Seems easier to just use the itemize environment with customized
bullet symbols. if you use the Document/Settings/Bullets options, you
can eliminate the symbols and then the output looks exactly the way
you want.
It would drive me nuts to keep turning the stevelist special
environment on and
Paul Johnson wrote:
Seems easier to just use the itemize environment with customized
bullet symbols. if you use the Document/Settings/Bullets options, you
can eliminate the symbols and then the output looks exactly the way
you want.
I thought about that, but what if you also want bullet lists
Seems easier to just use the itemize environment with customized
bullet symbols. if you use the Document/Settings/Bullets options, you
can eliminate the symbols and then the output looks exactly the way
you want.
It would drive me nuts to keep turning the stevelist special
environment on and
Paul Johnson wrote:
Seems easier to just use the itemize environment with customized
bullet symbols. if you use the Document/Settings/Bullets options, you
can eliminate the symbols and then the output looks exactly the way
you want.
I thought about that, but what if you also want bullet lists
Seems easier to just use the itemize environment with customized
bullet symbols. if you use the Document/Settings/Bullets options, you
can eliminate the symbols and then the output looks exactly the way
you want.
It would drive me nuts to keep turning the stevelist special
environment on and
Paul Johnson wrote:
Seems easier to just use the itemize environment with customized
bullet symbols. if you use the Document/Settings/Bullets options, you
can eliminate the symbols and then the output looks exactly the way
you want.
I thought about that, but what if you also want bullet lists
Steve Litt wrote:
That works perfectly, and I could make a LyX environment to eliminate the ERT.
As it turned out, I just used the itemize environment for this particular
application, but your example showed me how to directly translate my tab
indented outline into LyX with a simple Ruby
Steve Litt wrote:
That works perfectly, and I could make a LyX environment to eliminate the ERT.
As it turned out, I just used the itemize environment for this particular
application, but your example showed me how to directly translate my tab
indented outline into LyX with a simple Ruby
Steve Litt wrote:
That works perfectly, and I could make a LyX environment to eliminate the ERT.
As it turned out, I just used the itemize environment for this particular
application, but your example showed me how to directly translate my tab
indented outline into LyX with a simple Ruby
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
In several places in my latest book I need to insert tab indented outlines.
Here's an example:
Whole program
Initialize
Open input file for read
Open output file for write
Copy
loop
On Sunday 18 June 2006 06:21 pm, Paul A. Rubin wrote:
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
In several places in my latest book I need to insert tab indented
outlines. Here's an example:
Whole program
Initialize
Open input file for read
Open output file for write
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
In several places in my latest book I need to insert tab indented outlines.
Here's an example:
Whole program
Initialize
Open input file for read
Open output file for write
Copy
loop
On Sunday 18 June 2006 06:21 pm, Paul A. Rubin wrote:
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
In several places in my latest book I need to insert tab indented
outlines. Here's an example:
Whole program
Initialize
Open input file for read
Open output file for write
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
In several places in my latest book I need to insert tab indented outlines.
Here's an example:
Whole program
Initialize
Open input file for read
Open output file for write
Copy
loop
On Sunday 18 June 2006 06:21 pm, Paul A. Rubin wrote:
> Steve Litt wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > In several places in my latest book I need to insert tab indented
> > outlines. Here's an example:
> >
> > Whole program
> > Initialize
> > Open input file for read
> > Open
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