Ergebnis für URL: http://www.ams.org/STIX/STIX Project Home Page
Updated: 20 October 2006
____________________________________________________________________________
The pages accessible from here were originally developed for the use of the
[1]Team members and other contributors to the [2]STIX Project. (This group was
initially led by Nico Poppelier of Elsevier Science Inc.; Nico has left Elsevier,
and Wim de Vries is now the Elsevier representative to the STIX project.)
The various documents linked below were developed mainly in support of an attempt
to gain acceptance into Unicode of additional symbols used in mathematical and
technical publishing. These documents include all the proposals (and their
revisions) made to the Unicode Technical Committee (UTC) since work on the
project began in 1997 as well as a great deal of background information compiled
in support of these proposals. Thus, this page forms a historical outline of the
Unicode facet of the STIX project.
Newest files
2006/10/20
Oops! Another omission caught and corrected. Here are the new [3]table
file and the applicable [4]layout description.
2006/10/18
Some minor errors and omissions have been found and corrected in the
[5]table file. The [6]layout description remains the same. If anyone
notices any remaining errors, please send the details to [7]Barbara
Beeton.
2006/09/02
The final glyph delivery has been made, and the fonts are undergoing
packaging and a final design review. In the meantime, Unicode 5.0 has been
finalized, including some additional math characters. The STIX master
table has been updated with the new codes from Unicode 5.0 (and some new
symbols as well).
TeX control sequences have been assigned to all symbols that are likely to
occur in math or other technical contexts (e.g., phonetics); Latin
alphabetic characters that are intended for use in text, regardless of
language, have not been assigned TeX control sequences since there are
other, more preferred, methods of accessing them.
All glyphs have unique Type 1 names. Many of these correspond to simple
Unicodes. Some are formed from compound Unicodes (e.g., "uni227620D2") or
from qualified Unicodes (e.g., "uni019B.var"). Finally, some glyphs that
do not have Unicode representations have been assigned names with the
prefix "stix" and a 4-hex-digit code in the range EExx of the Unicode
Private Use Area (e.g., "stixEE24").
The updated [8]table file and the corresponding [9]layout description are
posted. The column layout remains the same; values of a few flags have
changed, and there are several new sources listed for TeX control sequence
names. Scott Pakin's [10]Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List, available from
CTAN, has been of enormous help in avoiding name clashes.
2005/09/26
Creation of the glyphs for the STIX fonts is almost complete, although a
full design review is required. Delivery of most of the remaining glyphs
has turned up some items which were not in the master table, and these
have been added. Some new characters accepted by Unicode have been added
as well. For symbols which have not been accepted by Unicode, "final"
STIX IDs have been assigned in the Unicode Private Use Area (PUA), and
Type 1 glyph names derived accordingly. The updated [11]table file and the
corresponding [12]layout description are posted. The column layout remains
the same; only values of a few flags have changed.
The next task is to assign TeX control sequence names to the symbols that
do not already have them. In order to make use of names already in general
use and to avoid name clashes, we will refer to Scott Pakin's
[13]Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List, which is available from CTAN.
2005/06/17
An inventory of the glyphs delivered for the STIX fonts has been
completed, and a request has been made for what remains. The [14]STIXFonts
web site has been updated with the latest information. [15]Unicode 4.1
charts are posted with quite a few additions, and the [16]pipeline still
shows a few math symbols waiting for final approval. The [17]table file
has been updated and rechecked; quite a few minor glitches were found and
corrected. The [18]layout description has been updated, mostly to reflect
changes in type-1 glyph names and a new flag value; the column layout
remains the same.
2004/06/18
Work on the STIX fonts continues, but is nearing completion. For more
information, see the [19]STIPub web site. Unicode 4.1 is under
construction, and some additional symbols (including an undotted j!) have
been accepted; see the [20]Unicode "pipeline" for details. The new symbols
have been added to the [21]table file, along with some more error
corrections. Some new flag values have been added to the [22]layout
description, to indicate the beta status of some new table entries; the
column layout remains the same as the last version.
