Thank you very much Pavel.
I manually added /usr/share/lyx/fonts/ to /etc/fonts/fonts.conf and
updated fc-cache . The font cmsy10 (and many others) appear as systems
fonts, but the \leq sign still appears as a dot :/
On 7/29/19 5:22 PM, Pavel Sanda wrote:
On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 12:07:13PM +
On 7/29/19 1:26 PM, Liviu Andronic wrote:
Hi all,
On 7/11/19, Scott Kostyshak wrote:
On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 11:00:57AM -0400, Maria Gouskova wrote:
Any idea when Liviu's PPA and/or the official Debian release are going to
be updated to 2.3.3?
I'm CC'ing Liviu. I think he's busy but he'll l
Hi all,
On 7/11/19, Scott Kostyshak wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 11:00:57AM -0400, Maria Gouskova wrote:
>
>> Any idea when Liviu's PPA and/or the official Debian release are going to
>> be updated to 2.3.3?
>
> I'm CC'ing Liviu. I think he's busy but he'll let us know when he can
> update th
On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 12:07:13PM +0200, HAROLDO GAMBINI SANTOS wrote:
> Any suggestions ?
Sounds like your system is not aware of symbols in the file cmsy10.ttf
(and probably other font files normally installed with lyx into
/usr/share/lyx/fonts/).
If you have standard lyx install I would rep
On 27-Jul-19 9:32 AM, Marius Shekow wrote:
> Hi again,
>
> I forgot to mention that you also need to set custom page margins. An
> example file is attached.
>
> Best regards!
>
> Am 26.07.2019 um 20:14 schrieb Marius Shekow:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've noticed that the recent Lyx versions (2.3.x) generate a
Hi,
I know that this was asked before here, but I tried the proposed solutions
(install computer modern fonts) and it didn't work.
I'm using LyX 2.3.3 on Arch Linux and the \leq symbol (less-or-equal) is
displayed as a dot.
I tried to select other fonts in Tools -> Preferences -> Screen fonts
w