John O'Gorman wrote:
Matej Cepl wrote:
BTW: What does "kpse" mean? Wikipedia doesn't know anything about it ;-)
It is based on the library which is shared by all TeX related programs
(including `which tex` itself) which is called libkpathsea. I am not
sure about "k", but the rest is abbreviation
Matej Cepl wrote:
BTW: What does "kpse" mean? Wikipedia doesn't know anything about it ;-)
It is based on the library which is shared by all TeX related programs
(including `which tex` itself) which is called libkpathsea. I am not sure
about "k", but the rest is abbreviation of "path search".
I t
Matej Cepl wrote:
> The good thing is that
> there are workarounds. Export both LyX documents to LaTeX and then you can
> try either output of 'diff -buB' or you may try wdiff.
Or Dekel Tsur's ldiff, which can handle LyX files:
http://cs.haifa.ac.il/~dekelts/ldiff/
Jürgen
Along the lines of using a straight diff program: I
would highly recommend kdiff3.
--- Matej Cepl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Harold Mouras wrote:
> > is there a simple way to follow corrections done
> by someone else in a Lyx
> > document, something like the revision mode in
> MsWord?
>
>
Harold Mouras wrote:
> is there a simple way to follow corrections done by someone else in a Lyx
> document, something like the revision mode in MsWord?
Two answers: one is good and other bad. Which one you want first? :-)
OK, in order to speed things up, I'll say the bad one first: it is coming
On Sunday 09 of January 2005 01:13, Marcus Beyer wrote:
Reply please to the group --
http://linuxmafia.com/faq/Essays/smart-questions.html#noprivate
> BTW: What does "kpse" mean? Wikipedia doesn't know anything about it ;-)
It is based on the library which is shared by all TeX related programs
Dear Lyx Users,
is there a simple way to follow corrections done by someone else in a Lyx
document, something like the revision mode in MsWord?
THanks
Harold