of
character classes inside Lyx, Therefore I modified my proposal, and
the whole procedure is now simpler.
On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 4:14 AM, Tommaso Cucinotta wrote:
> On 30/04/13 03:11, Albus X wrote:
>> My proposal is updated. I removed the mentioning of Prolog, made the
>> algori
Hello. In my opinion, cooperative editing the same paragraph does not
make sense. I will be annoyed if the paragraph I am editing change
from time to time making the structure and meaning and everything a
mess. I suggest that we could simply lock that paragraph while others
can commenting on it, le
My proposal is updated. I removed the mentioning of Prolog, made the
algorithm description clearer, and added more explanation.
On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 8:58 AM, Albus X wrote:
> No. I am indeed not familiar with programming in Prolog. I mentioned
> it because the pattern matching feat
It seems that there is another person interested in this project?
OK, here is my opinion:
I understand there will be plenty of classes modified this way, but to
most of them, the change is minor, and share a common pattern.
What we need for an inset class is (1) its type and (2) its child
nodes.
that you mention Prolog
> in your proposal. Are you planning on using Prolog? Do you have any ideas in
> how a similar algorithm could be implemented in C or C++ instead? (It would
> be good if a LyX user did not have to install Prolog as LyX currently does
> not depend on it.)
>
&g
I have officially submitted my proposal at
https://google-melange.appspot.com/gsoc/proposal/review/google/gsoc2013/albuseer/1
Please have a review.
On Mon, Apr 29, 2013 at 10:18 AM, Albus X wrote:
>> I am not very familiar with git, what is the meaning of
>> [712e1871/lyxgit]? I jus
Hello everyone, I am interested in GSoC 2013 and particularly the
"Advanced find and replace" project.
Before I start, I had a try with the current version, and want to ask
some questions.
I read the corresponding sections in the user guide, and tried to find
some math using regular expressions.