Giovanni Ridolfi wrote: > --- Lun 27/4/09, Robert Goldman <rpgold...@sift.info> ha scritto: >>> 1. I am making a table of conditional >>> probabilities. This means the >>> table headers look like this: p(e|\omega), for >>> example. The vbar in the >>> header confuses orgmode. It thinks that's a >>> column-delimiter. > > \vert
Thanks! That fixed my problem! Strangely, \vert doesn't appear in The Latex Companion (or at least not in its index). > >>> more importantly: >>> >>> 2. I put an eqnarray* environment in my org >>> file. > > #+BEGIN_LaTeX > > \begin{eqnarray} > \label{integralpha293} > > \alpha=\Gamma > > \end{eqnarray} > > #+END_LaTeX Two answers: 1. eqnarray *without* the BEGIN and END blocks works. I believe that this is because org-mode "knows" eqnarray, but not eqnarray*. I am inclined to think that this is a buglet, and we should put support for eqnarray* into org-mode. 2. I don't believe that the BEGIN and END blocks approach is equivalent. If I understand correctly, the use of these BEGIN and END blocks says "put this in only when I am exporting to Latex." From the manual: "...you can add special code that should only be present in LaTeX export with the following constructs: [#+LaTeX and #+BEGIN_LaTeX ... #+END_LaTeX]." Adding those delimiters changes the meaning of my document. *Without* those delimiters, my equation goes in an HTML or ASCII export (in some form); with those delimiters, the equation will only be exported when exporting to LaTeX.... Best, Robert _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode