* Jochen Schulz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [070925 16:07]: > Steve Lamb: >> they're robust but I have always seen their use tied to another >> editor. Since an outside editor is required it is my impression >> that there is no WYSIWYG, no way to get a basic view of how it >> might look printed outside of actually doing whatever magic it is >> to send it off to a printer. Which I don't have.
> Hm? Usually, you have one editor (Notepad-like or something more > advanced) for your Latex code and some viewer application where you can > see your compiled document (PDF, DVI). However, the more you get used > to it, the less you need to know how exactly some specific markup looks > like. You can always adjust the details at a later time without > touching the actual contents of your document. > > I know that there is a special Latex-mode for Emacs which displays some > kind of inline-preview directly in your editor. I like vim better, > though, so I cannot tell much about it. Rather than the Emacs preview, I use "xdvi" to view the typeset document: I use the Gnome desktop. I find it convenient to open several terminal windows (Gnome terminal or multi-Gnome-terminal). One window I use for the command line, and in each of the others I run an instance of "xdvi" for the file which I am editing. Inasmuch as xdvi allows me to "zoom" to any magnification I wish, I use each instance of xdvi to provide a different view: => a magnified view of the region of the page or column on which I am working (I typically typeset documents in two-column format) => a magnified view of the footnotes => a reduced view of the entire page (you can flip through the pages with the PAGEUP and PAGEDOWN keys; this makes it very easy to spot mark-up errors in section titles) => a normal view of the table of contents Using alt-TAB (or the rodent), I can switch between the XEmacs window, the xdvi windows, and the command-line window. Occasionally while writing, I save the document, switch to the command-line window and execute LaTeX, then look over the xdvi displays (which are updated automatically whenever LaTeX is run). RLH -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]