Alexis Huxley wrote:
Hi, I've got a LyX document which I convert to LaTeX andDon't use latex2html myself, but I exported your LyX file to LaTeX and ran it through the TeX4ht converter. The resulting HTML file was rather chunky (> 1.2 MB!), but the tables in section 1.2.3 looked ok to me (and in particular they had mutiple lines, with the first column containing the correct things). I'm not used to HTML files that large, and I don't know whether the size was expected or whether the file was larded up with gratuitous comments and style tags.
then convert to HTML using latex2html. The result is
fine except for that the tables are cropped to just the
top row!
Actually it's slightly more complicated: the last cell of
each row contains what it should *plus* what should be in
the first cell of the second row.
So what in LyX is:
--------------- | | | | | | a | b | c | d | | | | | | --------------- | | | | | | e | f | g | h | | | | | | --------------- | | | | | | i | j | k | l | | | | | | ---------------
comes out as:
--------------- | | | | | | a | b | c | d | | | | | e | ---------------
As an example of the output, please take a look at: http://dione.no-ip.org/~alexis/computing/ahdg/ahdg/node16.html and the input was: http://dione.no-ip.org/~alexis/computing/ahdg/ahdg.lyx (section 1.2.3).
Postscript and PDF versions do not display this problem
(change .lyx extension in above URL) to see. But, some
time ago, I had a problem with LyX's footnote environments
not being correctly rendered by latex2html when they were
in PS and PDF, so I am wondering if there is a similar 'problem-refraction' going on here.
Any advice appreciated! Thanks!
Alexis
Incidentally, htlatex (the TeX4ht executable) complained about several undefined cross-references.
-- Paul
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Paul A. Rubin Phone: (517) 432-3509
Department of Management Fax: (517) 432-1111
The Eli Broad Graduate School of Management E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Michigan State University http://www.msu.edu/~rubin/
East Lansing, MI 48824-1122 (USA)
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Mathematicians are like Frenchmen: whenever you say something to them,
they translate it into their own language, and at once it is something
entirely different. J. W. v. GOETHE
