texlive[41403] Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview: tex-overview

commits+karl at tug.org commits+karl at tug.org
Sun Jun 12 18:09:18 CEST 2016


Revision: 41403
          http://tug.org/svn/texlive?view=revision&revision=41403
Author:   karl
Date:     2016-06-12 18:09:18 +0200 (Sun, 12 Jun 2016)
Log Message:
-----------
tex-overview (25may16)

Modified Paths:
--------------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview-aux.tex
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview.pdf
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview.tex

Added Paths:
-----------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README.md

Removed Paths:
-------------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README

Deleted: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README	2016-06-12 16:08:34 UTC (rev 41402)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README	2016-06-12 16:09:18 UTC (rev 41403)
@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
-# TeX-overview #
-
-This document gives an overview about the developments that followed TeX:
-its children (new engines that provide more features) and its friends
-(formats based on TeX or newer engines, programs that help you when working with TeX etc.)
-
-Compile the tex-overview.tex with LuaLaTeX to get the pdf-file.
-You may need an up-to-date TeXlive distribution to do so. The pdf contains
-tooltips, so make sure your pdf viewer can display them –
-or you will miss most of the information.
-
-Mail me any suggestions and corrections: arno dot trautmann at gmx dot de
-
-# Licence #
-
-This work may be distributed and/or modified under the conditions of the
-LaTeX Project Public License, either version 1.3 of this license or
-(at your option) any later version. All (including the latest version)
-of this license can be accessed online [on the homepage of the LaTeX-project]
-(http://www.latex-project.org/lppl/), but you can also find a local copy
-of version 1.3 in the LICENCE file.
-
-This work has the LPPL maintenance status “maintained”
-and the Current Maintainer of this work is Arno Trautmann.
-
-This work consists of the files
-  tex-overview.tex,
-  tex-overview-aux.tex
-and the derived file
-  tex-overview.pdf.

Added: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README.md
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README.md	                        (rev 0)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README.md	2016-06-12 16:09:18 UTC (rev 41403)
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
+# TeX-overview #
+
+This document gives an overview about the developments that followed TeX:
+its children (new engines that provide more features) and its friends
+(formats based on TeX or newer engines, programs that help you when working with TeX etc.)
+
+Compile the tex-overview.tex with LuaLaTeX to get the pdf-file.
+You may need an up-to-date TeXlive distribution to do so. The pdf contains
+tooltips, so make sure your pdf viewer can display them –
+or you will miss most of the information.
+
+Mail me any suggestions and corrections: arno dot trautmann at gmx dot de
+
+# Licence #
+
+This work may be distributed and/or modified under the conditions of the
+LaTeX Project Public License, either version 1.3 of this license or
+(at your option) any later version. All (including the latest version)
+of this license can be accessed online [on the homepage of the LaTeX-project]
+(http://www.latex-project.org/lppl/), but you can also find a local copy
+of version 1.3 in the LICENCE file.
+
+This work has the LPPL maintenance status “maintained”
+and the Current Maintainer of this work is Arno Trautmann.
+
+This work consists of the files
+  tex-overview.tex,
+  tex-overview-aux.tex
+and the derived file
+  tex-overview.pdf.


Property changes on: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/README.md
___________________________________________________________________
Added: svn:eol-style
## -0,0 +1 ##
+native
\ No newline at end of property
Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview-aux.tex
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview-aux.tex	2016-06-12 16:08:34 UTC (rev 41402)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview-aux.tex	2016-06-12 16:09:18 UTC (rev 41403)
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-%% This document is part of the document tex-overview. It contains the formatting and definitions for typesetting. Please do *not* consider anything here as an example of good TeX coding style – it's not.
+%% This document is part of the document tex-overview and should not be distributed without it. This file contains the formatting and definitions for typesetting. Please do *not* consider anything here as an example of good TeX coding style – it's not.
 %% author: Arno Trautmann
 
 % !TeX root = tex-overview.tex
@@ -10,36 +10,48 @@
   array,
   bookmark,
   booktabs,
-  cooltooltips,
   colortbl,
-  dtklogos,  %% for \NTS etc. ⇒  what about metalogo?
   fontspec,
   geometry,
   hyperref,
   longtable,
   luacode,
+  metalogo,
   multicol,
   microtype,
-  pdftexcmds,
+%  pdftexcmds,
   tabu,
   tikz,
   xparse
 }
+%% copied definitions from old dtklogos, which are no longer supported:
 \makeatletter
-\def\l at section#1#2{ % this is not neat, but seemingly the only way to reduce the space between sections in toc. % Actually, it's a good reason to think about a plain TeX solution for this package …
-\ifnum \c at tocdepth >\z@ \ifnum \lastpenalty <20009 \addpenalty {\@secpenalty }\fi \addvspace {.3em \@plus \p@ }\setlength \@tempdima {1.5em}\if at tocleft \ifx \toc at l@number \@empty \else \setlength \@tempdima {0\toc at l@number }\fi \fi \begingroup \raggedsectionentry \parindent \z@ \advance \rightskip \@pnumwidth \parfillskip -\@pnumwidth \interlinepenalty \@M \leavevmode \advance \leftskip \@tempdima \null \nobreak \hskip -\leftskip \usekomafont {sectionentry}{#1\nobreak \usekomafont {sectionentrypagenumber}{\hfill \nobreak \hb at xt@ \@pnumwidth {\hss #2}}}\par \endgroup \ifnum \scr at compatibility >\@nameuse {scr at v@2.96}\relax \penalty 20008 \fi \fi 
+\providecommand\NTS{\mbox{\mathsurround=0pt
+    \(\cal N\mkern -4mu\lower .5ex\hbox{$\cal T$}\mkern -2mu S\)}}
+\providecommand\AMS{{\normalfont\(\cal A\)\kern-.1667em\lower.5ex\hbox{\(\cal M\)}\kern-.125em{\(\cal S\)}}}
+\providecommand\LamSTeX{%
+  L\raise.42ex\hbox{\kern-.3em\the\scriptfont2 A}%
+  \kern-.2em\lower.376ex\hbox{\the\textfont2 M}%
+  \kern-.125em {\the\textfont2 S}-\TeX}
+\DeclareRobustCommand{\BibTeX}{B\kern-.05em%
+    \hbox{$\m at th$% %% force math size calculations
+          \csname S@\f at size\endcsname
+          \fontsize\sf at size\z@
+          \math at fontsfalse\selectfont
+          I\kern-.025emB}%
+    \kern-.08em%
+    \-\TeX}
+
+\newcommand*{\noaddvspace}{\renewcommand*{\addvspace}[1]{}}
+\addtocontents{toc}{\protect\noaddvspace}
+
+\renewcommand*{\addparttocentry}[2]{%
+  \addtocentrydefault{part}{#1}{\Large #2 \normalsize}
 }
 
 \microtypesetup{stretch=35} %% allow for a bit more expansion to improve typesetting of the columns.
 \frenchspacing
 
-%% for circumventing a bug in cooltooltips
-\makeatletter
-  \let\topdfescapestring\pdf at escapestring
-\makeatother
-
-\ExplSyntaxNamesOn
-
 %% define the look-and-feel of the document
 \setmainfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
 \setsansfont{TeX Gyre Pagella}
@@ -48,17 +60,19 @@
 \hypersetup{
   unicode=true,
   colorlinks=true,
-  linkcolor=blue,
+  linkcolor=DarkRed,
   urlcolor=blue
 }
+\hyperbaseurl{.}
 
 %% page layout, headings
 \pagestyle{empty}
-\addtokomafont{disposition}{\color[rgb]{.4 0 0}}
+\addtokomafont{disposition}{\color[rgb]{0 0 .7}}
 \addtokomafont{section}{\Huge}
 \addtokomafont{subsection}{\LARGE}
 \addtokomafont{subsubsection}{\Large}
 
+\ExplSyntaxOn
 %% some missing definitions for \TeX-like things
 \tl_set:Nn\XeT{X\kern -.1667em\lower .5ex\hbox {E}\kern -.125emT\@}
 \tl_set:Nn\ConTeXt{Con\TeX{}t}
@@ -73,6 +87,7 @@
 \tl_set:Nn\package{green}
 \tl_set:Nn\distro{orange}
 \tl_set:Nn\histdistro{purple}
+\tl_set:Nn\annotation{black}
 
 %% shorthand to keep a good structure of the node positions
 \fp_new:N\layer_num
@@ -91,7 +106,7 @@
 %% the token list to save all the textviews. When set once, it is reset. May be useful anyhow. Or not.
 \tl_set:Nn\to_textviews{}
 \NewDocumentCommand\settextviews{}{
-  \setcounter{section}{3} %% to enable equal section numbers for both text and tree views
+  \setcounter{section}{4} %% to enable equal section numbers for both text and tree views
   \to_textviews
   \tl_set:Nn\to_textviews{}
 }
@@ -101,9 +116,9 @@
 \NewDocumentCommand\tograph{s+D(){}+m}
 {
   \IfBooleanT{#1}{
-    \ExplSyntaxNamesOn
+    \ExplSyntaxOn
     \bool_gset_true:N\to_short
-    \ExplSyntaxNamesOff
+    \ExplSyntaxOff
     #2
     \begin{tikzpicture}
       #3
@@ -110,9 +125,9 @@
     \end{tikzpicture}
     \clearpage
   }
-  \ExplSyntaxNamesOn
+  \ExplSyntaxOn
   \bool_gset_false:N\to_short
-  \ExplSyntaxNamesOff
+  \ExplSyntaxOff
   #2
   \begin{tikzpicture}
   	#3
@@ -122,8 +137,8 @@
 %% Style of the nodes: shade from a light 
 \tikzstyle{coolnode} = [
 	draw=\nodecolor!50!black!70,
-	top color=\nodecolor!10!white!105,
-	bottom color= \nodecolor!50!black!50
+	top~color=\nodecolor!10!white!105,
+	bottom~color= \nodecolor!50!black!50
 ]
 
