On Tue, Jul 04, 2000 at 06:21:11PM +0200, Ramon Diaz-Uriarte wrote:
> Dear Rachel,
>
> I've had a similar problem. What I have done is force lyx (latex) to use Type I
> fonts. To do this, I have in the preamble:
>
> \usepackage{ae}
> \usepackage{aecompl}
>
> and prevent Lyx from using the
Paul Borgermans wrote:
>
> Rachel,
>
> I had the same problem. There are two ways that work for me by changing
> settings in LyX (versions 1.1.4x, 1.1.5, 1.1.6cvs, probably earlier
> versions too):
>
>
> 1) put
>
> \usepackage{pslatex}
>
> in the latex pre
Dear Rachel,
I've had a similar problem. What I have done is force lyx (latex) to use Type I
fonts. To do this, I have in the preamble:
\usepackage{ae}
\usepackage{aecompl}
and prevent Lyx from using the default encoiding "T1" by changing the
lyxrc file in ~/.lyx, as follows:
#\font_encodi
Rachel,
I had the same problem. There are two ways that work for me by changing
settings in LyX (versions 1.1.4x, 1.1.5, 1.1.6cvs, probably earlier
versions too):
1) put
\usepackage{pslatex}
in the latex preamble (see Layout-> LaTeX preamble)
or
2)
sele
I want to produce my finished Lyx document as PDF, and this looks generally
straightforward. The resulting PDFs, however, while they print just fine,
look terrible on screen in acroread, which matters as it will be "published"
on an internal website and so is most likely to be seen using the acrob