LaTeX 2e style for Russian fonts in alternative encoding. The alternative encoding is de-facto standard on MS-DOS PC computers in Russia. In this encoding first half of code table (0-127) coincides with standard ASCII and cyrillic characters are located in second part of the table (128-255). Usually some simple screen and keyboard driver is used in order to type cyrillic characters. This directory includes: readme - this file cmcyr.sty - main style file *.fd - font drivers files lthyphen.cfg rhyphen.tex - support of Russian hyphenation rusfonts.tex - simple test In order to use cmcyr style you need Russian fonts in alternative encoding. These fonts is available from CTAN in /fonts/cmcyralt Actually it is composite virtual fonts which reproduce alternative encoding by mapping first half of ASCII table to standard TeX's Computer Modern font and second part to cmcyr fonts. The cmcyr style replaces basic LaTeX fonts by these virtual fonts. Just place all *.sty and *.fd files into LaTeX input directory and say \usepackage{cmcyr} in the preamble of your document. Now you can type any English and Russian text (in alternative encoding) in any order. No any special font switching commands is required. Since alternative encoding uses codes higher than 127 for Russian characters you need TeX which understand 8-bit input, and drivers which understand virtual fonts. The best choice for MS-DOS PC is emTeX and its dvidrv drivers (/systems/msdos/emtex directory on CTAN). If you want to have correct hyphenation for Russian you need to regenerate LaTeX 2e format file. Put lthyphen.cfg and rhyphen.tex in LaTeX input directory and call iniTeX. In particular, for emTeX you have to say: > tex /i /o /8 /mt65500 latex.ltx This produces format with both English and Russian hyphenation tables. Notice, that generated format must be invoked with the same /mt65500 switch > tex /mt65500 &latex yourdoc.tex Uploaded by Vadim V. Zhytnikov (vvzhy@phy.ncu.edu.tw) on the behalf of Alexander Harin (harin@lourie.und.ac.za)