Re: index page clickable

2014-07-19 Thread Wolfgang Engelmann


Am 18.07.2014 18:39, schrieb Scott Kostyshak:

On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 2:57 AM, Wolfgang Engelmann
engelm...@uni-tuebingen.de wrote:

Hello,

I used to be able to click at the page number indicated at the end of each
index entry and thus end up on that page. This does not work anymore and I
can't find the place where to set it. Can somebody tell me? My export is pdf
and I use okular. Is the setting done in lyx or Okular?

Maybe you're looking for hyperref? Document Settings  PDF Properties

Bookmarks  Generate Bookmarks (ToC)

Scott

Thanks, Scott,
but that was set already, but with and without /numbered bookmarks/ and 
with/without /open bookmark trees /I still do not get the back 
referencing. This is not only true for the index, but also for the 
references and citations in the document: all of them are not responding 
to mouse clicks. Do I miss some package?

Wolfgang


Re: date format

2014-07-19 Thread Enrico Forestieri
Will Parsons writes:
 
 Will Parsons wrote:
  In a document I'm writing, I would like to print the date of the last
  edit in the title page.  I've discovered [Insert = Date], which looks
  like it might be what I want (does it update when I save the document
  again?), but the format is 07/16/14, which is a common format for
  North America (which is where I am), but I would prefer a different
  format, preferably 14 June 2014, or even the ISO standard
  2014-07-14, but I can't figure out how to adjust this.  Is this
  configurable via LyX, or do I have to do some LaTeX magic?
 
 Of course, what I meant was '16 June 2014, or even the ISO standard
 2014-07-16', (which I guess illustrates that even *I* find the
 format 07/16/14 confusing, used to it though I am...

The format of the date is fully configurable through conversion specifiers in
Tools-Preferences-Output-General-Date format.
The default conversion spec is %x, which gives the locale's representation.
If you are on linux, you can access the conversion specifiers through
man strftime, otherwise you can read them online at
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/strftime.html

In your case, you want either %e %b %Y or %Y-%m-%d.

-- 
Enrico



Re: index page clickable

2014-07-19 Thread Wolfgang Engelmann


Am 18.07.2014 18:39, schrieb Scott Kostyshak:

On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 2:57 AM, Wolfgang Engelmann
engelm...@uni-tuebingen.de wrote:

Hello,

I used to be able to click at the page number indicated at the end of each
index entry and thus end up on that page. This does not work anymore and I
can't find the place where to set it. Can somebody tell me? My export is pdf
and I use okular. Is the setting done in lyx or Okular?

Maybe you're looking for hyperref? Document Settings  PDF Properties

Bookmarks  Generate Bookmarks (ToC)

Scott

Thanks, Scott,
but that was set already, but with and without /numbered bookmarks/ and 
with/without /open bookmark trees /I still do not get the back 
referencing. This is not only true for the index, but also for the 
references and citations in the document: all of them are not responding 
to mouse clicks. Do I miss some package?

Wolfgang


Re: date format

2014-07-19 Thread Enrico Forestieri
Will Parsons writes:
 
 Will Parsons wrote:
  In a document I'm writing, I would like to print the date of the last
  edit in the title page.  I've discovered [Insert = Date], which looks
  like it might be what I want (does it update when I save the document
  again?), but the format is 07/16/14, which is a common format for
  North America (which is where I am), but I would prefer a different
  format, preferably 14 June 2014, or even the ISO standard
  2014-07-14, but I can't figure out how to adjust this.  Is this
  configurable via LyX, or do I have to do some LaTeX magic?
 
 Of course, what I meant was '16 June 2014, or even the ISO standard
 2014-07-16', (which I guess illustrates that even *I* find the
 format 07/16/14 confusing, used to it though I am...

The format of the date is fully configurable through conversion specifiers in
Tools-Preferences-Output-General-Date format.
The default conversion spec is %x, which gives the locale's representation.
If you are on linux, you can access the conversion specifiers through
man strftime, otherwise you can read them online at
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/strftime.html

In your case, you want either %e %b %Y or %Y-%m-%d.

-- 
Enrico



Re: index page clickable

2014-07-19 Thread Wolfgang Engelmann


Am 18.07.2014 18:39, schrieb Scott Kostyshak:

On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 2:57 AM, Wolfgang Engelmann
 wrote:

Hello,

I used to be able to click at the page number indicated at the end of each
index entry and thus end up on that page. This does not work anymore and I
can't find the place where to set it. Can somebody tell me? My export is pdf
and I use okular. Is the setting done in lyx or Okular?

Maybe you're looking for hyperref? Document Settings > PDF Properties

Bookmarks > Generate Bookmarks (ToC)

Scott

Thanks, Scott,
but that was set already, but with and without /numbered bookmarks/ and 
with/without /open bookmark trees /I still do not get the back 
referencing. This is not only true for the index, but also for the 
references and citations in the document: all of them are not responding 
to mouse clicks. Do I miss some package?

Wolfgang


Re: date format

2014-07-19 Thread Enrico Forestieri
Will Parsons writes:
> 
> Will Parsons wrote:
> > In a document I'm writing, I would like to print the date of the last
> > edit in the title page.  I've discovered [Insert => Date], which looks
> > like it might be what I want (does it update when I save the document
> > again?), but the format is "07/16/14", which is a common format for
> > North America (which is where I am), but I would prefer a different
> > format, preferably "14 June 2014", or even the ISO standard
> > "2014-07-14", but I can't figure out how to adjust this.  Is this
> > configurable via LyX, or do I have to do some LaTeX magic?
> 
> Of course, what I meant was '"16 June 2014", or even the ISO standard
> "2014-07-16"', (which I guess illustrates that even *I* find the
> format "07/16/14" confusing, used to it though I am...

The format of the date is fully configurable through conversion specifiers in
Tools->Preferences->Output->General->Date format.
The default conversion spec is %x, which gives the locale's representation.
If you are on linux, you can access the conversion specifiers through
"man strftime", otherwise you can read them online at
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/strftime.html

In your case, you want either "%e %b %Y" or "%Y-%m-%d".

-- 
Enrico