Hi, I have seen that `org-latex-polyglossia-language-alist' contains far more languages than `org-latex-babel-language-alist'. Well, if I'm not mistaken, the situation in the LaTeX ecosystem is this: Polyglossia appeared as a babel replacement for XelaTeX and LuaLaTeX, since babel, at that time, had no support for these two new Unicode based TeX engines. I think those two separate lists in ox-latex.el translate that situation. But the reality is different now: babel has full support now for LuaTeX and XeTeX and supports more languages than polyglossia (and also supports language variants. See http://mirrors.ctan.org/macros/latex/required/babel/base/babel.pdf p. 20). In addition, babel is part of the LaTeX core and is, therefore, better mantained. Of course, anyone who wants to use polyglossia in their documents can keep doing it without problems. But I think it does not make much sense to mantain in ox-latex.el two separate lists today. Maybe, for simplicity, it would be better to unify the two lists in a single db, something like `org-latex-language-alist'. What do you think? Best regards, Juan Manuel -- -- ------------------------------------------------------ Juan Manuel Macías https://juanmanuelmacias.com/
Juan Manuel Macías <maciaschain@posteo.net> writes: > Well, if I'm not mistaken, the situation in the LaTeX ecosystem is > this: Polyglossia appeared as a babel replacement for XelaTeX and > LuaLaTeX, since babel, at that time, had no support for these two > new Unicode based TeX engines. And, as far as I remember, babel development had nearly ceased during that period. Since quite some years, the development has gained much more traction for babel and, as far as I read, babel is today as good or superior to polyglossia in many regards (but polyglossia is also in quite a good shape today). See for example: https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/482396/decide-between-polyglossia-and-babel-for-lualatex-in-2019 In short: Babel is a very good choice in almost all cases, maybe except for right-to-left texts set with XeLaTeX. > But I think it does not make much sense to mantain in ox-latex.el > two separate lists today. Maybe, for simplicity, it would be better > to unify the two lists in a single db, something like > `org-latex-language-alist'. What do you think? +1 -- Until the next mail..., Stefan.
Hi Stefan, Stefan Nobis writes: > And, as far as I remember, babel development had nearly ceased during > that period. > > Since quite some years, the development has gained much more traction > for babel and, as far as I read, babel is today as good or superior to > polyglossia in many regards (but polyglossia is also in quite a good > shape today). See for example: > > https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/482396/decide-between-polyglossia-and-babel-for-lualatex-in-2019 > > In short: Babel is a very good choice in almost all cases, maybe > except for right-to-left texts set with XeLaTeX. Indeed, Javier Bezos (who is also the author of very popular packages like enumitem or titlesec/titletoc) is doing a great job with Babel (you can see the latest news here: https://latex3.github.io/babel/). And he has added a lot of powerful features, such as babel replacements (with Lua code) or the possibility to load languages via ini files and define new languages with \babelprovide I've been doing some testing, and I think this hypothetical new unified list could support two types of members: 1. A member with 2 elements: ("lang-id" "lang-name"), i.e.: ("it" "italian") 2. A member with 4 elements (for variants): ("lang-id" "babel-lang-name" "polyglossia-lang-name" "polyglossia-variant") i.e.: ("la-classic" "classiclatin" "latin" "classic") And then it would be necessary to make some minor modifications in org-latex-guess-polyglossia-language and org-latex-guess-babel-language. I will try to write a patch (or at least a proof of concept) in the next days ... Best regards, Juan Manuel -- -- ------------------------------------------------------ Juan Manuel Macías https://juanmanuelmacias.com/