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- From: ntomczak@vega.math.ualberta.ca (N Tomczak-Jaegermann)
- Subject: Re: Tex Capacity Exceeded, Sorry
- Message-ID: <ntomczak.722539227@vega>
- Sender: news@kakwa.ucs.ualberta.ca
- Nntp-Posting-Host: vega.math.ualberta.ca
- Organization: University Of Alberta, Edmonton Canada
- References: <2425@usna.NAVY.MIL> <1992Nov23.040513.6515@cs.wright.edu>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 17:20:27 GMT
- Lines: 18
-
- sdawalt@cs.wright.edu (Shane Dawalt) writes:
-
- >From article <2425@usna.NAVY.MIL>, by dfr@usna.navy.mil (PROF D. Rogers (EAS FAC)):
- >> In article <1992Nov22.185905.6271@ncsu.edu> wolfrum@che09.ncsu.EDU (Ed Wolfrum) writes:
- >> There are always logical breaks in any document. Break the single
- >> file at these logical points and TeX and print in pieces.
-
- > How do you keep the page numbers straight between pieces?
-
- One method which comes to mind is to write out a current page number
- to an auxilliary file and next job picks it up from there - if it
- exists, otherwise we are on a square one. The last job in a queue
- should reset this number to 0. Or even better - a slightly different
- macro, written by previous part, expands to a starting page of the
- next part. This would allow for "out-of-order" processing.
- There are few details yet which need some attention. :-)
-
- --mj
-