2003/10/10
Concurrently with work on the STIX fonts, the master [23]table file has
been updated to correct errors and add occasional items uncovered
subsequent to the latest Unicode release. The [24]layout remains the same
as the version of 2003/05/02.
2003/10/03
[25]Unicode 4.0 was published. This version includes a number of
mathematical symbols discovered after the release of version 3.2.
A project undertaken in the W3C in coordination with ISO will update TR
9573-13 to include Unicode references along with entity names. A [26]draft
version of the new report is now available.
2003/08/31
Unicode Technical Report #25, [27]Unicode Support for Mathematics, has
been released in final form, as approved by the Unicode Technical
Committee.
2003/05/02
In preparation for the release of the STIX font, Type 1 glyph names are
being added to the master [28]table file. This requires a change in the
[29]layout.
2002-2003
Work continues on the STIX font. For details, see the [30]STIPub web site.
2002/09/11
At the 22nd International Unicode Conference, Murray Sargent presented the
paper [31]Unicode Support for Mathematics, introducing the mathematics
content of Unicode 3.2 and how it can be used.
2002/06/24
The STIPub web site is now live:
[32]http://www.stixfonts.org/
A [33]news story on the Bulletin site of the Seybold Reports announces the
public debut of the project and summarizes its goals.
2002/06/10
Another gap. In the interim, some exciting progress has been made:
+ Unicode 3.2 was released on 2 April 2002. A Unicode Consortium [34]press
release briefly describes the features relevant to the STIX effort.
+ The [35]Unicode code charts have been updated for version 3.2.
+ A Draft Unicode Technical Report (#25) entitled [36]Unicode support for
mathematics was issued on 8 May 2002. The content and approach are still
somewhat fluid, and comments are welcome.
+ The master [37]table file has been updated to contain the final values
in Unicode 3.2. Here is the [38]layout; it remains unchanged from the
version of 2000/10/19.
Work is now underway on creation of the fonts. That effort will be the
subject of a separate web site, under the aegis of STIPub. A link will be
provided with the site becomes "live".
2001/05/05
Once again, this file hasn't been kept current, owing to the press of
other business; when time permits, the gap will be filled in.
A new version of the master [39]table file incorporates corrected values
for some Unicodes as well as about 70 new symbols identified since the
initial submission in 1998. The layout hasn't changed; see the link at
2000/10/19.
2001/02/21
Mathematical Markup Language [40](MathML) version 2.0 was released as an
official W3C Recommendation.
2000/10/19
The master [41]table file has been updated to incorporate this new and
changed information:
+ Unicodes and character descriptions as shown in the latest Unicode
charts (see below);
+ reference to appendix in the font RFP which identified symbols to be
included in the STIX font;
+ a ``type'' code determining how many forms of each symbol are to be
included in the font;
+ a ``multiplication factor'' indicating the actual count of glyphs to be
created for each symbol in the font.
A brief explication of the [42]layout of this table is available; this
file identifies the location and content of each field in the table.
Draft Unicode charts including the math symbols were available for preview
from the Unicode site; these preliminary charts have been superseded by
the [43]Unicode 3.2 code charts.
2000/03/09
This file hasn't been kept current, owing to the press of other business;
when time permits, the gap will be filled in.
Briefly, activity has proceeded on two fronts.
+ Refinement of the symbols proposal was completed, and the material
incorporated into more extensive proposals for consideration by the ISO
WG2 Working Group. After recommending some relatively minor changes, WG2
incorporated the symbols and mathematical alphanumerics into two
documents to be balloted in the usual manner.
+ An RFP was sent out to candidate font providers, for development of a
STIX font. A provider was selected, and contract negotiations are nearly
complete. A schedule for doing the work is under construction.
2000/02/10
Good news!
