On Sun, 20 Oct 2002 00:51:38 +0200 (MEST), "I Wayan Warmada"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>
> On Sat, 19 Oct 2002, Wayne Menzie wrote:
>
> | I suppose that's possible but it seems like getting the data into the
> | table might be problematic and I was hoping there was a way to get
> | the indentation
On Sat, 19 Oct 2002, Wayne Menzie wrote:
| I suppose that's possible but it seems like getting the data into the
| table might be problematic and I was hoping there was a way to get the
| indentation you see in my sample data without using protected spaces.
| Any ideas on how to do this better?
Hello,
I'm using Lyx 1.2.1 on RH 7.3.
I am writing a talk using Foiltex, and I want to present it in Landscape
mode using a computer projector, so I'm after Type 1 fonts and a
landscape orientation.
After setting Layout>Document>Paper to landscape and the extra to
landscape too, the text and n
On Sat, 19 Oct 2002 14:40:33 -0600, "Eugenio"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Why not a Table?
I suppose that's possible but it seems like getting the data into the
table might be problematic and I was hoping there was a way to get the
indentation you see in my sample data without using protected spac
Why not a Table?
E.G.
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 19, 2002 2:20 PM
Subject: Help with columnar list
> I'm trying to use LyX to format an address list but I can't come up with
> an obvious way to make it work. The list u
I'm trying to use LyX to format an address list but I can't come up with
an obvious way to make it work. The list uses spaces for column
separation in the following way:
Begin sample data
==
SURNAME/ADDRESS/PHONE GI
Matthieu Amiguet wrote:
However, a nice feature would be something to force keeping the previous
paragraph environment (though having said that, the defaults are
usually pretty logical). You could bind it to something like M-Enter
(by analogy with C-Enter for a line-break within the current e
> However, a nice feature would be something to force keeping the previous
> paragraph environment (though having said that, the defaults are
> usually pretty logical). You could bind it to something like M-Enter
> (by analogy with C-Enter for a line-break within the current environment).
W
Paul Tremblay wrote:
On Fri, Oct 18, 2002 at 08:34:18AM +0100, José Abílio Oliveira Matos wrote:
Thanks. I had actually already actually figured out how to do this.
Isn't there a way to use the same style for several paragraphs if this
style is not the default style?
How about if you made your