Vaclav Smidl wrote:
When you fix the column width, each cell is set as a \parbox, so there is
no need to use minipage. (see attachment) However, the resulting .ps is
slightly different (extra vspace at the end of the second cell)...
I don't see any \parbox in the latex export of the example, but
\begin{tabular}{|m{5cm}|m{5cm}|c|c|c|}
So this is *not* a way to create a \parbox without ERT.
Sorry, I did not mean this is a way to create parbox, it is created by the
tabular enviroment. Namely, m{wd} is just vertically centered p{wd} which:
" p{wd} - Produces a column which can be multiple lines, with each item
typeset in a parbox of width wd."
p{wd} ist the same as \parbox[t]{wd}...
m{wd} ... \parbox[c]{wd}...
b{wd} ... \parbox[b]{wd}...
My point was that if you specify the width of a column in a table, you can
insert the same stuff as in parbox.
the behaviour of footnotes is different and the vertival space
for the first line also.
I agree, that you can do much more in the minipage...
what?
Herbert