The UTC at their meeting last week accepted the symbols proposal; a few
minor changes were suggested, and these have been posted in a [44]revised
version which will be frozen for the record. Code points were
provisionally assigned to all the distinct symbols; here is a [45]list of
the new Unicodes, keyed to the temporary IDs of the proposal. Some
additions have been made to this complement, most notably a ``variation
selector'' (which is the formal designation for the MVT used in the
proposal) and a collection of brace pieces representing a grandfathered
set used with a prominent word processor.
The next step is consideration of the proposal by the ISO WG2 Working
Group. This will occur at their next meeting, March 21-23, in Beijing.
1999/12/27
An updated version of the [46]symbols proposal is available in draft (PDF)
form. Many symbols have been removed as individual entities, and replaced
by composites or alternate forms indicated by a Math Variant Tag (MVT).
The symbol charts in the PDF file have not yet been changed. HTML versions
of the updated charts can be viewed as follows:
+ [47]A: Letter-like symbols, diacritics, punctuation
+ [48]B: Arrows and harpoons, combinations, fishtails
+ [49]C: Large operators, binary operators, relational operators
+ [50]D: More relations
1999/12/22
A new working draft, Mathematical Markup Language [51](MathML) version 2.0
was released. Chapter 6, Entities, Characters and Fonts, is still waiting
for Unicode action on the STIX proposal, and remains preliminary.
1999/11/14
The proposals for mathematical alphanumerics and for mathematical and
technical symbols were discussed at the October 26-29 meeting of the UTC.
Some additional changes have been requested in the symbols proposal before
the next meeting (January 31-February 3); an updated version will be
posted when ready.
Another proposal for math/technical symbols, [52]Mathematical brace
pieces, was also considered and accepted. This covers a number of pieces
used to create various delimiters as composites, and is intended to
support existing character sets from Adobe, Hewlett-Packard, and some
other sources; it is not intended to cover the existing TeX glyphs from
the cmex font -- for input, storage, searching, etc., the use of a single
code remains the method of choice, leaving the actual composition of the
glyphs to the typesetting software and fonts.
1999/10/16
The proposal [53]Request for assignment of codes to mathematical and
technical symbols (L2/99-244R) has been revised; this version will be
considered at the October 26-29 meeting of the UTC.
1999/09/20
Revision 1 of the [54]Proposal to encode mathematical alphanumeric
characters (L2/99-195) was presented to the WG2 meeting last week, and was
accepted unanimously:
``WG2 accepts the proposal for 991 (subject to verification of this
number) new mathematical alphanumeric symbols in document N2086, for
inclusion in 10646-2, in the range D400--D7FF in Plane 1. The project
editor is to select the appropriate character names and block name in the
preparation of the text for inclusion in part 2.''
The 2nd working draft of 10646-2 was accepted and the project editor
instructed to prepare the text for the CD (committee draft), including the
mathematical alphanumerics, and submit this document for ballot. After the
CD is accepted, two more ballots are required: DIS (Draft International
Standard), and IS (International Standard). This process, if expedited,
can be completed in about a year and a half.
1999/08/26
The proposal entitled [55]Request for assignment of codes to mathematical
and technical symbols (L2/99-244) has been updated in response to a review
by several UTC members, and will be carried into the semiannual Unicode
Conference for additional feedback.
An updated version of the [56]table file has also been posted. It contains
changes reflecting updates to the symbols proposal as well as some new
material from IEEE; the format has not changed from the last version
posted.
1999/08/11
New versions of two proposals are now in advanced draft stage. After a few
final corrections, these may be submitted to the WG2 meeting in September
and will be on the agenda of the October UTC meeting.
+ [57]Proposal to encode mathematical alphanumeric characters (L2/99-195)
Expected changes include the replacement of italic open-face by bold
fraktur.
+ [58]Request for assignment of codes to mathematical and technical
symbols (L2/99-244)
Copies of this proposal will be carried to the TeX Users Group meeting
(August 15-20) and to the Unicode Conference (August 28-September 2) and
circulated for comments; some minor changes may result from that review.
