Date: Sun, 11 Apr 2004 20:32:21 +0200
From: Uwe Stöhr [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Charlls Quarra [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: different image orientation with pdf and pdflatex
I've noted that in AMS unnumbered report and in
KomaScript book documents (maybe also in some
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
This has been discussed already in the list, what is the status to
deal with this (boring) problem ?
- upgrade gs ? (AFPL Ghostscript 7.04 here)
- use an overlooked gs option preventing this (I thought that
asking for compatibility with pdf 1.1 could do it, but
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Angus Leeming [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: different image orientation with pdf and pdflatex
Date: Mon, 19 Apr 2004 11:25:19 +0100
X-Gmane-NNTP-Posting-Host: host217-44-83-78.range217-44.btcentralplus.com
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
This has been discussed already
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
By the way, the currect workaround I use to solve this for video
presention is to export each page as an eps and to build a new
document including these graphics.
Sorry, you've lost me.
--
Angus
Hi all.
Up until recently I used to have lyx centrally installed on our NFS
server, which meant that I could just copy our letter and memo layouts
and templates to the new installation when I upgraded and everyone
automatically had access to them.
However, for various reasons it is no longer
Dear list,
I have to use headlines and footlines (not footnotes) in my document.
Both lines have to have the same text on every page. I hope it is easy
to realise,
but I cannot find the right way. In the manual I only find footnotes
and no headlines and footlines.
I'll be thankfull for help.
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Gerhard Lindel wrote:
I have to use headlines and footlines (not footnotes) in my document. Both
lines have to have the same text on every page. I hope it is easy to
realise, but I cannot find the right way. In the manual I only find
footnotes and no headlines and
Hi all,
I am trying to use LyX for IEEEtrans.
The Floats- Graphics method to insert images giving
me strange results.
Is there anybody tried LyX for IEEEtrans?
Hello Rich,
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where circled operators were used to denote vector/matrix
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where circled operators
Rich Shepard wrote:
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Rich Shepard wrote:
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
Here's an example from Hans Zimmerman's Fuzzy Sets, Decision Making and
Expert Systems, in the section on fuzzy game theory:
We will start with considering two-person games and specify what is
On Tue, 20 Apr 2004, Christian Ridderström wrote:
It looks like S_1 \oplus S_2 means the direct product/sum of the sets S_1
and S_2, i.e. elements in S_1 \oplus S_2 are members of the set
{ (x,y) : x \in S_1, y \in S_2 }
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DirectProduct.html
Related to this is a tendency for academicians to assume that everyone
reading what they write (or listening to them speak) is as knowledgeable as
they are in the subject being discussed.
Which is a valid assumption since the people reading what most academics write
are other academics.
Date: Sun, 11 Apr 2004 20:32:21 +0200
From: Uwe Stöhr [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Charlls Quarra [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: different image orientation with pdf and pdflatex
I've noted that in AMS unnumbered report and in
KomaScript book documents (maybe also in some
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
This has been discussed already in the list, what is the status to
deal with this (boring) problem ?
- upgrade gs ? (AFPL Ghostscript 7.04 here)
- use an overlooked gs option preventing this (I thought that
asking for compatibility with pdf 1.1 could do it, but
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Angus Leeming [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: different image orientation with pdf and pdflatex
Date: Mon, 19 Apr 2004 11:25:19 +0100
X-Gmane-NNTP-Posting-Host: host217-44-83-78.range217-44.btcentralplus.com
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
This has been discussed already
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
By the way, the currect workaround I use to solve this for video
presention is to export each page as an eps and to build a new
document including these graphics.
Sorry, you've lost me.
--
Angus
Hi all.
Up until recently I used to have lyx centrally installed on our NFS
server, which meant that I could just copy our letter and memo layouts
and templates to the new installation when I upgraded and everyone
automatically had access to them.
However, for various reasons it is no longer
Dear list,
I have to use headlines and footlines (not footnotes) in my document.
Both lines have to have the same text on every page. I hope it is easy
to realise,
but I cannot find the right way. In the manual I only find footnotes
and no headlines and footlines.
