Thanks, after pasting in the text and then examining it I was able to figure out the correct approach. It appears my earlier alignment difficulty stemmed from placing the equals sign in its own column. Now I create a four-column structure in the align environment, with equation= in the first column, equation in the second column, nothing in the third column, and the annotation in the last column. This gets me exactly what I had in pure LaTeX, which makes sense.
On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 11:30 AM, Richard Heck <rgh...@comcast.net> wrote: > On 10/03/2011 11:23 AM, Abiel Reinhart wrote: >> >> I'm able to type plain text as you've suggested but I'm still unable >> to get the alignment and spacing right. I can type text to the right >> of an equation on a given line, spacing it out from the equation using >> something like \quad. However, then the annotations from different >> lines of the equation won't necessarily align. Alternately I can add a >> column to the aligned environment. That takes care of horizontal >> alignment but unfortunately then I run into problems with spacing, as >> there is little spacing between the annotation and the math part of >> the equation. This can sometimes be solved by adding a blank column to >> the aligned environment, but in other cases the blank column doesn't >> seem to do much and may in fact affect the alignment in other columns. > > All of these things can happen, to be sure. But won't they happen with the > plain LaTeX you mentioned > >> \begin{align*} >> h(x)&= \int_a^b{[f(x)+g(x)]dx}&& \text{(Some annotation)}\\ >> &= \int_a^b{y(x)dx}&& \text{(Another annotation)} >> \end{align*} >> > > just as well? > > Try this: Copy that very text and paste it into LyX (as plain text). Now > highlight > that same text and hit Ctrl-M. Look at View>Source to see what LyX will now > generate. > > Richard > >