The [59]table file (prepared by Barbara) has once again been amended, to
add references to the new version of the symbols proposal. This is a very
large ASCII flat file, with material position-aligned into columns. This
is the current table structure.
start end name description
1 1 flag marks questioned items of various types
2 5 uniq Unicode point in hex
7 10 xref cross-reference code
12 15 AFII AFII identifier in hex
17 20 rq-1 ID of requested symbol in June 1999 proposal to UTC
22 25 rq-2 ID of requested symbol in August 1999 proposal to UTC
27 27 C character class code
29 38 entity entity name suggested
40 48 set ISO entity set
49 52 els Elsevier handle
53 53 source of TeX name
54 79 AMS/TeX name TeX or AMSTeX name
80 96 APS American Physical Society name
97 106 AIP American Institute of Physics name
107 116 ACS American Chemical Society name
117 136 IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers name
137 167 Wolfram Mathematica name
168 180 Springer Springer name
181 185 KAP Kluwer Academic Publishers handle
186 192 SciDes Design Science MTCode
193 197 M-Pi Adobe MathematicalPi font reference
198 end description descriptive text
1999/08/09
A revised version of the symbols proposal has been posted (see above). The
revised charts, showing (low resolution versions of) all the symbols can
be viewed separately. The collection has been divided into four parts:
+ [60]A: Letter-like symbols; diacritics and combining symbols;
punctuation
+ [61]B: Arrows and harpoons; combinations with arrows; fishtails
+ [62]C: Large operators; binary operators; relations
+ [63]D: Relations (continued); geometric shapes; miscellanea
1999/07/12
At the June UTC meeting, three math proposals were considered:
+ coding of alphanumeric characters: accepted; editorial revisions are
still underway, but the [64]most recent version can be viewed
+ [65]coding of math symbols: the UTC formally endorsed creation of ``a
new proposal for math symbols following the WG2/Unicode proposal
guidelines with Murray Sargent as project editor''; it is planned to
complete this draft by the end of August, and circulate it at the
semiannual Unicode conference in order to get more exposure and support
from potential users.
+ [66]math variant tags: rejected after discussion; symbols formerly
proposed to be coded using this method will be folded back into the main
symbols proposal.
1999/07/12
The post-UTC-meeting version of the [67]table file prepared by Barbara.
The table is a very large ASCII flat file. The structure is that of a very
wide table. This version incorporates the reference IDs from the proposal
for coding of math symbols as well as new material from Design Sciences
and the Adobe MathematicalPi fonts.
1999/06/01
A [68]revised proposal was prepared for presentation to the UTC, excluding
nearly all alphabetics (which had become the subject of a related proposal
prepared by Murray Sargent, a UTC member from Microsoft), and
consolidating most of the information on symbols from the December 1998
proposal and the March 1999 addendum.
A second proposal concerning [69]math variants was also submitted,
introducing tags to extend the symbol complement in regular ways, e.g. by
converting a binary to an n-ary operator, adding negation, etc. This
material was kept separate since it was expected to raise discussion not
relevant to whether the symbols in the first document would be acceptable
to UTC.
____________________________________________________________________________
Previous versions
1999/04/29
The last version of the [70]table file prepared by Barbara prior to the
June 1999 UTC meeting.
1999/01/22
At the request of the UTC, an [71]addendum was prepared, with some changes
in the proposal text and the symbols list, omitting items whose status was
resolved by recent additions and changes to Unicode.
____________________________________________________________________________
1998/11/27
The [72]submission to the Unicode Technical Committee was reorganized into
a single document with seven tables of symbols, grouped by type.
1998/04/24
The ISO 10646 WG2 [73]submission consists of some 70 or so files plus PDF
equivalents.
The [74]index to the private zone codes shows the sample glyphs with the
temporary numbers presently assigned. These are in no way to be considered
suggested Unicode numbers. But they really help clarity of discussion.
1998/04/24
An update of the [75]table file prepared by Barbara.
