You should better post here a minimal example file, i.e. LyX file with a
sentence that is causing you problems.
When I copy the one you cited here to a LyX document, it successfully
compiles.
A couple of months ago a power surge fried my laptop. I now have a new laptop
with a dual-boot Ubuntu 12.04 / Windows 7 setup. Lyx 2.0.3, Firefox 14.01
with Lyz 2.1.4 & Zotero 3.0.8 .
Since then I have not been doing anything with LyX and just noticed that I
cannot sent citations from Zot
Hello,
I would like to use crossreferences like "That statistics leads to see the
same conclusion (figure 3)."
The word "figure" should be included automatically. I read the manual and
tried the formatted cross-reference.
The example from the German manual (EmbeddedObjects, 3.4.1) is, which is m
Hello-
I am using lyx 2.0 under Mac Lion and I have a problem with the working
directory and pathnames to files. As I understand it, if you set the working
directory to a folder named, say, /Users/Tom/My_folder, then you can omit the
full pathnames when you insert graphics, etc. This is reall
On 07/25/2012 03:08 PM, Tim Meke wrote:
Hello,
I would like to use crossreferences like "That statistics leads to see
the same conclusion (figure 3)."
The word "figure" should be included automatically. I read the manual
and tried the formatted cross-reference.
The example from the German m
On 07/25/2012 03:45 PM, Kruyen, A.H.J. wrote:
Dear sir/madam,
Please can you tell me how to solve the error message I get when I try
to load my pdf file (see attached file). I tried different changes in
my document, by deleting and pasting different parts (whole sections,
images or reference
Hi,
I'm using
\usepackage[style=nature,backend=biber]{biblatex}
but it puts the references directly in a row, without a comma/semicolon
in between.
Do I have to load an additional package?
I've tried natbib but it clashes.
Thanks
Bernd
Am 25.07.2012 um 23:04 schrieb Hobbs,Tom:
> Hello-
>
> I am using lyx 2.0 under Mac Lion and I have a problem with the working
> directory and pathnames to files. As I understand it, if you set the working
> directory to a folder named, say, /Users/Tom/My_folder, then you can omit the
> full