Hello,
"Sebastien Vauban"
writes:
> Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>> "Sebastien Vauban" writes:
>>> Something like this:
>>>
>>> ** {10}(3,3) :textpos1:
>>>
>>> Contents to position
>>> at some (x,y) coordinates...
>>
>> Correct.
>
> I think this is quite e
Hello Nicolas,
Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> "Sebastien Vauban" writes:
>
>>> No. I fixed it ten days ago (dffdc49).
>>
>> Though I'm now on Org-mode version 8.0.3 (release_8.0.3-295-g91a4c8), pulled
>> this morning, I don't see it fixed.
>
> I realize that the patch won't fix it. This patch was introd
Hello,
"Sebastien Vauban"
writes:
>> No. I fixed it ten days ago (dffdc49).
>
> Though I'm now on Org-mode version 8.0.3 (release_8.0.3-295-g91a4c8), pulled
> this morning, I don't see it fixed.
I realize that the patch won't fix it. This patch was introduced to
allow something like:
#+begi
Hello Nicolas,
Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>> What do you call a recent Org? I'm blocked on commit 26a9b02, from May 27th,
>> as long as the #+SETUPFILE: bug is not fixed (fontification is broken).
>>
>> So, is that one (4 weeks old) a recent Org?
>
> No. I fixed it ten days ago (dffdc49).
Though I'm
Hello,
"Sebastien Vauban"
writes:
> With what you say below, we then have 3 different solutions (at least) for new
> environments:
>
> - the one above, where you add a new environment definition (but, then, it's
> kind of private for your own files; difficult to share)
If you use advanced f
Hello Nicolas,
Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> "Sebastien Vauban" writes:
>> Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>>> The previous definition would become:
>>>
>>> '("textpos1" "w" "\\begin{textblock}%r \\visible %a {" "}
>>> \\end{textblock}")
>>>
>>> WDYT?
>>
>> I'm not sure to understand. Where would he put his
Hello,
"Sebastien Vauban"
writes:
> Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>> The previous definition would become:
>>
>> '("textpos1" "w" "\\begin{textblock}%r \\visible %a {" "}
>> \\end{textblock}")
>>
>> WDYT?
>
> I'm not sure to understand. Where would he put his options? Directly on the
> heading li
Hello Nicolas,
Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> "Sebastien Vauban" writes:
>> Vikas Rawal wrote:
>
>>> For example, if I use the following:
>>>
>>> (add-to-list 'org-beamer-environments-extra
>>> '("textpos1" "w" "\\begin{textblock}%h \\visible %a {" "}
>>> \\end{textblock}"))
>>>
>>> and wri
Hello,
"Sebastien Vauban"
writes:
> Vikas Rawal wrote:
>> For example, if I use the following:
>>
>> (add-to-list 'org-beamer-environments-extra
>> '("textpos1" "w" "\\begin{textblock}%h \\visible %a {" "}
>> \\end{textblock}"))
>>
>> and write the headline as {10}(3,3), I get \
Hi Vikas,
Vikas Rawal wrote:
> I am trying to use textpos to position images at specific location on
> a frame.
I now use TikZ to do that. I have the impression it is easier. Though, I have
the real impression of writing LaTeX inside an Org buffer... which I dislike.
I'd like to write text as tex
I am trying to use textpos to position images at specific location on
a frame.
I would like something like this in the beamer export:
\begin{textblock}{10}(3,3) \visible <2-> {
\includegraphics[width=.9\linewidth]{scatterplot2.png}
} \end{textblock}
I have defined the following beamer environmen
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