Hello all,

Mea Culpa. Well, sort of. The format of {\a{a}} doesn't work. Oddly, it
works for {\"{u}} though. Not sure where I picked it up. Changing it to
{\aa} provided the solution, which now quite happily uses T1 encoding.

Sorry 'bout that,
Rod


On Fri, 19 Jan 2001, Rod Pinna wrote:

> 
> Thanks for the suggestion, however, I now get the message that it isn't
> available in OT1 encoding. Perhaphs I have the wrong code? I'm after an a
> with a little circle above it. Pardon my ignorance for not knowing the
> name BTW.
> 
> I've tried this both with and without the times.sty package, and got the
> same result.
> 
> Thanks alot,
> Rod
> 
> On 18 Jan 2001, Jean-Marc Lasgouttes wrote:
> 
> > >>>>> "Rod" == Rod Pinna <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > 
> > Rod> Hi all, A latex problem I suspect, but I'm not sure what I'm
> > Rod> doing wrong. I want to use {\a{a}} in an author name in bibtex,
> > Rod> however, when I view the postscript file, I get an error about
> > Rod> the character not being available in the T1 encoding.
> > 
> > Rod> It appears that lyx uses the T1 encoding as a default. Is there a
> > Rod> way to change this to something appropriate?
> > 
> > Change "TeX encoding" to "default" in Preferences>Ouputs>Misc.
> > 
> > JMarc
> > 
> 
> __________________________________________________________________________
> rod   | "How would the Yo-Yo king feel if he were stripped, in less than a
>       |  decade, of all his customers except cops and Hell's Angels?"
>       |    Hunter S. Thompson, "Hells Angels"
> 

__________________________________________________________________________
rod   | "How would the Yo-Yo king feel if he were stripped, in less than a
      |  decade, of all his customers except cops and Hell's Angels?"
      |    Hunter S. Thompson, "Hells Angels"

Reply via email to