 %% set the first default node style (will change to \distro or \program in the document)
@@ -131,8 +146,6 @@
 
 %% tonode ⇒ tex-overview node, now with better argument specifier
 \NewDocumentCommand\tonode{O{\tonodestyle}D(){no label given}D(){no position given}D<>{no description given}m}{
-%% save the content pdfescaped
-  \tl_set:No\tonodecontent{\topdfescapestring{#4}}
 
 %% test if we are in the short or full view
   \tl_gset:Nn\nodecolor{#1}
@@ -139,15 +152,14 @@
   \bool_if:NTF\to_short{
   %% short view
     \tl_if_eq:NNT#1{\vip}{   %% then check if this is an important node
-      \node[coolnode]
-	(#2) at (#3) {
-        \cooltooltip{#2}{\tonodecontent}{\tonodecontent}{}{#5\strut}
+      \node[coolnode] (#2) at (#3) {
+	  \href{#4}{\color{black}#5\strut}
       };
     }
   }{
   %% long view
     \node[coolnode] (#2) at (#3) {
-      \cooltooltip{#2}{\tonodecontent}{\tonodecontent}{}{#5\strut}
+	  \href{#4}{\color{black}#5\strut}
     };
   %% and the text view, to be added only once!
   \addtotextviews:f{\subsubsection*{\color{blue}#5}\parbox{\columnwidth}{#4}}
@@ -177,19 +189,23 @@
 }
 
 \NewDocumentCommand\topart{m}{
-  \clearpage
-  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpagewidth{9cm}       %% make a smaller paper so the header won’t feel so alone on the big, cold paper
-  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpageheight{4cm}
-  \newgeometry{margin=1cm}
+%  \clearpage
+% \pdfpagewidth is not available in LuaTeX > 0.85. So we skip this gimmick, might come back later.
+%%  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpagewidth{9cm}       %% make a smaller paper so the header won’t feel so alone on the big, cold paper
+%%  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpageheight{4cm}
+%  \newgeometry{margin=1cm}
 	\part{#1}
 	\newpage
-  \restoregeometry
-  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpagewidth{21cm}     %% back to a4
-  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpageheight{29.7cm}
+%  \restoregeometry
+%%  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpagewidth{21cm}     %% back to a4
+%%  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpageheight{29.7cm}
 }
 
 %% the following code is made to avoid code doubling on cost of readability. Seems to be stable enough to work here.
-%% the first argument, given in (), determines the level (sub/sub/section) of the entry. The rest is totally unreadable ☹
+%% the first argument, given in (), determines the level (sub/sub/section) of the entry.
+% second argument: Short name of the struct for toc
+% third argument: Full name of the struct
+% forth argument: default node style for this struct. Default for the default is the default style.
 \NewDocumentCommand\tostruct{D(){0}omO{\tonodestyle}}{
   \tl_set:Nn\to_disp{section}
   \int_compare:nT{#1 > 0}{\tl_put_left:Nn\to_disp{sub}}
@@ -197,15 +213,15 @@
   \bool_if:NTF\to_short
   {
     \int_compare:nT{#1 = 0}{\stepcounter{section}}
-    \tl_gset:cn{\to_disp mand}{\cs:w the\to_disp\cs_end:.\hspace{.175em} #3\newline short view}
-    \IfNoValueTF{#2}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{\tl_use:c{\to_disp mand}}}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{#2, short view}}
+    \tl_gset:cn{\to_disp mand}{\cs:w the\to_disp\cs_end:.\hspace{.175em} #3\newline short~view}
+    \IfNoValueTF{#2}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{\tl_use:c{\to_disp mand}}}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{~#2, short~view}}
     \cs:w \to_disp \cs_end:*{\cs:w\to_disp mand\cs_end:}
     \int_compare:nT{#1 = 0}{\addtocounter{section}{-1}}
   }
   {
     \tl_gset:cn{\to_disp mand}{#3}
-    \IfNoValueTF{#2}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{\cs:w \to_disp mand\cs_end:}}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{#2}}
-    \addtotextviews:f{\cs:w \to_disp\cs_end:[#2]{#3}}
+    \IfNoValueTF{#2}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{\cs:w \to_disp mand\cs_end:}}{\tl_gset:cn{\to_disp opt}{~#2}}
+    \addtotextviews:f{\cs:w \to_disp\cs_end:[~#2]{#3}}
     \cs:w \to_disp\cs_end:[\cs:w \to_disp opt\cs_end:]{\cs:w \to_disp mand\cs_end:}
   }
   \cs_gset_eq:NN\tonodestyle#4
@@ -233,7 +249,7 @@
 \end{minipage}
 }
 
-\ExplSyntaxNamesOff
+\ExplSyntaxOff
 
 \AtBeginDocument{
   {
@@ -242,7 +258,7 @@
                              and their friends~\dots
     \vspace*{-.2cm}
     \flushright\parbox{4cm}{
-      \large \color[rgb]{.4 0 0} Arno Trautmann\\
+      \large \color[rgb]{0 0 .7} Arno Trautmann\\
       \fontsize{8.25}{10}\selectfont arno.trautmann at gmx.de
     }
     \hspace*{.7cm}\par
@@ -294,7 +310,7 @@
 
 \AtBeginShipout{%
   \AtBeginShipoutUpperLeft{%
-	\color[rgb]{.6 0 0}
+	\color[rgb]{0 0 .7}
 	\luatexlatelua{
       linewidth(40)
       sloppyline({-30,-30},{30,30})

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview.pdf
===================================================================
(Binary files differ)

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview.tex
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview.tex	2016-06-12 16:08:34 UTC (rev 41402)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/latex/tex-overview/tex-overview.tex	2016-06-12 16:09:18 UTC (rev 41403)
@@ -1,37 +1,42 @@
-%% Engine needed: LuaTeX ≥ 0.70.1
+%% Engine needed: LuaTeX ≥ 0.90.0
 %% Format needed: LaTeX2ε
-%% use an up-to-date TeX Live2012 (with tl-contrib updates)
+%% use an up-to-date TeX Live2016 to be sure
 
-% this document has version number 0.1f-ish.
+% this document has version number 0.2-ish.
 \input{tex-overview-aux} %% everything that is not content-related
 
 \begin{document}
 \savegeometry{normal}
 \begin{abstract}
-In the world of \TeX, there are many developments and ambiguous names. This paper tries to give an overview of the development of \TeX\ and related programs. Contributions are very welcome!\footnote{The current source code of this document is availble at \url{http://github.com/alt/tex-overview}. Please feel free to patch there or mail me any suggestions and comments. I'll be happy to extend and correct this document!}
+In the world of \TeX, there are many developments and ambiguous names. This paper tries to give an overview of the development of \TeX\ and related programs. Contributions are very welcome!\footnote{The latest source code of this document is availble at \url{http://github.com/alt/tex-overview}. Please feel free to patch there or mail me any suggestions and comments. I'll be happy to extend and correct this document!}
 
 {\centering \Large \hyperref[textextview]{Link for the impatient.}\\[2ex]}
 \end{abstract}
 
 \section*{Introduction}
-This document is for people that have stumbled upon different term icluding something related to \TeX\ and are confused by the many different terms – at least I was, so mabye others are, too … 
+This document is for people that have stumbled upon different software names icluding something related to \TeX\ and are confused by the many different terms – at least I was, so mabye others are, too … 
 
-The base frame and main idea for this overview was taken from the article \textit{A brief history of \TeX,~volume~II} by Arthur Reutenauer in the proceedings of \textsf{EuroBacho\TeX 2007} and his talk there (see~references on page~\pageref{sec:refs}). Additional information is taken from original documentations and some review articles. For old, historic information, the \textsf{historic~archive} maintained by Ulrik Vieth and hosted on \url{ftp.tug.org} (see~refs) was very useful, especially in the reconstruction of \LaTeX\ versions. Many thanks for that great archive!
+The base frame and main idea for this overview was taken from the article \textit{A brief history of \TeX,~volume~II} by Arthur Reutenauer in the proceedings of \textsf{EuroBacho\TeX~2007} and his talk there (see~references on page~\pageref{sec:refs}). Additional information is taken from original documentation of the software and some review articles. For information of very old stuff, the \textsf{historic~archive} maintained by Ulrik Vieth and hosted on \url{ftp.tug.org} (see~refs) was very useful, especially in the reconstruction of \LaTeX\ versions. Many thanks for that great archive!
 
-All information is up to the date of this generated PDF and up to the information I found. Everything here is without guarantee – this is just to get an overview. Consult the references for further (and/or~correct) information! 
+All information is up to the date of this generated PDF and up to the information I~found. Everything here is without guarantee – this is just to get an overview. Consult the references for further (and/or~correct) information! 
 
 In the tree views, every node has a tooltip that shows up when you hover the mouse over it. For the case that your PDF viewer does not support this, there is a list of all the descriptions on page~\pageref{sec:text}.
 
