On Fri, Jun 28, 2019 at 4:46 PM Fraga, Eric wrote:
> On Friday, 28 Jun 2019 at 11:58, Ken Mankoff wrote:
> > Why don't you define the link in Org?
> >
> > #+NAME: eq:foo
> > \begin{equation}
>
> And why are the obvious solutions not those that come to mind (for
> me)
>
> Many thanks. Nothing
Org-ref provides a ref link for exactly this purpose. It looks like
ref:an-equation and if you click on it it jumps to the label. The link is
red if the label doesn't exist and maroonish if it does. It exports in
latex as \ref{an-equation}. It sounds like just what you need.
You can get org-ref on
On Friday, 28 Jun 2019 at 10:19, John Kitchin wrote:
> Org-ref provides a ref link for exactly this purpose.
Thanks John. I've looked at org-ref before and it looks nice. However,
due to my organically grown org (and Emacs) customizations (over 35
years...), I couldn't get it to work well for m
Hi Eric,
On 2019-06-28 at 10:55 -02, Fraga, Eric wrote...
> I would like to be able to use org fully with respect to links and
> targets. If I define a label in LaTeX directly, \label{an-equation}
> for instance, I get no benefit from using an org link to it, e.g.
> [[an-equation]]
Why don't you
On Friday, 28 Jun 2019 at 11:58, Ken Mankoff wrote:
> Why don't you define the link in Org?
>
> #+NAME: eq:foo
> \begin{equation}
And why are the obvious solutions not those that come to mind (for
me)
Many thanks. Nothing in the documentation to even suggest this
possibility. That's my excu
Hello all,
it's that time of year where I have to think about revamping my lecture
slides (having just finished one year, the next one starts...). I write
these in org and export to beamer obviously!
I teach a technical subject. I therefore have quite a few equations in
my slides and I use LaTe