The LaTeX2HTML Translator |
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Drakos/Moore |
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Later Developments, 1995-1996
Since 1995 the power and usefulness of LATEX2HTML has been enhanced significantly.
The revisions later than V95.1 have been largely due
to the combined efforts of many people, other than the original author.
Interested users have supplied patches to fix a fault,
or implement a feature that previously was not supported.
Often a question or complaint to the discussion-group
(see Getting Support ...)
has spurred someone else to provide the necessary ``patch''.
Arising from this work, special credit is due to:
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Marcus Hennecke
- for his many extensive revisions;
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Mark Noworolski
- for coordinating V95.3;
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Sidik Isani
- for his improvement in GIF quality;
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Michel Goossens
- was the driving force behind the upgrade to LATEX2e compatibility,
and other features developed at CERN;
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Herb Swan
- for coordinating V96.1 of LATEX2HTML,
including much of the Perl code
for the new features that were introduced,
and for providing a series of bug-fix revisions
prior to V96.1 rev-f;
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Ross Moore
- who has revised and extended this manual, helped design and test the
segmentation strategy, and later revisions of V96.1.
Ross organised the release of V96.1 rev-g
and provided many of the improvements
incorporated into V96.1 rev-h.
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Martin Wilck
- for the initial work on implementation of frames.
Also Martin did most of the work implementing the extensive citation and
bibliographic features of the natbib package, written by Patrick Daly.
He also provided the makeseg Perl script to create Makefiles
for segmented documents.
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Jens Lippmann
- for organising the releases V96.1 rev-h to V98.1.
Jens made significant contributions to
the internal workings of LATEX2HTML,
as well as cleaning up much of its source code.
Many others, too many to mention, contributed bug-reports,
fixes and other suggestions.
Thanks also to Donald Arseneau for allowing his url.sty
to be distributed with this manual.
Similarly, thanks to Johannes Braams for changebar.sty.
Both of these are useful utilities which enhance the appearance of the printed manual.