col...@gmx.net wrote:
> Ich benutze gerne das g-brief Template, auch wenn es etwas antiquiert
> ist. Nun habe ich möchte ich gern eine angepasste Version des Templates
> erstellen, so dass im Brieffuß nun statt "Kto." -> "IBAN" und statt
> "BLZ" -> "BIC" erscheint (auf Grund der leidigen SEPA Umste
Stephan,
I was able to make changes to the corresponding code for the English option in
g-brief.cls without any problem. (For some reason LyX wouldn’t acknowledge the
“german” option for the class even if I changed my language default to German
so I wasn’t able to test exactly your desired chan
> On the Mac installation, they get buried inside of the app package.
>
> Find LyX.app in your applications folder
> Right click on it and select "show package contents"The go to Contents ->
Resources -> examples
> It might be a good idea to copy the folder to somewhere more convenient
outside of
A completely empty folder? Or a folder containing a folder named 'Contents'?
On Thu, Dec 26, 2013 at 4:29 PM, justin wrote:
>
> > On the Mac installation, they get buried inside of the app package.
> >
> > Find LyX.app in your applications folder
> > Right click on it and select "show package
Richard Talley gmail.com> writes:
>
>
>
> A completely empty folder? Or a folder containing a folder named 'Contents'?
>
>
Thanks for coming back so quickly! Completely empty. Nothing in it
whatsoever. That's what it shows using that method anyway. I would really
love to find it, so I can
That's a stumper - an empty app would have nothing to run. If LyX actually
runs, then the app can't possibly be empty.
In OS X, the Finder presents an app as a single file, but it's actually an
application bundle that contains the executable and other resources (in the
case of LyX the other resour
>
> That's a stumper - an empty app would have nothing to run. If LyX actually
runs, then the app can't possibly be empty.
>
>
>
> In OS X, the Finder presents an app as a single file, but it's actually an
application bundle that contains the executable and other resources (in the
case of LyX
I'm not quite ready to upgrade to Mavericks, but this technique is so
fundamental to how OS X has worked since the very beginning I can't see
Apple removing it. My search also came up empty on your issue.
Try this instead:
Open a Finder window, pull down the 'Go' menu and choose the 'Go to
Folder
On Thu, 26 Dec 2013 23:48:41 + (UTC)
justin wrote:
> Richard Talley gmail.com> writes:
>
> >
> >
> >
> > A completely empty folder? Or a folder containing a folder named
> > 'Contents'?
> >
> >
>
>
> Thanks for coming back so quickly! Completely empty. Nothing in it
> whatsoever. Tha