 \setlength{\columnsep}{1.5cm}
+\newgeometry{bottom=3.5cm}
+\newgeometry{margin=1cm}
 \newpage
 \tableofcontents
 
-\section{The Difference Between Engine, Format and Distribution}
-There are three kinds of terms that are often confused especially by new users. This will try to explain them very shortly:
+%\restoregeometry
+
+\section{The Difference Between Editor, Engine, Format, and Distribution}
+There are four kinds of terms that are often confused especially by new users. This will try to explain them very shortly:
 \begin{description}
-\item[engine] This is the program that does all the actual work. The original program is \TeX, a famous development is pdf\TeX, while Lua\TeX\ is the latest successor.
-\item[format] A format is a (large) collection of abbreviations (macros) that make the life easy when working with \TeX. The most commonly used formats are \LaTeX, Con\TeX t and plain\TeX. The latter one is a minimal set of macros provided by Don Knuth. Formats can be combined with different engines, exploiting the special abilities of these engines. A format is first a collection of text files, but can be compiled into a binary format that can be read in faster by the engine.
-\item[distribution] In addition to formats, a large set of suppelmentary files can be used to work with \TeX, called \emph{packages} for \LaTeX, \emph{modules} for Con\TeX t, and many external programs have proven useful for the work with \TeX. Distributions such as \TeX~Live and MiK\TeX\ strive to provide a full set of such programs and macros by using a package manager to take care of package dependencies and updating. Many Linux distributions, as well as cygwin for Windows, repackage a \TeX\ distribution (mostly \TeX~Live) using the Linux distribution's package system.
+\item[editor] Typically, a user interfaces with any *\TeX\ via an editor as a front end. Although they might look fancy with a lot of graphical interfaces, an editor is just a program that allows the user to create and change a text file. This can be done with any program, but specialized editors offer additional features. It is important to keep in mind that an editor alone can \emph{not} convert a \verb|.tex| file into a pdf or any other output format, but always needs the programs as discussed below, most notably an engine that does all the work. This might often be hidden from the user's direct view by buttons which offer convenient ways to execute everything that is necessary.
+\item[engine] This is the program that does all the actual work. The original program is \TeX, the most famous derivative is pdf\TeX, while Lua\TeX\ is the latest successor. Normally,~a~user does not interface directly with the program, but uses an editor to parse a text file to it.
+\item[format] A format is a (large) collection of abbreviations (macros) that make the life easy when working with \TeX. The most commonly used formats are \LaTeX, Con\TeX t and plain\TeX. The latter one is a minimal set of macros provided by Don Knuth. Formats can be combined with different engines, exploiting the special abilities of these engines. A format is in the beginning a collection of text files, but can be compiled into a binary format that can be read much faster by the engine.
+\item[distribution] In addition to formats, a large set of supplementary files can be used to work with \TeX, called \emph{packages} for \LaTeX, \emph{modules} for Con\TeX t, and many external programs have proven useful for the work with \TeX. Distributions such as \TeX~Live and MiK\TeX\ strive to provide a full set of such programs and macros by using a package manager to take care of package dependencies and updating. Many Linux distributions, as well as cygwin for Windows, repackage a \TeX\ distribution (mostly \TeX~Live) using the Linux distribution's package system.
 \end{description}
 
 \newpage
@@ -49,56 +54,57 @@
 
 \item[{\let\nodecolor\planned \tikz \node[coolnode]{planned};}] Things that are planned to raise one day and are in the phase of preparation, i.\,e. there may be some code but not in the final form yet.
 
-\item[{\let\nodecolor\package \tikz \node[coolnode]{package};}] \LaTeX-packages or single \TeX-files (useable as packages or modules) that seemed worth mentioning. There won't be many of this; most very important packages won’t be mentioned.
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\package \tikz \node[coolnode]{package};}] \LaTeX-packages or single \TeX-files (useable as packages or modules) that seemed worth mentioning. There won't be many of this; just some that might elsewise be confused for something else.
 
 \item[{\let\nodecolor\distro \tikz \node[coolnode]{distribution};}] Software bundles that bring \TeX\ and friends to the normal user.
 
-\item[{\let\nodecolor\histdistro \tikz \node[coolnode]{hist. dist.};}] Historical distributions that have no use today but were important for bringing TeX to older computer systems.
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\histdistro \tikz \node[coolnode]{hist. dist.};}] Historical distributions that have no use today but were important for bringing \TeX\ to older computer systems.
 
-\item[{\let\nodecolor\program \tikz \node[coolnode]{program};}] Programs that are not directly connected to \TeX\ (but interesting in the context of using \TeX) or are separate helper programs.
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\program \tikz \node[coolnode]{program};}] Programs that are not directly connected to \TeX\ (but interesting in the context of using \TeX) or separate helper programs.
 
 \item[{\let\nodecolor\fonttechnology \tikz \node[coolnode]{font};}] Something related to a font. Neither a program nor libraries that provide access to fonts nor the actual files, but rather the abstract definition or specification.
 
 \end{description}
 
-Some of the graphs are quite complex, which is the reason why there are two versions of them: A short one mentioning only the most important things and a full version with everything I could find.
+Some of the graphs have quite many entries, which is the reason why there are two versions of them: A short one listing only the most important things and a full version with everything I could find.
 
 In most cases I did not mention the authors of the programs/packages. This is not to diminish their effort but only for brevity (long names make things harder to read). I did not write any of the below-mentioned programs or packages. The authors are given in the documents linked in the references.
 
 \section{How to contribute}
-I hope one day this document would become the standard reference for questions like ”What program do I need for …?“, ”What's the difference between …\TeX\ and …\TeX?“, ”Why is it called …?“ etc.
+I hope one day this document would become the standard reference for questions like ”Which program do I need for~…?“, ”What's the difference between …\TeX\ and …\TeX?“, ”Why is it called …?“ etc.
 
-To get to this point, I need some help of people who know more about the \TeX\ world than I do. At the moment, special help is needed for:
-\begin{itemize}
-\item font technologies
-\item METAFONT and succesors
-\item Bib\TeX\ and successors/alternatives
-\end{itemize}
+To get to this point, I need some help of people who know more about the \TeX\ world than I do. It is up to you to contribute texts, references, links, descriptions, hints etc. I'll be happy about anything I can add here. Also, if you have suggestions about the layout or corrections to the content, let me know.
 
-It is up to you to contribute texts, references, links, descriptions, hints etc. I'll be happy about anything I can add here. Also, if you have suggestions about the layout, let me know.
-
+\newpage
 \section{Problems with PDF viewers}
-As this document makes heavy use of PDF-features, some PDF viewers are not able to show everything correct and as intended. My experiences with viewers are as follows, where the number is the version which I tested:
+This document shows additional information via tooltips. At least that's what it should do. Unfortunately, there is no unique way to get hover-over tooltips to work in all PDF viewers, but each of them has its own way to present the information. For now, the information are provided as a hyperlink which points nowhere meaningful. But most viewers can shows this information in a way the user can understand.
 
+The following list summarizes my experience with different PDF viewers, all but the Adobe Reader XI tested on an Arch Linux. Your experince might differ; if you have any annotations to this list, I'll happily add them – especially if the document breaks anything completely.
+
 \begin{description}
-\item[evince 3.0.2] Shows the document correct and complete. (Tested on Arch Linux)
+\item[evince 3.20.0] Shows the document correctly and completely.
 
-\item[Adobe Reader 9] will show all the information but might hide some text of very long tooltips (at least that's the case on my machine). Also, it draws annoying green boxes around the tooltips which do not belong there. (Tested on Arch Linux)
+\item[Adobe Reader 9] Shows the document correctly and completely, surprisingly.
 
-\item[\TeX works 0.5 r869] The built-in PDF viewer of the \TeX works editor does not break lines of tooltips, therefore long annotations are not shown completely. (Tested on Arch Linux)
+\item[Adobe Reader XI] Shows the document correctly and completely, surprisingly. (Tested on Windows 7)
 
-\item[okular 0.13] also does not break the lines. (Tested on Arch Linux)
+\item[\TeX works 0.6.1 r3614278] Shows the document completely, but the tooltips shows some characters at the beginning. Ignore those and it's fine.
 
-\item[xpdf 3.03] shows only very short tooltips. Most of the information is not visible in the graphs. (Tested on Arch Linux)
+\item[okular 0.25.0] As \TeX works, but does not break the tooltips, therefore information is lost.
 
-\item[gv 3.7.2] shows no tooltips, but the annoying green boxes. (Tested on Arch Linux)
+\item[xpdf 3.04] Shows the tooltips only in the status bar, thus hiding most of the information in the graphs.
+
 \end{description}
 
 \subsection*{About this document}
 This document is typeset in the \TeX\ Gyre Pagella font using the Lua\LaTeXe\ format with \verb|expl3| and \verb|xpackages| based on Lua\TeX\ 0.\the\luatexversion.\luatexrevision.
 
+In case you wonder why the typesetting is so ugly, especially the margins: Those are chosen to be small so that much text fits on one page which in this case increases the overview. I do not expect anybody to ever print this document, therefore I ignore the need of margins. In the tooltips, you will not see any colons even if they would make sense – this is because a colon leads to an error and the tooltip will not be displayed.
+
+\addtocontents{toc}{\string\vspace{.2cm}}
 \addtocontents{toc}{\string\begin{multicols}{2}}
 
+\clearpage
 \topart{Tree Views}
 \newgeometry{margin=1cm}  %% to save space; no need for margins if only a tree is shown
 
@@ -133,12 +139,12 @@
 	\tonode(tex--xet)(4,\layer)<TeX--XeT was able to really put the glyphs on the right place in the DVI.>{\TeX-{}-\XeT}
 		\todraw(tex-xet)(tex--xet)
 
-	\tonode[\vip](tex3)(7,\layer)<Ability to handle 8-bit input. 1989. TeX development was frozen in 1991 and only bugfixes were made. Now in version 3.1415926, it gets closer to pi with every bugfix. Don Knuth wishes the version number to be pi when he dies.>{\TeX3}
+	\tonode[\vip](tex3)(7,\layer)<Ability to handle 8-bit input. 1989. TeX development was frozen in 1991 and only bugfixes were made. Now in version 3.14159265 (published 01-2014), it gets closer to pi with every bugfix. Don Knuth wishes the version number to be pi when he dies.>{\TeX3}
 		\todraw*(tex)(tex3)
 
 	\steplayer[-1.5]
 
-	\tonode(ptex)(12,\layer)<Extension of Nihongo TeX to enable vertical typesetting. (“p” for “publishing”)  Distributed as WEB change files. Primary author is D. E. Knuth, latest version (TeX Live 2012) is pTeX 3.1415926-p3.3.>{p\TeX}
+	\tonode(ptex)(12,\layer)<Extension of Nihongo TeX to enable vertical typesetting. (“p” for “publishing”)  Distributed as WEB change files. Primary author is D. E. Knuth, latest version (TeX Live 2016) is pTeX 3.14159265-p3.7.>{p\TeX}
 		\todraw(nihongo)(ptex)
 		\todraw(tex3)(ptex)
 
@@ -147,10 +153,10 @@
 	\tonode(enctex)(5.9,\layer)<A small extension to TeX, started 1997. Adds 10 new primitives relating input re-encoding>{enc\TeX}
 	\todraw(tex3)(enctex)
 	
-	\tonode(mltex)(8,\layer)<Extension to TeX (started 1990) that allows hyphenation of words with accented letters. (Therefore the name: MultiLingual TeX.) Distributed as a change file to the original WEB sources of TeX.>{ML\TeX}
+	\tonode(mltex)(8,\layer)<Extension to TeX (started 1990) that allows hyphenation of words with accented letters. (Therefore the name, MultiLingual TeX.) Distributed as a change file to the original WEB sources of TeX.>{ML\TeX}
 	\todraw(tex3)(mltex)
 	
-	\tonode[\experimental](uptex)(14,\layer)<Unicode-aware version of pTeX – "Unicode-publishing"-TeX.>{up\TeX}
+	\tonode[\experimental](uptex)(14,\layer)<Unicode-aware version of pTeX – “Unicode-publishing”-TeX. Current version in TeX Live 2015 is 3.14159265-p3.7-u1.21.>{up\TeX}
 		\todraw(ptex)(uptex)
 	\steplayer[-2]
 
@@ -157,7 +163,7 @@
 	\tonode[\experimental](omega)(1,\layer)<Support for 16bit-Unicode-input. Still constrained on the output encoding. Started 1994.>{$\Omega$}
 		\todraw(tex3)(omega)
 	
-	\tonode[\vip](etex)(4,\layer)<An extension to TeX, provided by the NTS team as an intermediate project until NTS would be ready. eTex is a full TeX and backward compatible. The number of TeX's registers is increased and various new primitives useful to programmers are added.>{$\varepsilon$-\TeX}
+	\tonode[\vip](etex)(4,\layer)<An extension to TeX, provided by the NTS team as an intermediate project until NTS would be ready. eTeX is a full TeX and backward compatible. The number of TeX's registers is increased and various new primitives useful to programmers are added.>{$\varepsilon$-\TeX}
 		\todraw(tex--xet)(etex)
 		\todraw'(tex3)(etex)
 
@@ -170,7 +176,7 @@
 
 	\steplayer[-1]
 
-	\tonode(texgx)(10,\layer)<"GX" stands for Graphic eXtension, a font technology available only on Mac OS. TeXGX was able to handle these fonts.>{\TeX{}gX}
+	\tonode(texgx)(10,\layer)<“GX” stands for Graphic eXtension, a font technology available only on Mac OS. TeXGX was able to handle these fonts.>{\TeX{}gX}
 		\todraw(tex3)(texgx)
 
 	\steplayer[-1]
@@ -177,25 +183,27 @@
 
 	\tonode[\experimental](omega2)(0,\layer)<A short-time try to pick up the development of Omega again in 2006. Seemed more like a good plan and is now regarded as obsolete. LuaTeX is kind of a successor.>{$\Omega_2$}
 		\todraw(omega)(omega2)
+
+	\steplayer[-0.5]
 	
-	\tonode[\experimental](vtex)(3.6,\layer)<VTeX (VisualTeX) can produce PDF, HTML, SVG, DVI or ps output directly from input. In contrast to pdfTeX, it includes a full PostScript interpreter, thus capable to include EPS figures, PStricks etc. First official version I found: February 15, 1999: VTeX 6.3; last official version seems to be from Oct 1, 2005: VTeX 8.61. Commercial product.>{V\TeX}
+	\tonode[\experimental](vtex)(3.6,\layer)<VTeX (VisualTeX) can produce PDF, HTML, SVG, DVI or ps output directly from input. In contrast to pdfTeX, it includes a full PostScript interpreter, thus capable to include EPS figures, PStricks etc. First official version I found is from February 15, 1999; VTeX 6.3; last official version seems to be from Oct 1, 2005; VTeX 8.61. Commercial product.>{V\TeX}
 		\todraw(etex)(vtex)
 
-	\steplayer[-1]
+	\steplayer[-0.5]
 
-	\tonode(eptex)(13.7,\layer)<A merge of e-TeX with pTeX written by Hironori Kitagawa. Additional support for 256 math fonts, and some pdfTeX functionality. Latest Version (TeX Live 2012) is 3.1415926-p3.3-110825-2.4.>{ε-p\TeX}
+	\tonode(eptex)(13.7,\layer)<A merge of e-TeX with pTeX written by Hironori Kitagawa. Additional support for 256 math fonts, and some pdfTeX functionality. Latest Version (TeX Live 2016) is 3.14159265-p3.7-160201-2.6.>{ε-p\TeX}
 		\todraw(ptex)(eptex)
 		\todraw(etex)(eptex)
 
 	\steplayer[-1.5]
 
-	\tonode(euptex)(15.2,\layer)<>{ε-up\TeX}
+	\tonode(euptex)(15.2,\layer)<Merger of e-TeX and upTeX features. Current Version (TeX Live 2016) 3.14159265-p3.7-u1.21-160201-2.6.>{ε-up\TeX}
 		\todraw(etex)(euptex)
 		\todraw(uptex)(euptex)
 
 	\steplayer[-.5]
 
-	\tonode(aleph)(1,\layer)<Originally named epsilon-Omega, an attempt to stabilize Omega while merging epsilon extensions. Authors: John Plaice and Yannis Haralambous, now maintained for severe bugfixes by Taco Hoekwater. Latest version number is 3.1415926-1.15-2.1-0.0-rc4.>{$\aleph$ (Aleph)}
+	\tonode(aleph)(1,\layer)<Originally named epsilon-Omega, an attempt to stabilize Omega while merging epsilon extensions. Authors are John Plaice and Yannis Haralambous, now maintained for severe bugfixes by Taco Hoekwater. Latest version number is 3.14159265-1.15-2.1-0.1.>{$\aleph$ (Aleph)}
 		\todraw(omega)(aleph)
 		\todraw(etex)(aleph)
 	
@@ -213,11 +221,11 @@
 
 	\steplayer[-1]
 	
-	\tonode[\vip](pdfetex)(6,\layer)<Merging the pdfTeX engine with the eTeX-extensions. This engine can produce DVI (with or without the eTeX-extensions) as well as PDF (again, with or without extensions).>{pdf($\epsilon$)-\TeX}
+	\tonode[\vip](pdfetex)(6,\layer)<Merging the pdfTeX engine with the eTeX-extensions. This engine can produce DVI (with or without the eTeX-extensions) as well as PDF (again, with or without extensions). Current Version number 3.14159265-2.6-1.40.17.>{pdf($\epsilon$)-\TeX}
 		\todraw*(etex)(pdfetex)
 		\todraw*(pdftex)(pdfetex)
 
-	\tonode[\vip](XeTeX)(10,\layer)<This extension enables full multilingual support for left-to-right typesetting, right-to-left and almost any other possible direction. Unicode encoding is fully supported (utf8 as native encoding). XeTeX also features support for OpenType, AAT, TrueType and Graphite-fonts (via the operation system). In contrary to pdfTeX or LuaTeX, no external configuration file is needed to use fonts. Since version 3.1415926-2.2-0.9997.4, code from pdf(e)TeX for margin kerning has been added.>{\XeTeX}
+	\tonode[\vip](XeTeX)(10,\layer)<This extension enables full multilingual support for left-to-right typesetting, right-to-left and almost any other possible direction. Unicode encoding is fully supported (utf8 as native encoding). XeTeX also features support for OpenType, AAT, TrueType and Graphite-fonts (via the operation system). In contrary to pdfTeX or LuaTeX, no external configuration file is needed to use fonts. Since version 3.1415926-2.2-0.9997.4, code from pdf(e)TeX for margin kerning has been added. Latest version number is 3.14159265-2.6-0.99996. XeTeX version numbers will converge to 1.>{\XeTeX}
 		\todraw(texgx)(XeTeX)
 		\todraw*(etex)(XeTeX)
 		\todraw'(pdfetex)(XeTeX)
@@ -231,22 +239,59 @@
 
 	\tonode[\program](lua)(0,\layer)<A script language; has nothing to do with TeX.>{Lua}
 	
