The purpose of this style is to put all figures on pages by themselves
at the end of an article in a section named Figures. Likewise for tables.
Markers, like “[Figure 3 about here]” appear in the text (by default) near
where the figure (or table) would normally have occurred. This is usually
required when preparing submissions to journals.
A number of package options and other mechanisms are provided to give
the user control over various aspects of the package’s behavior.
Loading this package will change the output of LATEX.
Create dummy text. Can be used to create examples with a lot text to become a feeling for the look of classes, packages... Some macros: - \blindtext creates some text, - \Blindtext creates more text. - \blinddocument creates a small document with sections, lists... - \Blinddocument creates a large document with sections, lists...
"apt-fast and Axel: Roughly 26x Faster apt-get Installations and Upgrades Monday, 02 June 2008 Updated 12/17/2009 Since apt-fast has gotten popular due to acolades in the Ubuntu community and from mention in Linux Format, I've gotten lots of hits, and a few bugs. I believe that apt-fast is now golden, though, thanks to travisn000 on the PCLinuxOS forums. From now on, you can find the latest version "source" (it's just a shellscript) at http://www.mattparnell.com/linux/apt-fast/ ... the latest version will always be the one named "apt-fast.sh." Yes, this will work for any distro that uses apt-get, and the concept should work most of the others...it may even be as simple as removing wget and replacing it with a symlink to axel. Since I last updated this post, I have started using Archlinux, whose package manager has a system in place that allows any download manager to be used, for example."
Several months ago I created an article with 5 APT (Advanced Packaging Tool) tips for both Debian and Ubuntu available here. APT is the package manager in Debian and Debian-based distributions, like Ubuntu. Here's part two of that article, with 5 more tips and tricks for APT.