Romano Giannetti
Romano Giannetti
> Well, it is similar. But, I am talking about a recent Gnome version. Yes, if you look at my last comment, it's still there in Gnome 48.1
My style is the standard (Ubuntu) light Yaru theme: (upper window is Gnome Tweaks, lower is Settings - Appearance) And this is how the search box looks: This is if...
Be careful because the valid character set for filenames does not depend on the operating system alone, but also on the type of filesystem where you are saving the file....
Works like a charm, again. Thanks! (If Thunderbird didn't hide so well the possibility to use a downloaded add-on, I'd have tested it earlier).
@nonilevinson After downloading the .zip file, change it extension to .xpi, and follow the instructions here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/installing-addon-thunderbird
Notice that the code of the arrow has been fixed; you can see it here: https://github.com/circuitikz/circuitikz/pull/810/files I am not posting it because it really isn't that relevant --- the matter...
> I think `Jack Tap[fill=.]` does what you want. Ah, yes, probably it does. Hmmm... I still like more of a "flag" type, but yes, that's a good solution.
Well, the behavior is not really the same. Look at this (contrived) example: ```latex \documentclass[]{article} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage{tikz} \usetikzlibrary{arrows.meta} %% Jack Tap, see %% https://github.com/circuitikz/circuitikz/issues/806 \pgfdeclarearrow{name=Jack Tap, parameters = {% \the\pgfarrowlength,%...
Yes, that would be possible too --- although I think that having on/off for binary switch is also a clean interface. My feeling would be to let `fill` as it...
...thinking about it a bit more, probably the `filled` flag would be the easiest to add and document. It's just a sentence in the description of `open` ;-). I know...