-	\tonode[\vip](luatex)(4,\layer)<LuaTeX supports utf8, OpenType and many more things. TeX Live 2012 ships version 0.70.2. LuaTeX features an embedded scripting language, Lua, making it easy to extend and to change the TeX interna, so most of the programming can be done in Lua instead of TeX-hackery.>{Lua\TeX}
+	\tonode[\vip](luatex)(4,\layer)<LuaTeX supports utf8, OpenType and many more things. TeX Live 2016 ships version beta-0.95.0. LuaTeX features an embedded scripting language, Lua, making it easy to extend and to change the TeX interna, so most of the programming can be done in Lua instead of TeX-hackery.>{Lua\TeX}
 		\todraw(aleph)(luatex)
 		\todraw*(pdfetex)(luatex)
 		\todraw[dashed](lua)(luatex)
-	
-	\steplayer[-3]
-	\tonode[\experimental](itex)(7,\layer)<iTeX is the official successor of TeX3, announced by Don Knuth at the TUG conference 2010. Not to be confused with William Cheswick's application for the iPad.>{i\TeX}
+
+	\steplayer[-2]
+	\tonode[\program](luajit)(0,\layer)<A just-in-time compiler for Lua.>{LuaJIT}
+		\todraw(lua)(luajit)
+
+	\tonode[\experimental](luajittex)(4,\layer)<LuaJITTeX is a LuaTeX based on LuaJIT.>{LuaJIT\TeX}
+		\todraw(luajittex)(luatex)
+		\todraw[dashed](luajit)(luajittex)
+
+	\steplayer[-2.5]
+	\tonode[\experimental](itex)(7,\layer)<iTeX is the official successor of TeX3, announced by Don Knuth at the TUG conference 2010. (It was a joke, ok.) Not to be confused with William Cheswick's application for the iPad.>{i\TeX}
 }
 \vfill
 
-{\flushleft The chronological order may not be exact in this graph. I have to work hard on the arrangement to show both chronological order and code dependence, and for now only the code dependence is (should be) correct.
+{\flushleft The chronological order may not be exact in this graph. I had to work hard on the arrangement to show both chronological order and code dependence, and for now only the code dependence is (should be) correct.
 
 } 
 
 \clearpage
 
+%%% TeX, iniTeX, virTeX %%%
+
+\tograph(\tostruct[ini\TeX\ et al.]{ini\TeX, Vir\TeX, et al.}){
+	\tonode(initex)(-3,\layer)<The program TeX without preloaded format (“initial TeX”), intended for format creation. (Format dump possible.)>{ini\TeX}
+
+	\tonode(virtex)(0,\layer)<The program TeX without preloaded format (“virgin TeX”), intended for production use. (Format dump not possible.) No longer part of TeX Live.>{Vir\TeX}
+
+	\tonode(tex)(3,\layer)<In this special context, TeX means the program with the plain format preloaded. (Format dump not possible.)>{\TeX}
+
+	\todraw(initex)(tex)
+	\todraw(tex)(virtex)
+
+\steplayer[-2]
+
+	\tonode(inimf)(-4,\layer)<The program metafont without preloaded format (“initial metafont”), intended for format creation. (Format dump possible.)>{iniMETAFONT}
+
+	\tonode(virmf)(0,\layer)<The program metafont without preloaded format (“virgin metafont”), intended for production use. (Format dump not possible.) No (longer?) part of TeX Live.>{VirMETAFONT}
+
+	\tonode(mf)(4,\layer)<In this special context, mf means the program with the plain format preloaded. (Format dump not possible.)>{METAFONT}
+
+	\todraw(inimf)(mf)
+	\todraw(mf)(virmf)
+
+}
+
+{\flushleft All other engines have the same functionality, but no special names given: |luatex --ini| is the INITEX version of Lua\TeX\ etc.
+
+}
+
 %%% plain TeX %%%
 \tograph(\tostruct[plain\TeX]{plain\TeX\ – the first format}){
 	\tonode(plaintex)(0,\layer)<The basic format offered by Don Knuth to provide a minimal set of macros to work with.>{plain\TeX}
@@ -258,7 +303,7 @@
 	\todraw(plaintex)(csplain)
 
 \steplayer[-2]
-	\tonode[\experimental](eplain)(0,\layer)<Extensions of plainTeX to provide often-used utilities. Not thought for document preparation as LaTex is. First version that is still available is 2.1 from 1992. Latest version 3.4 is from 2 2010 and based on pdfTeX.>{eplain}
+	\tonode[\experimental](eplain)(0,\layer)<Extensions of plainTeX to provide often-used utilities. Not thought for document preparation as LaTex is; you can use it as a standalone format or as extension to a given format. First version that is still available is 2.1 from 1992. Latest version 3.5 is from 2013-02-13.>{Eplain}
 	\todraw(plaintex)(eplain)
 }
 \clearpage
@@ -299,7 +344,7 @@
 	\todraw(latex209)(amslatex11)
 	
 	\steplayer[-1.7]
-	\tonode[\vip](latex2ε)(0,\layer)<June 1994: New release of LaTeX to avoid incompatible dialects of LaTeX 2.09. Introduced by the LaTeX3-Team. This is the latest stable version of LaTeX at the moment. Support for pdfTeX, XeTeX and LuaTeX is give, where small changes allow for the special abilities of the engines. Most adaption to the engines is done on package level (fonts, encodings etc.)>{\LaTeX\,2\raisebox{-.5ex}ε}
+	\tonode[\vip](latex2ε)(0,\layer)<June 1994, New release of LaTeX to avoid incompatible dialects of LaTeX 2.09. Introduced by the LaTeX3-Team. This is the latest stable version of LaTeX at the moment. Support for pdfTeX, XeTeX and LuaTeX is given, where small changes allow for the special abilities of the engines. Most adaption to the engines is done on package level (fonts, encodings etc.) or with additional files during format creation.>{\LaTeX\,2\raisebox{-.5ex}ε}
 	\todraw*(latex209)(latex2ε)
 	\todraw[dashed](slitex)(latex2ε)
 	\todraw[dashed](amslatex11)(latex2ε)
@@ -364,11 +409,11 @@
 	\todraw(inrstex)(pragmatex)
 	\steplayer[-2]
 
-	\tonode(MKi)(0,\layer)<Original ConTeXt with Dutch low level interface. "MK" stands for "Mark", meaning "version".>{\ConTeXt\ MKI}
+	\tonode(MKi)(0,\layer)<Original ConTeXt with Dutch low level interface. “MK” stands for “Mark”, meaning “version”.>{\ConTeXt\ MKI}
 	\todraw(MKi)(pragmatex)
 	\steplayer[-2]
 
-	\tonode[\vip](MKii)(0,\layer)<ConTeXt with English low level interface. Works with any TeX-engine, as LaTeX does: TeX, e-TeX, pdfTeX, Aleph, XeTeX, .... For the end user, no difference to MKI.>{\ConTeXt\ MKII}
+	\tonode[\vip](MKii)(0,\layer)<ConTeXt with English low level interface. Works with any TeX-engine, as LaTeX does; TeX, e-TeX, pdfTeX, Aleph, XeTeX, ... For the end user, no difference to MKI.>{\ConTeXt\ MKII}
 	\todraw(MKi)(MKii)
 	\steplayer[-2]
 	
@@ -385,7 +430,8 @@
 %%%% formats %%%%
 \tostruct[Other Formats]{Other Formats}
 %%% AMSTeX %%%
-\tograph(\tostruct(1)[\texorpdfstring{\AMS}{AMS}-\TeX]{\AMS-\TeX}){
+\tograph(\tostruct(1)[\texorpdfstring{
+AMS}{AMS}-\TeX]{AMS-\TeX}){
 	\tonode(amstex20)(0,\layer)<A macro package provided by the American Mathematical Society. Version 2.0 from 1990. No information found for versions pre-2.0.>{\AMS-\TeX  2.0}
 	\steplayer[-1]
 
@@ -420,8 +466,12 @@
 %%% Lollipop %%%
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[Lollipop]{Lollipop}){
 	\tonode(lollipop09)(0,0)<First release, October 1992.>{Lollipop 0.9}
-	\steplayer
-	\tonode(lollipop095)(0,0)<Latest, unofficial, release, January 1993.>{Lollipop 0.95}
+	\steplayer[-2]
+	\tonode(lollipop095)(0,\layer)<Latest, unofficial, release, January 1993.>{Lollipop 0.95}
+	\todraw(lollipop09)(lollipop095)
+	\steplayer[-2]
+	\tonode(lollipop098)(0,\layer)<Resurrection of this old format, now by Victor Eijkhout and Vafa Khalighi. Put to CTAN on 04.09.2014.>{Lollipop 0.98}
+	\todraw(lollipop098)(lollipop095)
 }
 
 %%% MacroTeX %%%
@@ -431,23 +481,23 @@
 
 %%% MEX %%%
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[MeX]{MeX}){
-	\tonode(mex)(0,0)<Information needed. There seems to be different formats that use the pdfTeX engine: mex, pdfmex, htmex and utf8mex.>{MeX}
+	\tonode(mex)(0,0)<Polish-based format based on PlainTeX. Different versions exist called mex, pdfmex, htmex and utf8mex. All are based on pdfTeX. Contained in TeX Live.>{MeX}
 }
 