14MR1998
The ISO 10646 WG2 [76]submission is done, and consists of some 70 or so
files plus PDF equivalents. The [77]index to the private zone codes is
private to STIX, though the rest can be accessed as above.
24FE1998
A [78]rough collection of files with glyphs showing, based on an earlier
version of BNB's table, is available. Note there are 20 (hex) files. Those
from 10 on contain the characters not already in Unicode 2.0.
24FE1998
Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) 1.0 became a [79]Proposed
Recommendation of the [80]W3C today [[81]Press Release]. The files
containing tables in its [82]Chapter 6 show many glyphs though not the
complete set required from STIX. If things are wrong there it would be
good to know. Note the Unicode numbers in the private zone used in the
MathML document are not necessarily the same as those in use in the STIX
tables. It is hoped that the glyphs are the same though.
19FE1998
Barbara's newest [83]table file is now online, as she goes off to a
well-deserved Caribbean 'bare-foot' vacation.
17FE1998
Though the new [84]Unicode home page no longer leads to the Unicode glyph
image charts, John Jenkins of Apple, who oversees this site, has told us
that there is a [85]Unicode chart server. (A later edition of the Unicode
home page does contain a link to the charts.)
____________________________________________________________________________
01 Sep 1997
There are new files merging the character information from all of the
sources in a sort of [86]Universal form. As of today not all the links
have been verified, so it is best to look at the files from an index, and
that's where the previous link gets you.
04 Aug 1997
Chris Hamlin has added a new form of the [87]AIP list including Unicode
equivalences, to the others available, such as Arthur Smith's [88]APS list
including a comparison with ISO characters, and those to be had below from
Elsevier and the AMS.
31 July 1997
There are now compilations of characters in table form with images from
Unicode and Elsevier based on the [89]ISO tables (ISOAMS[A-C], ISOPUB,
etc.).
A link pointed out by Arthur Smith to the recent (21 July 1997)
[90]Working Draft on Fonts of the W3C CSS committee is added below in the
reference materials.
28 July 1997
It seems that it may be more useful to have [91]full listings with images
of all the characters in the chosen signatures, not just those in the
Elsevier and other lists. This allows one to see at a glance which have
been left out.
Correction to the links to images in some files posted last week have been
made.
The LaTeX 3 Project's early report on math symbols authored by Justin
Ziegler, as pointed out by Barbara Beeton, deserves linking here too. It
lists the symbols required for math/technical composition, arranged into
256-element fonts for use with LaTeX. There is a [92]local copy for
convenience, perusable as [93]TeX source if you wish. The original can be
found on any CTAN node in the area info/ltx3pub/l3d007.tex . This
reference is relative to a TeX archive root node as follows:
+ [94]ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/
+ [95]ftp://ftp.dante.de/tex-archive/
+ [96]ftp://ctan.tug.org/tex-archive/
19 July 1997
Building on some of the recent material there is now a pair of sets of
comparative listings of characters covering those items of the Elsevier
collection already in Unicode. The comparison is with AFII numbers, AMS
names and ISO 9573-13 names. There are forms with and without the added
convenience for viewing, but disadvantage for loading, of images from both
Elsevier and Unicode. The whole has, of course, still the status of a
working draft.
+ [97]Listings without images.
+ [98]Listings with images.
The collection is divided into signatures, which are taken to be subsets
of characters whose Unicodes are of the form NN** in hex; each signature
is divided into tables of up to 16 characters of the form NNM*, which may
be thought of as sheets of characters. It is hoped that this way the
loading of tables will be quicker. Since the symbols of interest to STIX
are taken from a restricted part of the Unicode set the signatures that
have been covered in this list are those with NN drawn from the list
(00,01,02,03,1E,1F,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,30)
Initially only the characters in the Elsevier set are shown in this
listing although it is keyed by Unicode numbers. Those not already in
Unicode are intended to be prepared for consistency with Unicode numbers
from the private zone signatures E5, E6, and E7.
