Any idea?
Perhaps something like the aqua effect suffices?
Example:
http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/advanced/aqua_text.png
Explanation:
http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/advanced/#gel_effects
Is there anything that can do that in lyx/beamer/latex?
Not sure if that is acceptable to you, but imagemagick can easily create
such drawings for you.
See e.g. http://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/fonts/
Best regards,
Stefaan.
If you want to have a programming language in which you can accurately
"calculate" your drawings, "asymptote"[1] is a good candidate.
Best regards,
Stefaan.
[1] http://http://asymptote.sourceforge.net/
As far as I know the LyX algorithm is not related
to algorithm.sty; it is more like an
environment which, like verbatim, obeys user typed spaces, but,
unlike verbatim, also allows math, boldface, etc...
One thing that bites many users: when exporting
to Latex, LyX inserts empty lines between two li
(I am writing here the solution
because it may help somebody in the future...
... as have done many before you on exactly this same list.
Now if only someone would look at the archives before posting...
Sorry, could not resist ;-)
Stefaan.
Look in the comprehensive latex symbol list:
http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/info/symbols/comprehensive/
Stefaan.
Ananda Murthy R S wrote:
Hello:
I am writing a technical book. In this I want to include list of
symbols used to indicate different quantities. Is there any package
which can be
> I recommend downloading LyX-1.3.3 (where this bug is
fixed) and compiling it yourself.
Hi,
Thank you for the advice.
The workaround I chose for now is to install
and activate the preview-latex package. But I will
be looking forward to the new LyX-1.3.3 !
Bye
Stefaan.
Hi all,
I am using Debian unstable, and since I updated my system today for
the first time in the last two weeks, most of the LyX math symbols have
stopped appearing in the qt front-end.
I *do* have latex-ttf-fonts installed, and they are visible
from "xset q" (hence visible for Xfree86) and fro
AFAIK there are two versions, one is GPL (but no LGPL!), so you can use it with
GPL applications.
Only the UNIX version is GPL-ed. For windows there's a binary only
"non-commercial" version of Qt 2.x.