column, equation in the second column, nothing
in the third column, and the annotation in the last column. This gets
me exactly what I had in pure LaTeX, which makes sense.
On Mon, Oct 3, 2011 at 11:30 AM, Richard Heck wrote:
> On 10/03/2011 11:23 AM, Abiel Reinhart wrote:
>>
>> I'
>>
>> On 10/02/2011 08:27 PM, Abiel Reinhart wrote:
>>>
>>> I'm trying to understand how I can add annotations that sit to the
>>> right of each line of a multiline equation. For example, in a proof,
>>> such annotations might provide justification f
I'm trying to understand how I can add annotations that sit to the
right of each line of a multiline equation. For example, in a proof,
such annotations might provide justification for each step in the
proof.
In pure LaTeX I could accomplish this like so:
\begin{align*}
h(x) &= \int_a^b{[