Hi: Thanks, and thanks to Robin. My book's all about choosing lifestyles 
in the Digital Age, and successful business models. Neither tolerates M$ 
  .doc files, nor has much use for .pdf! So, that's good to hear that 
publishers are fairly flexible. What I guess I'll do, is see if there's 
one that has Lyx1.2 on board somewhere in their facilities, and they can 
export to whatever they want, other than .doc. If they don't have Lyx1.2 
around, I'll deliver it to them!
Thanks,
Tom Poe
Reno, NV
-- 
http://www.studioforrecording.org/
http://www.ibiblio.org/studioforrecording/
http://renotahoe.pm.org/

--
Hollywood's BPDG Group ?!?
        Never heard of them. What did they do in technology
except manage to put on their tie without accidentaly killing
themselves ?!?
[ modified quote from  [EMAIL PROTECTED] ]
--

Herbert Voss wrote:
> tom poe wrote:
> 
>> Hi: I'm venturing into writing a book land. I'm thinking there's 
>> probably a lot of advantages with using Lyx1.2. My general question 
>> is, does anyone have an idea about pitfalls for exporting to other 
>> formats for different publishers?  Is that a problem? And, what might 
>> be the best way to ask? I skimmed the tips and tricks to see if there 
>> was discussion about formats and publishers, but might have missed it. 
>> I also took a brief look in the search results, but didn't see any 
>> general discussion in this area. If it turns out, Lyx is really good 
>> in the eyes of publishers, maybe that's a big highlight on the web 
>> page [I'm going to be embarrassed if it turns out it already is!]
> 
> 
> 
> the only problem is an export to microsofts word format.
> If the publisher accepts the pdf-format (which most of
> them support) then there will absolutely no problem.
> Same for PostScript or TeX-Output.
> 
> Herbert
> 
> 
> 




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