 %%% PHYS(E) %%%
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[PHYS(E)]{PHYS(E)}){
-	\tonode(physe)(0,0)<Documentation says: “The TeX formats PHYSE and PHYS are extensions of the PLAIN format
+	\tonode(physe)(0,0)<Documentation says “The TeX formats PHYSE and PHYS are extensions of the PLAIN format
 and should simplify the writing of physics papers.” Latest version I found is from 1986. PHYS is for german, PHYSE for english usage.>{PHYS(E)}
 }
 
 %%% PHYZZX %%%
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[PHYZZX]{PHYZZX}){
-	\tonode(phyzzx)(0,0)<Documentation says: “PHYZZX is a macropackage which is designed to make typing papers destined for Physical Review or Nuclear Physics as simple as possible.” Created 1984, latest version I found is from 1988.>{PHYZZX}
+	\tonode(phyzzx)(0,0)<Documentation says “PHYZZX is a macropackage which is designed to make typing papers destined for Physical Review or Nuclear Physics as simple as possible.” Created 1984, latest version I found is from 1988.>{PHYZZX}
 }
 
 %%% StarTeX %%%
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[Star\TeX]{Star\TeX\ – Starter's \TeX}){
-	\tonode(startex)(0,0)<A format designed to help students with short documents. Using html-like notation: <command> instead of \ command>{Star\TeX}
+	\tonode(startex)(0,0)<A format designed to help students with short documents. Using html-like notation, <command> instead of \ command>{Star\TeX}
 }
 
 %%% Texinfo %%%
@@ -502,19 +552,21 @@
 	\tonode[\histdistro](4alltexcd)(-3,\layer)<The (vague) past ... (?)>{4All\TeX CD }
 	\todraw.(web2c)(tetex)
 	\todraw.(web2c)(4alltexcd)
-	\steplayer
+	\steplayer[-1.5]
 
 	\tonode(fptex)(3,\layer)<A free TeX distribution for Win32 based on teTeX, by Fabrice Popineau. Still active, provides up-to-date binaries for Windows. Special support for Japanese Typesetting.>{fp\TeX}
 	\todraw(fptex)(tetex)
 
-	\tonode(gnutex)(3,\layer)<A temporary attempt to distribute TeX and related programs according to the GPL. Not a change of teTeX, but a new approach inspired by teTeX. As most (La)TeX packages are not GPL compatible, it was quite "crippled" and never made it into the real world.>{GNU\TeX\ 0.x}
+	\tonode(gnutex)(6.5,\layer)<A temporary attempt to distribute TeX and related programs according to the GPL. Not a change of teTeX, but a new approach inspired by teTeX. As most (La)TeX packages are not GPL compatible, it was quite “crippled” and never made it into the real world.>{GNU\TeX\ 0.x}
 	\todraw(gnutex)(tetex)
 
-	\steplayer[-2.5]
+	\steplayer[-1.5]
 
-	\tonode[\histdistro](xemtex)(4,\layer)<A TeX distribution for Windows, based on fpTeX with XEmacs/AucTeX as IDE for (La)TeX. XemTeX was sponsored by the French government.>{XEm\TeX}
+	\tonode[\histdistro](xemtex)(4.5,\layer)<A TeX distribution for Windows, based on fpTeX with XEmacs/AucTeX as IDE for (La)TeX. XemTeX was sponsored by the French government.>{XEm\TeX}
 	\todraw(xemtex)(fptex)
 
+	\steplayer[-0.5]
+
 	\tonode[\histdistro](tlpre2008)(0,\layer)<First version 1996 (UNIX only, later also Windows binaries), and then a long story of ongoing work – see the documentation for a detailed history. Some of the binaries (still) identify themselfes as *TeXk. The “k” stands for “Karl” meaning that they were compiled with kpathsea.>{\TeX\ Live 1996\,–\,2007}
 	\todraw(tetex)(tlpre2008)
 	\todraw(4alltexcd)(tlpre2008)
@@ -521,7 +573,7 @@
 	\todraw.(web2c)(tlpre2008)
 	\steplayer
 
-	\tonode(tl2008)(0,\layer)<A new package manager and network installer are available. So installation via the net is possible as well as package updates. Missing packages are not installed on-the-fly. The last of the modern machines is added: LuaTeX>{\TeX\ Live 2008}
+	\tonode(tl2008)(0,\layer)<A new package manager and network installer are available. So installation via the net is possible as well as package updates. Missing packages are not installed on-the-fly. The last one of the modern machines is added, LuaTeX>{\TeX\ Live 2008}
 	\todraw.(tl2008)(tlpre2008)
 
 	\tonode[\histdistro](gwtex)(5,\layer)<A (re)distribution for Mac OS based on TeX Live (earlier on teTeX) by Gerben Wierda. Provides TeX-related packages for the i-Installer. Unsupported from 2007 on.>{gw\TeX}
@@ -537,7 +589,7 @@
 	\todraw(tl2010)(tl2009)
 
 
-	\tonode(tlcontrib)(-5,\layer)<An extension to TeX Live that contains packages that TeX Live cannot hold because: not-free lizence, binary update, not on CTAN or intermediate release. Useable via the TeX Live manager. Latest version can handle several TL sources.>{TLContrib}
+	\tonode(tlcontrib)(-5,\layer)<An extension to TeX Live that contains packages that TeX Live cannot hold due to not-free lizence, binary update, not on CTAN, or intermediate release. Useable via the TeX Live manager. Latest version can handle several TL sources.>{TLContrib}
 	\todraw.(tl2010)(tlcontrib)
 	\steplayer
 
@@ -547,16 +599,27 @@
 
 	\steplayer
 
-	\tonode(tl2012)(0,\layer)<Latest release of TeX Live for 2012.>{\TeX~Live 2012}
+	\tonode(tl2012)(0,\layer)<Release of TeX Live for 2012.>{\TeX~Live 2012}
 	\todraw(tl2012)(tl2011)
 	\todraw.(tl2012)(tlcontrib)
 
+	\tonode(texportal)(-4,\layer)<A TeX Live port for Android OS. Based on binaries from the TeXAndroid project; not all binaries are available at the moment.>{\TeX Portal}
+	\todraw(tl2012)(texportal)
+
+\steplayer
+
+	\tonode(tl20132016)(0,\layer)<Ongoing yearly releases for 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, without dramatic changes.>{\TeX~Live 2013\,–\,2016}
+	\todraw(tl2012)(tl20132016)
+
 	\tonode(mactex)(5,\layer)<Once based on teTeX, MacTeX is now TeX Live-based. For Mac OS X only, it provides a native installer, the TeXShop editor and Mac-specific tools.>{Mac\TeX}
-	\todraw(tl2012)(mactex)
+	\todraw(tl20132016)(mactex)
+
+	\tonode(basictex)(8,\layer)<“BasicTeX is a subset of TeX Live of size 100 megabytes instead of 2 gigabytes.”>{Basic\TeX}
+	\todraw(mactex)(basictex)
 }
 
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[MiK\TeX]{MiK\TeX}){
-	\tonode(mt)(0,\layer)<MiKTeX is a TeX distribution originally for Windows only. Copyright by Christian Schenk goes back to 2001. Regarding the name, the author stated: “mik used to be my login name. It is an acronym for: Micro-kid. Hence the capital K in MiKTeX.”>{MiK\TeX}
+	\tonode(mt)(0,\layer)<MiKTeX is a TeX distribution originally for Windows only. Copyright by Christian Schenk goes back to 2001. Regarding the name, the author stated “mik used to be my login name. It is an acronym for Micro-kid. Hence the capital K in MiKTeX.”>{MiK\TeX}
 	\steplayer
 
 	\tonode(mt26)(0,\layer)<Windows only. featuring  pdftex 1.40.4, mpost 1.000>{MiK\TeX\ 2.6}
@@ -573,10 +636,15 @@
 
 	\tonode(mt29)(0,\layer)<Windows only (stable version). Beta version for GNU/Linux available. Featuring XeTeX 0.9997.4, pdftex 1.40.11, LuaTeX 0.60.2, mpost 1.211. Offers both LaTeX and ConTeXt (MK IV) formats.>{MiK\TeX\ 2.9}
 	\todraw(mt29)(mt28)
-	\steplayer	
+	\steplayer
 	
-	\tonode(protext)(2,\layer)<A distribution based on MiKTeX (since 2004) with a comfortable install procedure, Editor etc. Provides an easy installation for a full (La)TeX environment.>{ProTeXt}
+	\tonode(protext)(3,\layer)<A distribution based on MiKTeX (since 2004) with a comfortable install procedure, Editor etc. Provides an easy installation for a full (La)TeX environment.>{ProTeXt}
 	\todraw(protext)(mt29)
+
+\steplayer
+
+	\tonode[\experimental](mt30)(0,\layer)<Planned version, no fixed release date yet.>{MiK\TeX\ 3.0}
+	\todraw(mt30)(mt29)
 }
 
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[\TeX\ collection]{\TeX\ collection}){
@@ -588,12 +656,16 @@
 	\tonode(minimals)(-3,\layer)<standalone ConTeXt provides a distribution of latest (beta and stable) ConTeXt versions with binaries and formats. Efficient upgrading is possible as well as parallel use with another TeX distribution. Was renamed from “minimals” into standalone in 2011.>{Standalone}
 }
 
