I think the issue you are having is that with the Aqua-QT version of
LyX, the Control key has been remapped to the Command key. I just
tried the emacs.bind on my machine, and for example, buffer-write
works with command-x command-s but not control-x control-s.
I think the fink-X11 version
From your description, it sounds like you may not have specified the
pdflatex viewer correctly.
Go to Preferences. Under "File Formats" select PDF (pdflatex) and in
the "Viewer" field enter:
open -a 'Preview'
Hit modify to get LyX to save the new viewer, and hit save to save
preferences
First, let me express my great appreciation to the LyX dev team for
their continuing hard work. And thanks to Bennett also, for
providing us with a Mac binary so quickly.
I've given the LyX/Mac 1.4 a quick spin on a MacBookPro, and can
report that it runs quite well in Rosetta. I haven't
On Jun 2, 2006, at 5:03 PM, Bruce Pourciau wrote:
Does TeXShop make a better previewer than the default (Preview) for
LyX/Mac?
I use it instead of Preview. One advantage is that "View->Update"
works with TeXShop and does not with Preview.
To change the viewer to TeXShop in LyX/Mac 1.4.1
My suggestion for an easier way to install aspell (and other unix
programs) in OSX is to use fink.
Go to:
fink.sourceforge.net
It has a very simple command line interface. If you prefer something
a little more GUI-like, you can get finkcommander as well:
finkcommander.sorceforge.net
Bas
can't open library:
libqt.3.1.2.dylib (No such file or directory, errno = 2)
I thought the binary installer also installed the QT libraries, or do I
need to install these separately?
Thanks again.
Tomoharu Nishino
On Wednesday, Jul 2, 2003, at 08:15 US/Central, Ronald Florence wrote:
instead.)
Then with the document you want to preview open, select View-->PDF from
the menus. This should compile the document, launch the Preview app,
and display the fully formatted document.
Hope this helps.
Tomoharu Nishino
On Dec 30, 2003, at 2:50 AM, Ronald Florence wrote:
"Gattuso, Jean-Pierre" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
- My .cshrc file was modified according to Tomoharu Nishino' web page
and contains the lines:
source /sw/bin/init.csh
setenv PATH "${PATH}:/usr/local
I've been playing with the FreeBSD based underpinnings of MacOSX/Darwin, and
trying to get Lyx to compile.
So far, I've got:
-xforms and xpm correctly installed.
-Patched libtools to make sure that libraries compile under Darwin.
-Replaced the config.guess and config.sub files with Darwin provid
After reading a helpful suggestion from a member of this list, I have
managed to compile LyX successfully (or so I think) on Darwin/MacOSX.
The only problem, however, is that whenever I try to launch the program from
xterm (or anywhere else, for that matter), I get the following error:
X Error o
I finally managed to get xfree86 and Lyx compiled and running rootless in
MacOSX/Darwin. And Lyx runs, but I have run into one major problem --
lyx cannot seem to locate the latex/pdflatex that is installed. I have a
standard teTeX distribution installed, and other TeX programs (e.g.
TeXShop) se
;
>Herbert
>
You might also find the following of some use:
http://www.la.utexas.edu/~tnishino/osx_lyx/
------
Tomoharu Nishino
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
tall lyx". This will compile 1.2.1.
Since version 0.5.0 resolves the issues present in 0.4.1 with respect
to 10.2.x compatibility, you may want to upgrade to 0.5.0 in any case.
Hope this helps.
Tomoharu Nishino
On Sunday, December 8, 2002, at 02:38 AM, Torsten Hahn wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
ss of using fink to force remove any
existing XFree86 implementation, and installing Apple's X11, for those
of you interested in switching.
Tomoharu Nishino
On Thursday, January 9, 2003, at 03:01 PM, Ronald Florence wrote:
I've modified the HOWTO at http://www.18james.com/lyx_on_osx.htm
fink website for
the LyX package info. You should be able to find out who the
maintainer of the package is. He might have the OSX binary of LyX
1.1.6f4 still available, or at least the necessary patch files to get
it to compile correctly on OSX.
Hope this is useful.
Good luck.
Tomoharu Nishi
On Nov 15, 2004, at 6:24 AM, Chris Menzel wrote:
On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 04:18:09PM -0600, dcbns wrote:
I'm having problems getting LyX (1.3.5, precompiled QT) on Mac OS X
(10.3.6) to work with X11 programs like xdvi and gv.
Hi Dave,
In case you are not aware of this option, as an alternative to
xd
On Nov 15, 2004, at 6:03 PM, Chris Menzel wrote:
Hi Tomohiru, thanks for chiming in. The method I suggested works just
fine for me; no multiple copies. As a remark later in your message
suggests, I believe that, to update your PDFs, you are using only "View
-> PDF (pdflatex)" rather than "View->
On Nov 15, 2004, at 6:06 PM, Chris Menzel wrote:
On Tue, Nov 16, 2004 at 11:08:37AM +1300, Stefano Franchi wrote:
, click the "Automatic Preview Update" box in the "TeXShop ->
Preferences -> Preview" dialog.
There does not seem to be any such Preference in my version of TeXShop
(1.19, just download
On Dec 7, 2004, at 9:32 PM, Sang Oh wrote:
hello...
i just installed the lyx/mac binaries.
lyx itself works fine, but i can't get the preview working. (dvi,
pdf, ps...) none works.
i did a default installation. (defalut install path)
my lyx installation sits at /Application/lyx
thanks,
sang
Co
Hi.
I no longer use X11 tools to preview LyX documents, so my memory on
properly configuring this is a bit rusty (so I may be barking up the
wrong tree here). But I seem to recall that in order to make sure that
LyX can call programs installed by fink correctly, you needed to set
the paths in
A symbolic link is the UNIX equivalent of the alias in the Finder.
(Unfortunately, the UNIX part of OSX can't properly handle Finder
aliases.)
To do what you want open the terminal application and type the
following commands:
cd /usr/local/bin
sudo ln -s
/Library/PreferencePanes/Spelling.pre
A couple of things to try:
Make sure that Use Natbib is enabled in Layout->Documents and you've
selected Author-Date.
When inserting BibTex Reference, you might try one of the following
styles:
apsrmp
apalike
apsrev
As far as I can tell, apsrmp looks pretty much like the Harvard style,
though
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