Johannes Wiedersich wrote: > I hope I didn't state that you are wrong, that's not my intention.
By refuting my personal opinion so emphatically even if you haven't said the word the sentiment is clear. > - From my personal experience LaTeX *is the tool* when it comes to You personal experience is not *MY* personal experience. >> o version might be nice in case I want to back out of large portions of the >> document or refer to previous verbage I had removed and want to reconsider. > > and > >> Am I writing a book? Yes. But does not fit the requirement of easily converted to an acceptable format or being able to work visually with it. No, I am not counting LyX and the like because to suggest a WYSIWYG editor for LaTeX who's stringent proponents eschew WYSIWYG is to put oneself right back at the same level as any other tool. > Any solution with (Open)-office tools that tries to satisfy those two of > your requirements will be impractical and cumbersome, as far as I know. They're not the only requirements. I thought the words "might be nice" was a good clue that it wasn't a high priority. Normally one states high priority without qualifiers or with words like "is essential." > It's not as difficult as you seem to think. (texmacs uses F5 for > italics, so it's even one key less than OOo's ctrl-i). Yeah, EMACS, not working for me. And as for "one less than OOo's CNTL-I" that depends, do you cound a chord as one keystroke or two? Most people don't count the chord for capitalization as two keystrokes. Is FIVE 8 keystrokes, 5 keystrokes or 4 keystrokes? Chording is a part of typing, as any EMACS user is well aware. :P -- Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream? PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | And dream I do... -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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