OK -- so I could just as well start using RC4?

I'm not super software savvy, so I have been hesitant not knowing:
* Can I install RC4 and still use LyX 2.7.1?
* Do I have to uninstall RC4 and install the official release when it becomes 
available?
* With 2.7.1, I have used MikTeX. Should I still use MikTeX, or use something 
else? (Does MikTeX also come with LuaTeX, XeTeX, TeXLive, or whatever?)

If these three bullet points do not cause any problems, I may try to download 
and use RC4.
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Richard Kimberly Heck <rikih...@gmail.com> 
Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2024 9:51 PM
To: Bernt Lie <bernt....@usn.no>; LyX Developers <lyx-de...@lists.lyx.org>; 
lyx-users <lyx-users@lists.lyx.org>
Subject: Re: LyX 2.4.0 & Jupyter Notebooks

On 4/9/24 12:00, Bernt Lie wrote:
> Thanks. Will look at it when the new version is released.

I don't think there have been any major changes in that machinery. And there 
definitely won't be any before the final release. Changes from RC4 to the 
official release are going to be pretty minor (as one would hope).

Riki


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Richard Kimberly Heck <rikih...@gmail.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, April 9, 2024 5:38 PM
> To: Bernt Lie <bernt....@usn.no>; LyX Developers 
> <lyx-de...@lists.lyx.org>; lyx-users <lyx-users@lists.lyx.org>
> Subject: Re: LyX 2.4.0 & Jupyter Notebooks
>
> On 4/9/24 08:48, Bernt Lie wrote:
>> Is there a way to import Jupyter Notebooks into LyX 2.4.0 (when v. 2.4.0 is 
>> released)?
>>
>> I'm particularly interested in the possibility to...
>>
>> * link the notebooks into LyX so that I always get the latest 
>> version/computations in the notebook, i.e., preferably not a static 
>> import
>>
>> * inclusion of mark-up text with headlines, math, etc.
>>
>> * inclusion of input and output cells, with figures, etc.
>>
>> * linked-in notebooks would be multipage. Perhaps it should be possible to 
>> embed the notebooks in some theorem-like environment.
>>
>> OK -- don't know if this is possible, but it would go a long way towards 
>> getting a literal programming environment.
> The most plausible way to do this would be to use an external inset.
> That's the way that Lilypond files (music) are included, for example.
> Such insets are user definable. Basically, you tell LyX how to convert 
> the file to something LaTeX can process. This is discussed in section
> 7.1 of the Embedded Objects manual. You can use the existing xtemplate files 
> as a starting point, too.
>
> Riki
>
>

--
----------------------------
Richard Kimberly (Riki) Heck
Professor of Philosophy
Brown University

Pronouns: they/them/their
Website:  http://rkheck.frege.org/

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