Drew Kime wrote:
Does anyone know of a tool that helps in the building of new styles? I've
learned enough Latex to tweak existing styles, etc. but I'm a writer, not a
typesetter. I know my book looks better when I use Lyx/Latex than with
something like OpenOffice, so I'll keep using it. Still, e
Drew Kime wrote:
On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 8:50 AM, Guenter Milde wrote:
My advice is to use an existing module (e.g. logicalmkup.module) as
starting point. There is a whole selection under LYXDIR/layout/ (where
LYXDIR is a system/installation dependent location, e.g.
/usr/share/lyx/).
On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 8:50 AM, Guenter Milde wrote:
> My advice is to use an existing module (e.g. logicalmkup.module) as
> starting point. There is a whole selection under LYXDIR/layout/ (where
> LYXDIR is a system/installation dependent location, e.g.
> /usr/share/lyx/).
>
Does anyone know of
On 2009-04-30, Helge Hafting wrote:
> Drew Kime wrote:
>> ... I've found designing my own type styles somewhat less than user
>> friendly. I'm sure it's one of those things that, once learned, seems
>> second nature. But the learning curve is pretty steep.
> Indeed, but it might be worth it for a
Drew Kime wrote:
2009/4/28 Steve Litt
Lyx has an option to specify a typewriter face. Simply highlight the
text,
click on Edit->Text Style->Customized, and under "Family" select
Typewriter. Then check what it does to the code, and do a global replace
to
get all occurrences.
You can do tha
Drew Kime wrote:
2009/4/28 Steve Litt
Lyx has an option to specify a typewriter face. Simply highlight the
text,
click on Edit->Text Style->Customized, and under "Family" select
Typewriter. Then check what it does to the code, and do a global replace
to
get all o
2009/4/28 Steve Litt
> > Lyx has an option to specify a typewriter face. Simply highlight the
> text,
> > click on Edit->Text Style->Customized, and under "Family" select
> > Typewriter. Then check what it does to the code, and do a global replace
> to
> > get all occurrences.
>
> You can do that
On Monday 27 April 2009 11:51:38 pm Drew Kime wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 8:02 PM, tedc wrote:
> > So my question is: how do I tell LyX or LaTeX that
> > \textstyleInlinecode{for i=0,n-1}
> > means to render
> > for i=0,n-1
> > with a specified typeface? or at least as "typewriter"?
> > --
>
tedc wrote:
I do have one question, though. The OO file used "text styles" to specify
the formatting of inline source code, names of GUI tools, and chapter
crossreferences. In LyX these show up as ERT, like the boldfaced bit here:
\textstyleInlinecode{for i=0,n-1}
When I click o
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at 8:02 PM, tedc wrote:
> So my question is: how do I tell LyX or LaTeX that
> \textstyleInlinecode{for i=0,n-1}
> means to render
> for i=0,n-1
> with a specified typeface? or at least as "typewriter"?
> --
>
Lyx has an option to specify a typewriter face. Simply highlight
t does preserve many essentials such as index tags. The resulting files
import into LyX, seem to work more or less with the publisher's cls file,
and it looks like I can repair the broken formatting with LyX.
I do have one question, though. The OO file used "text styles" to specify
t
s preserve many essentials such as index tags. The resulting files
import into LyX, seem to work more or less with the publisher's cls file,
and it looks like I can repair the broken formatting with LyX.
I do have one question, though. The OO file used "text styles" to specify
the formattin
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