+\tograph(\tostruct(1)[Decus \TeX]{Decus \TeX}){
+	\tonode[\histdistro](decustex)(0,\layer)<A TeX/LaTeX distribution for VMS. Started at least in 1988.>{Decus \TeX}
+}
+
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[Ker\TeX]{Ker\TeX}){
-	\tonode(kertex)(0,\layer)<A lightweight TeX distribution including all of Don Knuth's programs and fonts, dvips, MetaPost, bibtex and more. It is pure C89 and under a BSD like license.>{Ker\TeX}
+	\tonode(kertex)(0,\layer)<A lightweight TeX distribution including all of Don Knuth's programs and fonts, dvips, MetaPost, bibtex and more. It is pure C89 and under a BSD like license. Latest version 0.9999.8.2.>{Ker\TeX}
 }
 
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[W32\TeX]{W32\TeX}){
-	\tonode(w32tex)(0,\layer)<A distributon to provide binaries for MS Windows, with special support for Japanese. First version (up to the changelog): 2009/08/02. Still up-to-date.>{W32\TeX}
+	\tonode(w32tex)(0,\layer)<A distributon to provide binaries for MS Windows, with special support for Japanese. First version (up to the changelog) 2009/08/02. Still up-to-date.>{W32\TeX}
 }
 
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[OzTeX]{OzTeX}){
@@ -610,10 +682,10 @@
 }
 
 \newpage
-\ExplSyntaxOn
-  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpagewidth{13cm}       %% make a smaller paper so the header won’t feel so alone on the big, cold paper
-  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpageheight{6cm}
-\newgeometry{left=1cm,top=1cm,width=11cm}
+%\ExplSyntaxOn
+%  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpagewidth{13cm}       %% make a smaller paper so the header won’t feel so alone on the big, cold paper
+%  \dim_set:Nn\pdfpageheight{6cm}
+%\newgeometry{left=1cm,top=1cm,width=11cm}
 \ExplSyntaxOff
 \newpage
 \tostruct[Pandora's Box]{Pandora's Box}
@@ -645,12 +717,16 @@
 	\tonode[\normalimportant](mptopdf)(-4,\layer)<Actually a pdfTeX-generated format, this program can be used to compile MetaPost source code directly into PDF output. Metafun is supported, too.>{mptopdf}
 	\todraw.(metapost)(mptopdf)
 
-	\tonode[\experimental](mflua)(4,\layer)<A (so far) experimental implementation of METAFONT with Lua embedded for better extraction of information from METAFONT.>{MFLua}
+	\tonode[\experimental](mflua)(3.5,\layer)<A (so far) experimental implementation of METAFONT with Lua embedded for better extraction of information from METAFONT. TeX Live 2016 ships version 2.7182818-0.5.>{MFLua}
 	\todraw(mflua)(metafont)
-	\steplayer[-2]
+	\steplayer[-0.5]
 
-	\tonode[\normalimportant](metappeal)(4,\layer)<"Metappeal is an extension to Plain MetaPost, providing a lightweight framework 
-for consistent development in MetaPost.">{Metappeal}
+	\tonode[\experimental](mfluajit)(6.5,\layer)<As MFLua, but based on LuaJIT.>{MFLuaJIT}
+	\todraw(mfluajit)(mflua)
+	\steplayer[-1.5]
+
+	\tonode[\normalimportant](metappeal)(4,\layer)<“Metappeal is an extension to Plain MetaPost, providing a lightweight framework 
+for consistent development in MetaPost.”>{Metappeal}
 	\todraw(metappeal)(metapost)
 	\steplayer[-1]
 
@@ -672,7 +748,7 @@
 	\todraw(nbibtex)(bibtex)
 	\steplayer[-0.5]
 
-	\tonode(bibtex8)(0,\layer)<The documentation says: "An 8-bit Implementation of BibTeX 0.99 with a Very Large Capacity">{\BibTeX8}
+	\tonode(bibtex8)(0,\layer)<The documentation says: “An 8-bit Implementation of BibTeX 0.99 with a Very Large Capacity”>{\BibTeX8}
 	\todraw(bibtex8)(bibtex)
 
 	\tonode(mlbibtex)(-4,\layer)<Mentioned in the kpathsea-manual. No idea what it is. BibTeX for MLTeX?>{MlBibTeX}
@@ -697,7 +773,7 @@
 	\todraw(pbibtex)(upbibtex)
 	\steplayer
 	
-	\tonode(biber)(0,\layer)<A perl implementation of a BibTeX-like program, designed as backend for BibLaTeX. “biber” is an animal handling bibliographies. (german for “beaver”, hence the beaver in the biber logo)>{biber}
+	\tonode(biber)(0,\layer)<A perl implementation of a BibTeX-like program, designed as backend for BibLaTeX. “biber” is an animal handling bibliographies. (german for “beaver”, hence the beaver in the biber logo) TeX Live 2016 ships version 2.5.>{biber}
 	\todraw(bibtexu)(biber)
 	
 	\steplayer
@@ -728,7 +804,7 @@
 
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[Fonts]{Fonts}[\fonttechnology]
 \parbox{\textwidth}{\large
-This section tries to cover the development of fonts – the most important thing for a typesetting system are font mechanism …\\[4ex]}
+This section tries to cover the development of fonts – the most important thing for a typesetting system are font mechanisms, after all …\\[4ex]}
 ){
 	\tonode(bitmap)(0,\layer)<Bitmap fonts contain the shape of the letters as a number of dots. If you zoom in, a bitmap letter will show pixels. Hence one needs a special version for every resolution.>{Bitmap fonts}
 	\steplayer[-3]
@@ -755,31 +831,122 @@
 \tograph(\tostruct(1)[Work Flow]{Work Flow – Under Construction!}[\vip]
 {
 \flushleft
-\large Ok, this section might never be ready, but I will leavi it here in the hope that someone will help out: I want to try to depict the typical work flow for working with \TeX. This will never be complete as there are many ways to work with any of the \TeX\ flavours, including helper programs etc. We will start with a simple \LaTeX\ document, and maybe we will extend this to different formats, engines etc. …
+\large This section tries to give a rough overview over the connection of different file types and how they are used by the different programs. We concentrate on the ”modern“ version of the programs, i.\,e.~Lua\TeX, biber etc. The graph so far shows:
 
+\begin{itemize}
+\item basic files used/produced in every Lua\LaTeX run,
+\item files used for complex documents with TOC, LOT and LOF,
+\item files and programs associated with bibliographies,
+\item files produced by the beamer class
+\end{itemize}
+
+A next version might show the files produced using Ti{\textit k}Z and externalizing etc.
+
+\global\let\necessary\vip
+\global\let\additional\experimental
+\global\let\automatic\normalimportant
+\global\let\program\program
+\global\let\temporary\package
 The preliminary nomenclature is:
 \begin{itemize}
-\item[red] necessary files
-\item[yellow] additional input files
-\item[blue] automatically produced files
-\item[green] program that is used – editor, processing tool, viewer, …
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\necessary \tikz \node[coolnode]{necessary\strut};}] necessary input files
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\temporary \tikz \node[coolnode]{temporary\strut};}] temporary storage files: written in one run, read in the next one
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\additional \tikz \node[coolnode]{additional\strut};}] additional input files
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\automatic \tikz \node[coolnode]{automatic\strut};}] automatically produced files
+\item[{\let\nodecolor\program \tikz \node[coolnode]{program\strut};}] program that is used – editor, processing tool, viewer, …
 \end{itemize}
 
 %% yes, this is stupid, but for now that's how it is …:
-\let\necessary\vip
-\let\additional\experimental
-\let\automatic\normalimportant
-\let\program\package
 }
 ){
-	\tonode(texfile)(0,\layer)<The .tex file. A plain text file that typically contains all of the document information.>{.tex}
-	\steplayer[-5]
+	\tonode[\necessary](texfile)(0,\layer)<The .tex file. A plain text file that typically contains all of the document information.>{.tex}
 
-	\tonode(pdffile)(0,\layer)<The resulting, ready-compiled document is most often a PDF document. Production of DVI documents is also mostly possible, but seldom used.>{.pdf}
+	\steplayer
+	\tonode[\necessary](styfile)(-1,\layer)<Style files contain additional code with arbitrary functionality. There are at least zillions of .sty files.>{.sty}
 