18 July 1997
Although much work has been done in the last week there has been nothing
new posted on the STIX site. This is now changing with a bang. There are
new tables from Barbara Beeton:
+ A [99]table of 9573-13 materials made available by Anders Berglund of
ISO WG8.
+ The [100]table of 9573-13 materials sorted and annotated by BNB with
Elsevier information.
and Arthur Smith has made available to the list his [101]ongoing work on
the fonts for APS work provided by Beacon. This includes new image files.
Nico Poppelier's new files weren't simply made available by posting, but
now can be seen here too:
+ The distribution [102]tar file.
+ A tab-separated [103]database file updating the earlier one.
+ The [104]HTML form of the above.
+ A PDF file of character [105]sample pictures.
+ A text listing of [106]Unicode descriptions in uppercase.
+ In addition hundreds of new image files replacing and supplementing the
old were provided. A [107]directory listing is quite long.
24 June 1997
[108]Tables from the AMS containing work of Barbara Beeton on checking
AFII codes and TR 9573 entity names.
19 June 1997
These working tables have been supplied by Nico Poppelier and the folks at
Elsevier:
+ A three-column table of Unicode (if available), Elsevier grid coordinate
and Elsevier entity name, as a text file, [109]stix.dbs of 1105 lines.
+ A PostScript file, [110]stix.ps (ca. 4152K) which contains three pages
of tables of the Elsevier collection of glyphs in the grid mentioned
above. This has had the specification of A4 paper size removed so that
it can work with US printers.
+ A long (25804 lines, half of them blank) text file, [111]unicode.text
from the Unicode consortium giving the Unicodes and corresponding
decriptive text in upper-case.
+ An archive file, [112]stix.tar, as originally sent by Nico (ca. 4557K),
containing the 3 files mentioned above (with the A4 option specified).
+ A long (878 rows) [113]HTML table derived from the above by skipping the
letters at the beginning with added columns, one blank for Elsevier
Descriptions and one of GIF images showing the Elsevier glyphs.
____________________________________________________________________________
Reference materials
For reference we have various relevant files:
* The [114]Working Draft on Fonts of the W3C [115]Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)
committee.
* The [116]9 entity sets of ISO TR 9573-13
* A rough [117]Character Database prepared earlier sent to the HTML-Math
Working Group
* For other information, one should see the [118]Unicode Home Page
Last update: 20 October 2006
____________________________________________________________________________
The nominal administrators of these pages are
* [119]Patrick Ion, for the initial realization of the site, the early
implementation of tables with glyph images, and the early history,
particularly that involved with MathML;
* [120]Barbara Beeton, for content of the symbol tables, proposals to the
Unicode Technical Committee, the history since April 1998, and anything to do
with the STIX fonts.
Please direct any comments to the appropriate person.
References
1. http://www.ams.org/STIX/members.html
2. http://www.ams.org/STIX/project.html
3. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.ascii-2006-10-20
4. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2006-05-15
5. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl-2006-10-18.asc
6. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2006-05-15
7. mailto:bnb@ams.org
8. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.ascii-2006-09-01
9. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2006-05-15
10. http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/info/symbols/comprehensive
11. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.ascii-2005-09-24
12. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2005-09-24
13. http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/info/symbols/comprehensive
14. http://www.stixfonts.org/
15. http://www.unicode.org/charts/symbols.html
16. http://www.unicode.org/alloc/Pipeline.html
17. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.ascii-2005-06-15
18. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2005-06-15
19. http://www.stixfonts.org/
20. http://www.unicode.org/alloc/Pipeline.html
21. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.ascii-2004-06-18
22. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2004-06-18
23. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-2003-10-10
24. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2003-05-02
25. http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode4.0.0/
26. http://www.w3.org/2003/entities/
27. http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr25/
28. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-2003-05-02
29. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-2003-05-02
30. http://www.stixfonts.org/
31. http://www.unicode.org/iuc/iuc22/a390.html
32. http://www.stixfonts.org/
33. http://www.seyboldreports.com/News/2002/20020624.html
34. http://www.unicode.org/press/pr-3.2.html
