This is a question that cannot be answered as such. If you have a large
font, the page size will generally be larger too. The usual font size
for American science paperbacks is 9 x 6 inches and 11 pt.In general, up
to 65 letters (including spaces) are legible; but there can be 80. If
the line s
My web searches for the optimal printed document page size finds only hits
on fonts, not the page size itself. I'm curious whether an executive page
size (8x10 inches) would be more readable than the letter page size (8.5x11
inches) because each text line is shorter. If shorter text lines read mor
On 10/25/23 05:13, Patrick Dupre wrote:
Thank Richard,
Can I have a template?
You have quite a few on your system already. The bibtex ones are *.bst.
The biblatex ones are *.bbx. Although I have not used it, I'd suggest
you try biblatex. It is designed to be much easier to customize. "Good
On Tue, 24 Oct 2023, Paul Rubin wrote:
The Natbibapa module may be the culprit. If I remove it, I can change the
bibliography style.
Paul,
Well, shame on me! I looked at Settings and missed Modules. That's exactly
the cause. How that module was added I've no idea.
Many thanks,
Rich
--
lyx-u
Thank Richard,
Can I have a template?
Thanks.
>
> On 10/24/23 05:20, Patrick Dupre via lyx-users wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > In my bib file, I have
> >
> > @ARTICLE{javaloyes03b,
> >AUTHOR = {J.~Javaloyes and M.~Perrin and G.L. Lippi and A.~Politi},
> >TITLE = {Recoil-induced lasing},
> >
So it was not really a MWE.
el
On 2023-10-25 04:52, Paul Rubin wrote:
> On 10/24/23 14:57, Rich Shepard wrote:
[...]
>> I've created a new KOMA-Script report class MWE (attached.) It
>> has only a title and the question, "Why can't I change the
>> bibliograpy style format in Document -> Setting