Automatically capitalize first letter of first word in a new sentence in LaTeX

寵の児 提交于 2019-12-03 06:16:21

The following code solves the problem.

\let\period.
\catcode`\.\active 
\def\uppercasesingleletter#1{\uppercase{#1}}
\def.{\period\afterassignment\periodx\let\next= }
\def \periodx{\ifcat\space\next \next\expandafter\uppercasesingleletter \else\expandafter\next\fi}

First. second.third.  relax.relax. up

\let\period. save period

\catcode\.\active make all periods to be active symbol (like macro).

\def\uppercasesingleletter#1{\uppercase{#1}} defines macro \uppercasesingleletter to make automatically capitalize the following letter.

\def.{\period\afterassignment\periodx\let\next= } writes saved period and checkes the next symbol.

\def \periodx{\ifcat\space\next \next\expandafter\uppercasesingleletter \else\expandafter\next\fi} If the next letter is a space then \uppercasesingleletter is inserted.

ages ago there was discussion of this idea on comp.text.tex, and the general conclusion was you can't do it satisfactorily. satisfactory, in my book, involves not making characters active, but i can't see how that could work at all.

personally, i would want to make space active, and have it then look at \spacefactor and \MakeUppercase the following character if the factor is 3000.

something like

\catcode\ \active % latex already has a saved space character -- \space
\def {\ifhmode% \spacefactor is invalid
% (or something) in vertical mode
\ifnum\spacefactor<3000\else% note: with space active,
% even cs-ended lines need %-termination
\expandafter\gobbleandupper\fi}%
\def\gobbleandupper#1{\def\tempa{#1}\def\tempb{ }%
\ifx\tempa\tempb% can''t indent the code, either :-(
% here, we have another space
\expandafter\gobbleandupper% try again
\else\space% insert a "real" space to soak up the
% space factor
\expandafter\MakeUppercase\fi}%

this doesn't really do the job -- there are enough loose ends to knit a fairisle jumper. for example, given that we can't rely on \everypar in latex, how do you uppercase the first letter of a paragraph?

no ... however much it hurts (which is why i avoid unnecessary key operations) we need to type latex "properly" :-(

I decided to solve it in the following way:

Since I always compile the LaTeX code three times before i okular the result (to get pagination and references right), I decided to build the capitalization of sentences into that process.

Thus, I now have a shell script that calls my capitalization script (written in CRM114) first, then pdflatex three times, and then okular. This way, all the stuff happens as the result of a single command.

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!