On 2011-11-04, Bianca Kranzusch wrote:
>> Also, using a narrower typewriter font may help. My favourite is "txtt"
>> (which unfortunately needs to be configured "per hand": Set the GUI selector
>> for monospaced to [Default] and
...
> This sounds good, but I don't understand the part "Set the GUI
@Helge:
Thank you so much, this helped immensely!
@Guenter:
> Also, using a narrower typewriter font may help. My favourite is "txtt"
> (which unfortunately needs to be configured "per hand": Set the GUI selector
> for monospaced to [Default] and put the line
>
> \renewcommand{\ttdefault}{txtt}
On 2011-10-31, Liviu Andronic wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 4:10 PM, Helge Hafting wrote:
>> With this, your document looks much better. There is still one line
>> that doesn't break properly. The best solution is to rewrite it
>> slightly. Or you can tweak the interword space/stretch/shrink, a
On Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 4:10 PM, Helge Hafting wrote:
> With this, your document looks much better. There is still one line
> that doesn't break properly. The best solution is to rewrite it
> slightly. Or you can tweak the interword space/stretch/shrink, at the
>
Manual hyphenation can be achieved
On 28. okt. 2011 17:43, Bianca Kranzusch wrote:
My thesis contains a "material" part where I have, among other stuff,
a list of used equipment with names and manufacturers.
I would like to use typewriter font for product names and small caps
for manufacturer names. Within the thesis text, this lo
My thesis contains a "material" part where I have, among other stuff,
a list of used equipment with names and manufacturers.
I would like to use typewriter font for product names and small caps
for manufacturer names. Within the thesis text, this looks good, but
when I format this list in this patt