Sharon Kimble writes:
> The first distro that I used was Red Hat, and I bought a copy as that
> was the only way in which you could get hold of it, and a couple of days
> before I was going to install it, Red Hat made it free to download and
> use! And that did not help my mood at all! But
Tim Cross writes:
> Sharon Kimble writes:
>
>> Eric S Fraga writes:
>>
>>> On Tuesday, 9 Oct 2018 at 12:06, Sharon Kimble wrote:
Brilliant, thanks very much Robert, you've saved the project as I didn't
fancy having to work with the document in LibreOffice. These are the
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Wednesday, 10 Oct 2018 at 08:31, Tim Cross wrote:
>
> [...]
[...]
>
>
> And I highly recommend the koma-script classes as opposed to the default
> LaTeX ones. For Sharon, the scrreprt class may be what you want.
Yes, koma-script has been my default as well for some
On Wednesday, 10 Oct 2018 at 08:31, Tim Cross wrote:
[...]
> One of the most common mistakes I see when people start using latex as
> the basis for document generation is ad hoc tweaking of the
> style. This is an unfortunate consequence of most of us being exposed
> to traditional word
Sharon Kimble writes:
> Eric S Fraga writes:
>
>> On Tuesday, 9 Oct 2018 at 12:06, Sharon Kimble wrote:
>>> Brilliant, thanks very much Robert, you've saved the project as I didn't
>>> fancy having to work with the document in LibreOffice. These are the
>>> settings that I've finally gone
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Tuesday, 9 Oct 2018 at 12:06, Sharon Kimble wrote:
>> Brilliant, thanks very much Robert, you've saved the project as I didn't
>> fancy having to work with the document in LibreOffice. These are the
>> settings that I've finally gone with -
>>
>> #+LaTeX_Header:
On Tuesday, 9 Oct 2018 at 12:06, Sharon Kimble wrote:
> Brilliant, thanks very much Robert, you've saved the project as I didn't
> fancy having to work with the document in LibreOffice. These are the
> settings that I've finally gone with -
>
> #+LaTeX_Header: \parskip=0pt
> #+LaTeX_Header:
Robert Klein writes:
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2018 16:54:39 +0100
> Eric S Fraga wrote:
>
>> On Monday, 8 Oct 2018 at 10:56, Sharon Kimble wrote:
>> > My finished output in the pdf will have every line indented/tabbed
>> > to 4 spaces and have a carriage-return at the end of each
>> > paragraph, with
On Mon, 08 Oct 2018 16:54:39 +0100
Eric S Fraga wrote:
> On Monday, 8 Oct 2018 at 10:56, Sharon Kimble wrote:
> > My finished output in the pdf will have every line indented/tabbed
> > to 4 spaces and have a carriage-return at the end of each
> > paragraph, with no spacings in between
On Monday, 8 Oct 2018 at 10:56, Sharon Kimble wrote:
> My finished output in the pdf will have every line indented/tabbed to 4
> spaces and have a carriage-return at the end of each paragraph, with no
> spacings in between paragraphs.
>
> I can get it how I want in org-mode, but when its exported
I have a problem in an org-mode file which is then exported to latex and
then converted into a pdf. And the file is the draft of my fiction book.
My finished output in the pdf will have every line indented/tabbed to 4
spaces and have a carriage-return at the end of each paragraph, with no
"Charles C. Berry" writes:
> On Mon, 12 Dec 2016, Sharon Kimble wrote:
>
>>
>> I'm trying to write an org-mode file that is being exported to latex,
>> and then built into a pdf file, of the MPD online manual.
>>
>> I'm now trying to show the 'mpf.conf' file which is mostly
On Mon, 12 Dec 2016, Sharon Kimble wrote:
I'm trying to write an org-mode file that is being exported to latex,
and then built into a pdf file, of the MPD online manual.
I'm now trying to show the 'mpf.conf' file which is mostly with
commented out lines starting with a hash (#). But that
I'm trying to write an org-mode file that is being exported to latex,
and then built into a pdf file, of the MPD online manual.
I'm now trying to show the 'mpf.conf' file which is mostly with
commented out lines starting with a hash (#). But that breaks the
org-mode export, so how can I have it
The difference is that no "\maketitle" is generated for LaTeX export after
"\begin{document}"
Regards,
Xiaolong
On Sat, Jun 18, 2016 at 2:55 PM, wrote:
> I have a bunch of org-files that I want to export. They all have a
> #+TITLE: but I don't want the Title to appear in
I have a bunch of org-files that I want to export. They all have a
#+TITLE: but I don't want the Title to appear in the exported code.
If I export the following minimal file:
#+TITLE: My Title.
#+AUTHOR: Ian Barton.
#+STARTUP: content indent
#+DATE: [2016-06-18 Sat 07:43]
#+OPTIONS:
On Friday, 25 Apr 2014 at 04:38, Uwe Ziegenhagen wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to export an org file to individual Beamer frames but fail as
Org mode exports the sections, but not the frames.
Use H:2 option instead of H:3 (in the #+OPTIONS line). This setting
tells the exporter which level of
Eric S Fraga e.fraga at ucl.ac.uk writes:
On Friday, 25 Apr 2014 at 04:38, Uwe Ziegenhagen wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to export an org file to individual Beamer frames but fail as
Org mode exports the sections, but not the frames.
Use H:2 option instead of H:3 (in the #+OPTIONS line).
On Friday, 25 Apr 2014 at 09:37, Uwe Ziegenhagen wrote:
Eric S Fraga e.fraga at ucl.ac.uk writes:
On Friday, 25 Apr 2014 at 04:38, Uwe Ziegenhagen wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to export an org file to individual Beamer frames but fail as
Org mode exports the sections, but not the frames.
How exactly are you trying to export? Your output looks like a plain
latex export (M-x org-export-dispatch RET l p), not beamer (... l P)?
Note difference in case (p versus P) and similar for export to latex
code alone (l or b) and for opening the PDF automatically (o versus O).
Got it!
Hi,
I am trying to export an org file to individual Beamer frames but fail as
Org mode exports the sections, but not the frames.
I use the following example org file (as given by
http://orgmode.org/worg/exporters/beamer/tutorial.html)
##
#+TITLE: Writing
Hi Seweryn,
Seweryn Kokot writes:
I would like to have a main text of the document in LaTeX and only some parts
as
org files (using tables and babel functionality). Then these files I want to
export to .tex files and include to the main tex file with \input{myorgfile1}.
My question: is it
Hi,
I would like to have a main text of the document in LaTeX and only some parts as
org files (using tables and babel functionality). Then these files I want to
export to .tex files and include to the main tex file with \input{myorgfile1}.
My question: is it possible to export to LaTeX without
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