Thank you all, that's much better ;)
While we're at it: Is there a ready way to define different hyphenation
exceptions for each language used in one document?
All the best -- Thomas
Am 13.07.2011 23:17, schrieb Ross Moore:
Hello Arno,
On 14/07/2011, at 6:38 AM, Arno Trautmann wrote:
Hi
Wow, Ulrik, Perfect!
I will simply use your version now (not trying to learn the syntax).
Will - Maybe it makes sense to incorporate some of the changes into
your original document?
Or at least create a second copy or style file with the purpose to
compare different fonts?
Mojca
--
Ross Moore wrote:
Hello Arno,
On 14/07/2011, at 6:38 AM, Arno Trautmann wrote:
Hi Thomas,
short answer: use \hyphenation after \begin{document}, then it works.
However, I've been wondering for a while now why this is the case – can someone
explain this behaviour?
It could well be that the
Am Thu, 14 Jul 2011 09:00:35 +0200 schrieb Thomas Fehige:
> While we're at it: Is there a ready way to define different hyphenation
> exceptions for each language used in one document?
Activate the languages before using \hyphenation:
\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage{fontspec}
\usepac
Thanks Ulrike, that's logical /and/ works :) I had thought that you
can only have one \hyphenation{...} per document.
Cheers -- Thomas
Am 14.07.2011 12:00, schrieb Ulrike Fischer:
Am Thu, 14 Jul 2011 09:00:35 +0200 schrieb Thomas Fehige:
While we're at it: Is there a ready way to define dif
I am trying to use the epsdice package from inside LyX, and when I switch to
using xelatex as the formatting engine, the package malfunctions.
Instead of drawing a single die, it draws all 12 possible combinations of
dice on two lines. :(
Is there a working dice or dominoes or "grouped dots" pack