-	\draw[->,very thick](texfile) to node{latex} (pdffile);
+	\tonode[\necessary](clsfile)(-2.5,\layer)<Every LaTeX document has to load one class file, containing the basic layout.>{.cls}
+
+	\steplayer
+
+	\tonode[\necessary](bibfile)(-3,\layer)<The .bib file contains information about the biblography.>{.bib}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](auxfile)(2,\layer)<Every LaTeX run will produce an aux file that stores information for the next run.>{.aux}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](tocfile)(4,\layer)<If a table of contents is used, the necessary information are stored here.>{.toc}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](lotfile)(5.5,\layer)<If a list of figures is used, the necessary information are stored here.>{.lot}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](loffile)(7,\layer)<If a list of tables is used, the necessary information are stored here.>{.lof}
+
+	\steplayer
+
+	\tonode[\additional](snmfile)(5,\layer)<Help file used by beamer.>{.snm}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](navfile)(6.5,\layer)<Help file used by beamer.>{.nav}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](outfile)(8,\layer)<Help file used by beamer.>{.out}
+
+	\steplayer
+	\tonode[\additional](bibrunfile)(-3.5,\layer)<Temp file produced by the biblatex package to store information for bibliography settings.>{.run.xml}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](bcffile)(-5.5,\layer)<Temp file produced by the biblatex package to store information for bibliography settings.>{.bcf}
+
+	\tonode[\additional](bblfile)(-7,\layer)<File with the formatted and sorted bib entries.>{.bbl}
+
+	\steplayer[-2]
+
+	\tonode[\necessary](fmtfile)(4,\layer)<Pre-compiled format file (containing the code that maken LaTeX LaTeX and adaptions to LuaTeX) that is loaded in each run.>{lualatex.fmt}
+
+	\steplayer
+
+	\tonode[\program](lualatex)(3,\layer)<Call on the script/binary lualatex starts LuaTeX.>{lualatex}
+
+	\tonode[\program](luatex)(0,\layer)<The actual binary, using the format file.>{luatex}
+
+	\todraw[->](lualatex)(luatex)
+	\todraw[->](fmtfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[->](texfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[->](styfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[->](clsfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[->](bibfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](auxfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](tocfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](lotfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](loffile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](navfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](snmfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](outfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](bibrunfile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[<->](bcffile)(luatex)
+	\todraw[->](bblfile)(luatex)
+
+
+
+	\tonode[\program](biber)(-3,\layer)<Processes the information in the .bib file accourding to settings in the .tex file that has been stored in the .aux file.>{biber}
+	\todraw[->](auxfile)(biber)
+	\todraw[->](bibfile)(biber)
+	\todraw[->](biber)(bblfile)
+	\todraw[<->](bibrunfile)(biber)
+
+	\steplayer[-3]
+
+	\tonode[\automatic](logfile)(3,\layer)<Log file with information about the recent tex run.>{.log}
+	\todraw[->](luatex)(logfile)
+
+	\tonode[\automatic](synctex)(6,\layer)<SyncTeX file to synchronize between input file and pdf. Used by graphical editors to help navigation.>{.synctex.gz}
+	\todraw[->](luatex)(synctex)
+
+	\tonode[\additional](blgfile)(-3,\layer)<Log file produced by the biber run.>{.blg}
+	\todraw[->](biber)(blgfile)
+
+	\steplayer
+
+	\tonode[\automatic](pdffile)(0,\layer)<The resulting, ready-compiled document is most often a PDF document. Production of DVI documents is also mostly possible, but seldom used.>{.pdf}
+	\todraw[->](luatex)(pdffile)
+
 }
 
+\clearpage
 \topart{Text Views}
 \label{sec:text}
 
@@ -793,9 +960,10 @@
 \addtocontents{toc}{\string\end{multicols}}
 \onecolumn
 
+\addtocontents{toc}{\string\vspace{.2cm}}
 \tostruct[Program Names]{Program Names}[\normalimportant]
 \flushleft  %% centering was still active until here
-The following list tries to explain what happens if a programm is called by a given name. E.\,g. calling the command \texttt{latex} on the command line will start the PDFε-\TeX\ engine\footnote{Actually it's only called PDF\TeX\ now, but it is always the version that includes ε-\TeX\ extensions. Here, always the full name is used for clearness.} in DVI mode with the format \LaTeX\,2\raisebox{-.5ex}ε. This will list the names used in the \emph{official} (upstream) \TeX~Live~2012 distribution, which should mostly (but not all) be the same in MiK\TeX.
+The following list tries to explain what happens if a programm is called by a given name. E.\,g. calling the command \texttt{latex} on the command line will start the PDFε-\TeX\ engine\footnote{Actually it's only called PDF\TeX\ now, but it is always the version that includes ε-\TeX\ extensions. Here, always the full name is used for clearness.} in DVI mode with the format \LaTeX\,2\raisebox{-.5ex}ε. This will list the names used in the \emph{official} (upstream) \TeX~Live~2016 distribution, which should mostly (but not necessarily all) be the same in MiK\TeX.
 
 \begin{longtabu}{>{\ttfamily\large}lX}
 \rowcolor[gray]{0.8}\LARGE \bfseries program \strut & \LARGE  meaning\\
@@ -802,8 +970,11 @@
 \\[-2ex]
 \totablesec{engines / no preloaded format}
 initex & INI\TeX\ (same as \texttt{tex --ini})\\
+inimf & INIMF (same as \texttt{mf --ini}\\
 texlua & Lua\TeX\ in Lua mode\\
 texluac & Lua\TeX\ as byte compiler\\
+texluajit & LuaJIT\TeX\ in Lua mode\\
+texluac & LuaJIT\TeX\ as byte compiler\\
 
 \totablesec{plain formats}
 tex & \TeX\ with the plain format\\
@@ -816,6 +987,7 @@
 euptex & ε-up\TeX\ with the plain format\\
 etex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the plain format and DVI output\\
 luatex & Lua\TeX\ with the plain format and PDF output\\
+luajittex & LuaJIT\TeX\ with the plain format and PDF output\\
 mltex & PDFε-\TeX\ with ML\TeX\ extensions enabled, DVI output\\
 pdfcsplain & PDFε-\TeX\ with the csplain format and PDF output\\
 pdfetex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the plain format and PDF output\\
@@ -836,14 +1008,19 @@
 xelatex & \XeTeX\ with the \LaTeXe\ format\\
 
 \totablesec{Con\TeX t}
-texexec & PDFε-\TeX with Con\TeX t MKII format and PDF output\\
+texexec & PDFε-\TeX\ with Con\TeX t MKII format and PDF output\\
 texexec --interface = de & dito, with german interface (only an example, more languages available)\\
-texexec --xtx & \XeTeX with Con\TeX t MKII format\\
+texexec --xtx & \XeTeX\ with Con\TeX t MKII format\\
 context & Lua\TeX\ with Con\TeX t MKIV format and PDF output\\
 context --interface = de & dito, with german interface (only an example)\\
+contextjit & Con\TeX t with LuaJIT\TeX \\
+
 \totablesec{other formats}
 amstex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the \AMS\TeX\ format and DVI output\\
 jadetex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the Jade\TeX\ format and DVI output\\
+lamed & Aleph with the Lamed (\LaTeXe) format and DVI output\\
+lollipop & PDFε-\TeX\ with the LOLLIPOP format and PDF output\\
+lualollipop & Lua\TeX\ with the LOLLIPOP format and PDF output (removed in TL2016)\\
 mex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the MeX format and DVI output\\
 pdfjadetex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the Jade\TeX\ format and PDF output\\
 pdfmex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the MeX format and PDF output\\
@@ -850,19 +1027,25 @@
 pdfxmltex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the XML\TeX\ format\\%%  FIXME: what output? …
 texsis & PDFε-\TeX\ with the \TeX sis format and DVI output\\
 utf8mex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the UTF8MeX format and DVI output\\
+xelollipop & \XeTeX\ with the LOLLIPOP format and PDF output (removed in TL2016)\\
 xmltex & PDFε-\TeX\ with the XML\TeX\ format \\%%  FIXME: what output? …
 
 \totablesec{metafont}
 mf & the METAFONT program\\
+mflua & MFLua \\
+mfluajit & MFLuaJIT \\
 mp & the METAPOST program\\
 mptopdf & PDFε-\TeX\ with the mptopdf format and PDF output\\
 \end{longtabu}
 
+\normalsize
+\addtocontents{toc}{\string\vspace{.2cm}}
 \appendix
+\clearpage
 \topart{Appendix}
 
 %%
-%% This is kind-of a bibliography.
+%% This is kind-of-a bibliography.
 %%
 \tostruct{References}
 \label{sec:refs}
@@ -905,6 +1088,7 @@
 	\tobib{$\epsilon\chi$\TeX\ project page}<http://www.extex.org>	
 	\tobib{ee\TeX\ project page}<http://tex.aanhet.net/eetex>	
 	\tobib{Lua\TeX\ project page}<http://www.luatex.org>
+	\tobib{LuaJIT\TeX\ project page}<http://foundry.supelec.fr/gf/project/luajittex/>
 	\tobib{\textit{i\TeX—Document formatting in an ereader world.} TUGboat 32 (2011), no. 2, 158\,–\,163.}
 	\tobib{i\TeX\ announcement by Don Knuth at the TUG 2010}<http://river-valley.tv/tug-2010/an-earthshaking-announcement>
 	
@@ -920,7 +1104,7 @@
 	\tobib{BLUe on CTAN}<http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/blu>
 	\tobib{\AMS-\TeX\ on CTAN}<http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/amstex>
 	\tobib{INRS\TeX\ on CTAN}<http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/inrstex>
-	\tobib{L\AMS\TeX: Short description}<http://www.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/digests/texline/no13/lamstex>
+	\tobib{L\AMS-\TeX: Announcement of publication in \TeX line13, ISSN 0961-3978}<http://www.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/digests/texline/no13/lamstex>
 	\tobib{HP \TeX\ on CTAN}<http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/hptex>
 	\tobib{Jade\TeX\ project page}<http://jadetex.sourceforge.net>
 	\tobib{PHYSE and PHYS on CTAN}<http://ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/physe>
@@ -940,6 +1124,8 @@
 	\tobib{Frank Mittelbach: \textit{Reflections on the history of the \LaTeX\ Project Public License (LPPL)—A software license for \LaTeX\ and more.} In: TUGboat Vol. 32 (2011) No.~1, p.~83~ff.}<http://www.tug.org/TUGboat/Contents/contents32-1.html>
 	\tobib{TLContrib project page}<http://tlcontrib.metatex.org/>
 	\tobib{Mac\TeX\ project page}<http://www.tug.org/mactex>
+	\tobib{\TeX Portal project page}<https://github.com/anhoavu/TeXPortal>
+	\tobib{\TeX Android project page}<https://github.com/anhoavu/TeXAndroid>
 	\tobib{MiKTeX project page}<http://miktex.org/>
 	\tobib{Christian Schenk about the name of MiKTeX (mailing list archive)}<http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_id=26826076>
 	\tobib{Pro\TeX t project page}<http://www.tug.org/protext>



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