\documentclass[a4paper]{article} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} \usepackage[pl]{aeguill} %\usepackage{french} %\usepackage[frenchb]{babel} \begin{document} \title{The \texttt{aeguill} package} \author{Denis Roegel\\ \texttt{roegel@loria.fr}} \date{2 August 2003} \maketitle When using the T1 encoding and the \texttt{ae} fonts, one is faced with the problem that the \texttt{ae} fonts do not contain the guillemets, which are necessary for the French. This package proposes a solution to this problem. Example of french guillemets: «~test~». % the input << test >> works only with \usepackage{french} The guillemets in the previous example are taken from the \texttt{plr} fonts (Polish CMR), which are similar to EC guillemets and of which there is a Type~1 version. Hence, you will get a nice output with \texttt{pdflatex}. There are five options to the \texttt{aeguill} package: \begin{itemize} \item `\texttt{lm}' (default): with this, the guillemets are taken from the \texttt{lmr} fonts. \item `\texttt{pl}': with this, the guillemets are taken from the \texttt{plr} fonts. \item `\texttt{cyr}': with this, the guillemets are taken from the \texttt{wncyr} fonts. \item `\texttt{cm}': with this, the guillemets are built with the \texttt{lasy} fonts. \item `\texttt{ec}': with this, the guillemets are those in the \texttt{ec} fonts. \end{itemize} \textbf{Caution:} \begin{itemize} \item If the \texttt{babel} package is used with the \texttt{french} option, do not use \verb|\CyrillicGuillemets|. \item If the \texttt{french} package is used, you may write ``\verb|<<|'' and ``\verb|>>|'' instead of ``\verb|«|'' and ``\verb|»|'' (i.e., use 7-bit encoding instead of 8-bit encoding). \end{itemize} \end{document}