Yup. The standard was developed for manual typewriters, and that shows
you how many carriage returns you need between lines.
It's also, I suspect, why the paragraphs are always left-justified with
the margin:
1. This is the first paragraph.
The second line of a paragraph just wraps, and goes to
On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 05:43:58PM -0700, Andrew Diederich wrote:
> Folks,
>
> I'm in the US Army and I'd like to write documents in LyX. This won't be
> a big surprise to you, but the army is a bit particular about the
> formatting of her documents. There's a whole AR (Army Regulation) on it,
>
I think those numbers are there only to show the blank lines, isn't it?
The rest of the examples seems pretty standard.
On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 05:43:58PM -0700, Andrew Diederich wrote:
> I'm in the US Army and I'd like to write documents in LyX. This won't be
> a big surprise to you, but the army is a bit particular about the
> formatting of her documents. There's a whole AR (Army Regulation) on it,
> http://www.
It would also be worth having a look on CTAN, to see if there is anything
interesting. There is alot of material there, though the organisation can
make it difficult to find.
Rod
>
> I recommend you prepare a lyx file using standard lyx editing
> techniques (i.e. document and paragraph layouts
On Thu, 30 Jan 2003, Andrew Diederich wrote:
> formatting of her documents. There's a whole AR (Army Regulation) on it,
> http://www.usapa.army.mil/pdffiles/r25_50.pdf. It's "Preparing and
> Managing Correspondence", AR 25-20.
>
> Anyway, the downside is I'm no great shakes at LaTeX. Is there
Folks,
I'm in the US Army and I'd like to write documents in LyX. This won't be
a big surprise to you, but the army is a bit particular about the
formatting of her documents. There's a whole AR (Army Regulation) on it,
http://www.usapa.army.mil/pdffiles/r25_50.pdf. It's "Preparing and
Managing