35. http://www.unicode.org/charts/
36. http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr25/
37. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-02apr02
38. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-00oct19
39. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-01may05
40. http://www.w3.org/TR/MathML2
41. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-00oct19
42. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.layout-00oct19
43. http://www.unicode.org/charts/
44. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/feb2000/utcmemo-s-feb00.pdf
45. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/feb2000/utc-codes.txt
46. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/jan2000/utcmemo-s-jan00.pdf
47. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/jan2000/glyph-rev-ax.html
48. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/jan2000/glyph-rev-bx.html
49. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/jan2000/glyph-rev-cx.html
50. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/jan2000/glyph-rev-dx.html
51. http://www.w3.org/TR/MathML2
52. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/99346-mathbraces.html
53. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-s-oct99-r.pdf
54. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/99195-rev1.htm
55. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-s-oct99.pdf
56. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-99aug26
57. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/99195-mathalphanum.htm
58. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-s-oct99.pdf
59. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-99aug11
60. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/glyph-rev-AX.html
61. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/glyph-rev-BX.html
62. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/glyph-rev-CX.html
63. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/glyph-rev-DX.html
64. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/99195-mathalphanum.htm
65. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-s-jun99.pdf
66. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-v-jun99.pdf
67. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-99jul03
68. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-s-jun99.pdf
69. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-v-jun99.pdf
70. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc
71. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utc-addendum.pdf
72. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/newsub/utc/utcmemo-dec98.pdf
73. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/
74. http://www.ams.org/STIX/private/stixprv-index.html
75. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc26MR98
76. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/
77. http://www.ams.org/STIX/private/stixprv-index.html
78. http://www.ams.org/STIX/stixfull-rough.html
79. http://www.w3.org/TR/PR-math
80. http://www.w3.org/
81. http://www.w3.org/Press/1998/MathML-PR
82. http://www.w3.org/TR/PR-math/chapter6.html
83. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc98feb26
84. http://www.unicode.org/
85. http://www.unicode.org/charts/
86. http://www.ams.org/STIX/ion/Univ/
87. http://www.aip.org/anjtest/chartabs/tab_all.html
88. http://publish.aps.org/eprint/reports/STIX/
89. http://www.ams.org/STIX/glyphs/proposal/reference/stixiso-index.html
90. http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-font
91. http://www.ams.org/STIX/ion/complistsimgf.html
92. http://www.ams.org/STIX/l3d007.tex
93. http://www.ams.org/STIX/l3d007-tex.html
94. ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/
95. ftp://ftp.dante.de/tex-archive/
96. ftp://ctan.tug.org/tex-archive/
97. http://www.ams.org/STIX/ion/complists.html
98. http://www.ams.org/STIX/ion/complistsimg.html
99. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/9573-13.file
100. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/9573-13.sort-elsevier
101. http://publish.aps.org/eprint/reports/STIX/iso.html
102. http://www.ams.org/STIX/nico/distribute.tar
103. http://www.ams.org/STIX/nico/stix.dbs
104. http://www.ams.org/STIX/nico/stix.html
105. http://www.ams.org/STIX/nico/grid3n.pdf
106. http://www.ams.org/STIX/nico/unicode.txt
107. http://www.ams.org/STIX/images/
108. http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnbranges.html
109. http://www.ams.org/STIX/stix.dbs
110. http://www.ams.org/STIX/stix.ps
111. http://www.ams.org/STIX/unicode.text
112. http://www.ams.org/STIX/stix.tar
113. http://www.ams.org/STIX/stix-glyphs.html
114. http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-font
115. http://www.w3.org/Style/
116. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-MathML/chapter6.html#sec6.2.5
117. http://www.ams.org/STIX/roughdb.html
118. http://www.unicode.org/
119. mailto:ion@ams.org
120. mailto:bnb@ams.org
Usage: http://www.kk-software.de/kklynxview/get/URL
e.g. http://www.kk-software.de/kklynxview/get/http://www.kk-software.de
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