=—– LGrind - a source pretty printer for LaTeX =—–

This directory contains:  lgrind.ins DocStrip driver lgrind.dtx Documented package lgrind.gls Glossary and index for the documentation (for the ones with- lgrind.ind out MakeIndex, and because it had to be modified by hand) lgrindef The language definition file

In the directory 'source': (not needed by DOS users) lgrind.c The source code for the LGrind executable lgutil.c lgrindef.c lgrindef.h regexp.c regexp.h v2lg.c Source code for verbatim to embedded source converter retest.c Test program for the regular expression routines lgrind.1 Man-pages for the LGrind program lgrindef.5 and the language definition file Makefile Makefile for UN*X makefile.dos Makefile for MS-DOS (Borland C++, should work with everything) makefile.emx Makefile for use with DMAKE

In the directory 'binary': c2tex.bat Example batch files for facilitating calls to LGrind masm2tex.bat egmasm.asm Example sources egcprog.c subst Example substitution file lgrindeg.tex Example making use of the above dos/lgrind.exe The executable for MS-DOS and Windows

What you need: J- lgrind (or lgrind.exe for MS-DOS and OS/2) just where you like it - lgrind.sty somewhere in LaTeXs reach - lgrindef anywhere; (position is semi-fixed in the executable) - LaTeX2e the obsolete LaTeX 2.09 is not supported - LGrind utilizes by default the fancyhdr package by Piet van Oostrum. You can change this behaviour by modifying the lgrindef file.

How to get the files:  - If you have MS-DOS or Windows, your executable is provided. If not, all the source files are in the source directory, a makefile provided. - Run LaTeX or PlainTeX on lgrind.ins. You will obtain lgrind.sty.

Er, mmmmh, documentation? ^ Of course. A lot. Took me days. Run LaTeX on lgrind.dtx and the result is lgrind.dvi. If you don't want the documentation about all internal stuff, run LaTeX on something like lgrind.dtx