Hi Daniel, in the next version, also something like
With #+HTML: [1] #+ASCII: [1] #+LaTeX: [1] you can make a footnote. will work. Silly, but still does the trick. - Carsten On Aug 18, 2007, at 12:19, Daniel Clemente wrote:
Hi, in a file I would like to write following line: ---- „Writing [1] you can create a footnote." ---- But then [1] is interpreted as a footnote. I have tried escaping it: \[1\] =[1]= \\[1\\] @<span>[1]@</span> etc. but it doesn't work; it's always interpreted as a footnote. How can these 3 characters [1] be written on a file? Of course, disabling footnotes (#+OPTION f:nil) is not a solution since I do want to use them eventually. I expected to find this information in the manual, page 75 (example: point 11.5.4), but there's nothing about it. I think it's missing a type of <literal> element: <literal>this goes [1] *aa* /aa/ unprocessed.</literal> Any idea? Greetings, Daniel _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode
-- Carsten Dominik Sterrenkundig Instituut "Anton Pannekoek" Universiteit van Amsterdam Kruislaan 403 NL-1098SJ Amsterdam phone: +31 20 525 7477 _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode