local

adfa7a2a8e54c5d890bcf205d9f0e3901e578604 — Ricardo Wurmus 8 years ago de224ad
gnu: Add texlive-latex-eqparbox.

* gnu/packages/tex.scm (texlive-latex-eqparbox): New variable.
1 files changed, 28 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)

M gnu/packages/tex.scm
M gnu/packages/tex.scm => gnu/packages/tex.scm +28 -0
@@ 1706,6 1706,34 @@ implementation is output device independent, and made very simple by relying
on everypage.")
    (license license:lppl1.3+)))

(define-public texlive-latex-eqparbox
  (package
    (name "texlive-latex-eqparbox")
    (version (number->string %texlive-revision))
    (source (origin
              (method svn-fetch)
              (uri (texlive-ref "latex" "eqparbox"))
              (file-name (string-append name "-" version "-checkout"))
              (sha256
               (base32
                "0pvmhsd4xmpil0m3c7qcgwilbk266mlkzv03g0jr8r3zd8jxlyzq"))))
    (build-system texlive-build-system)
    (arguments '(#:tex-directory "latex/eqparbox"))
    (home-page "http://www.ctan.org/pkg/eqparbox")
    (synopsis "Create equal-widthed parboxes")
    (description
     "LaTeX users sometimes need to ensure that two or more blocks of text
occupy the same amount of horizontal space on the page.  To that end, the
@code{eqparbox} package defines a new command, @code{\\eqparbox}, which works
just like @code{\\parbox}, except that instead of specifying a width, one
specifies a tag.  All @code{eqparbox}es with the same tag---regardless of
where they are in the document---will stretch to fit the widest
@code{eqparbox} with that tag.  This simple, equal-width mechanism can be used
for a variety of alignment purposes, as is evidenced by the examples in
@code{eqparbox}'s documentation.  Various derivatives of @code{\\eqparbox} are
also provided.")
    (license license:lppl1.3+)))

(define-public texlive-latex-natbib
  (package
    (name "texlive-latex-natbib")