--- Ven 8/5/09, Matthew Lundin ha scritto:
> Jeffrey Windsor
> writes:
>
> > I'm a PhD candidate in English literature,
> > My advisor and
> > committee are all incorrigible Microsoft Word users --
> > there's no chance that they'll ever switch.
> > But I need to regularly send drafts to my
@Carsten.
Thanks for pointing that variable out. I'll experiment. I was encouraged
by the fact that even when italics didn't work the way I wanted, the
/slashes/ were always still intact. I figured if I got desperate, I could
always do a second pass on an export hook, but I'll mess with the var
Hi Sebastian,
Sebastian Titz writes:
> Matthew Lundin wrote:
>
>> I am in the same position --- i.e., I use emacs/auctex/org-mode/biblatex
>> in a field in which MS Word is the default option. Many of the things I
>> write have to be converted to doc format at some point.
> could you elaborate
Matthew Lundin wrote:
> I am in the same position --- i.e., I use emacs/auctex/org-mode/biblatex
> in a field in which MS Word is the default option. Many of the things I
> write have to be converted to doc format at some point.
Hi Matthew,
could you elaborate on how you use biblatex with org-m
On May 9, 2009, at 1:04 AM, Scot Becker wrote:
I'm doing something similar. Also in the humanities, and also the
lone non-Word user in my department (also with biblatex).
In my case, no one minds what tools I use, so I'm lucky. I'm using
org > latex >PDF and pass those on to my superviso
I'm doing something similar. Also in the humanities, and also the lone
non-Word user in my department (also with biblatex).
In my case, no one minds what tools I use, so I'm lucky. I'm using org >
latex >PDF and pass those on to my supervisor.
I hope that you find something that works. Convers
Hi Jeffrey,
Jeffrey Windsor writes:
> I'm a PhD candidate in English literature, trying to break free from
> the crappy tools that proliferate among humanists. My advisor and
> committee are all incorrigible Microsoft Word users -- there's no
> chance that they'll ever switch. I'd rather use ema
I've tried searching around, and can't find an answer to this: I only
come here as a last resort.
I'm a PhD candidate in English literature, trying to break free from
the crappy tools that proliferate among humanists. My advisor and
committee are all incorrigible Microsoft Word users -- there's no