Ken Mankoff writes:
> Wow. I was going point out that citing for both formats is cumbersome
> and makes the document hard-to-read, but the MACRO solves this. I was
> not aware of MACRO's. I guess this is both the beauty and pain of Org
> and emacs, all this customization. And down the rabbit-hole
Hi Nicolas et al.,
On Mon, 13 Jan 2014, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
Ken Mankoff writes:
I am not familiar with export snippets, but I guess from that
syntax that I will not be able to export with citations to
ODT/DOC. Right now one org file exports well to both formats.
You can also write the
Hello,
Ken Mankoff writes:
> I am not familiar with export snippets, but I guess from that syntax
> that I will not be able to export with citations to ODT/DOC. Right now
> one org file exports well to both formats.
You can also write the same for odt:
@@odt:\cite{key}@@
So, in your buffer,
On Mon, 13 Jan 2014, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
Use export snippets:
@@latex:\cite{}@@
I am not familiar with export snippets, but I guess from that syntax
that I will not be able to export with citations to ODT/DOC. Right
now one org file exports well to both formats.
I will deal with
Hello,
Ken Mankoff writes:
> If I have some text and then \cite{a, b
> c, d, e}, these citations do not export properly
> to LaTeX, due to the newline in the \cite{}.
Use export snippets:
@@latex:\cite{}@@
Outside math mode, Org support for LaTeX is very limited.
Regards,
--
Nicol
And a slightly more complicated example:
\cite[some text here
where spaces are not optional]{citekey1,citekey2}
Exports as \cite[some text here where spaces are not
optional]\{citekey1,citekey2\}
-k.
On Sun, Jan 12, 2014 at 6:21 PM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
> If I have some text and then \cite{
If I have some text and then \cite{a, b
c, d, e}, these citations do not export properly
to LaTeX, due to the newline in the \cite{}.
The command is escaped and appears as \cite\{a, b, c, d, e\}.
-k.