From: CHR05EE@TECHNION.BITNET (Erik Engdahl) Newsgroups: comp.text.tex Subject: Re: SweTeX Date: 8 Dec 92 07:49:11 GMT Organization: TECHNION - Israel Institute of Technology. Here is a summary of the information I have got on SweTeX out of Plain Tex. SweTeX gives the Swedish special characters by using }{|][\ whereas <>\ are used for delimiters and escape character. One approach that has been proposed by Jan K{rrman and Anders Holmberg in Uppsala and Staffan Romberg in Stockholm is to use a macro (or macros). They are available on anonymous ftp on albireo.tdb.uu.se (130.238.136.6) on the directory pub/tex/swetex. In modes.tex that is the most important of the files I recommend adding \let\SweTeX=\swedishmode \let\noSweTeX=\usmode since SweTeX is SweTeX and nothing but SweTeX. This file also contains macros to input SweTeX macro in a TeX code and in reverse. Per Foreby in Lund has two proposals. Either one uses SLaTeX that follows the Swedish ISO-626 character standard or uses TeX 3.14 (that allows 8-bit characters) together with dc fonts containing the Swedish characters according to the cork standard. Both SLaTeX and the dc fonts is available on ftp.efd.lth.se:/pub/tex. Bj|rn Lisper in Stockholm gave me two lex-files for translation from SweTeX to TeX and in reverse. On unix systems (and some others) they can be lexed giving a c-program that eventually gives a filter to be put in a pipeline for the translation. Dov Grobgeld in Rechovot has found file named styles-and-macros.Index.Z available by anonymous ftp at menora.weizmann.ac.il. This information contains information about a file named swedish.sty that is a Babel document-style option which provides support for typesetting in Swedish. Bye Erik Engdahl, chr05ee@technion.bitnet