I'll be thankfull for help.
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Gerhard Lindel wrote:
I have to use headlines and footlines (not footnotes) in my document. Both
lines have to have the same text on every page. I hope it is easy to
realise, but I cannot find the right way. In the manual I only find
footnotes and no headlines and
Hi all,
I am trying to use LyX for IEEEtrans.
The Floats- Graphics method to insert images giving
me strange results.
Is there anybody tried LyX for IEEEtrans?
Hello Rich,
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where circled operators were used to denote vector/matrix
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where circled operators
Rich Shepard wrote:
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Rich Shepard wrote:
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
Here's an example from Hans Zimmerman's Fuzzy Sets, Decision Making and
Expert Systems, in the section on fuzzy game theory:
We will start with considering two-person games and specify what is
On Tue, 20 Apr 2004, Christian Ridderström wrote:
It looks like S_1 \oplus S_2 means the direct product/sum of the sets S_1
and S_2, i.e. elements in S_1 \oplus S_2 are members of the set
{ (x,y) : x \in S_1, y \in S_2 }
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DirectProduct.html
Related to this is a tendency for academicians to assume that everyone
reading what they write (or listening to them speak) is as knowledgeable as
they are in the subject being discussed.
Which is a valid assumption since the people reading what most academics write
are other academics.
>>Date: Sun, 11 Apr 2004 20:32:21 +0200
>>From: Uwe Stöhr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>To: Charlls Quarra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>Subject: Re: different image orientation with pdf and pdflatex
>>
>>> I've noted that in AMS unnumbered report and in
>>> KomaScript book documents
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
> This has been discussed already in the list, what is the status to
> deal with this (boring) problem ?
> - upgrade gs ? (AFPL Ghostscript 7.04 here)
> - use an overlooked gs option preventing this (I thought that
> asking for compatibility with pdf 1.1 could do it,
>>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>From: Angus Leeming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>Subject: Re: different image orientation with pdf and pdflatex
>>Date: Mon, 19 Apr 2004 11:25:19 +0100
>>X-Gmane-NNTP-Posting-Host: host217-44-83-78.range217-44.btcentralplus.com
>>
>>Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
>>> This has been
Jean-Pierre.Chretien wrote:
> By the way, the currect workaround I use to solve this for video
> presention is to export each page as an eps and to build a new
> document including these graphics.
Sorry, you've lost me.
--
Angus
Hi all.
Up until recently I used to have lyx centrally installed on our NFS
server, which meant that I could just copy our letter and memo layouts
and templates to the new installation when I upgraded and everyone
automatically had access to them.
However, for various reasons it is no longer
Dear list,
I have to use headlines and footlines (not footnotes) in my document.
Both lines have to have the same text on every page. I hope it is easy
to realise,
but I cannot find the right way. In the manual I only find footnotes
and no headlines and footlines.
I'll be thankfull for help.
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Gerhard Lindel wrote:
> I have to use headlines and footlines (not footnotes) in my document. Both
> lines have to have the same text on every page. I hope it is easy to
> realise, but I cannot find the right way. In the manual I only find
> footnotes and no headlines and
Hi all,
I am trying to use LyX for IEEEtrans.
The Floats-> Graphics method to insert images giving
me strange results.
Is there anybody tried LyX for IEEEtrans?
Hello Rich,
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where circled operators were used to denote vector/matrix
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
> I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
> of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
> circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
> where circled
Rich Shepard wrote:
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
I think, as with any other symbol, the meaning depends on the context. As
of right now, I am doing my homework on differential topology, and the
circled product represents the tensor product. I remember some other cases
where
On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Rich Shepard wrote:
> On Mon, 19 Apr 2004, Pablo Diaz-Gutierrez wrote:
> Here's an example from Hans Zimmerman's "Fuzzy Sets, Decision Making and
> Expert Systems", in the section on fuzzy game theory:
>
> "We will start with considering two-person games and specify what
On Tue, 20 Apr 2004, Christian Ridderström wrote:
> It looks like S_1 \oplus S_2 means the direct product/sum of the sets S_1
> and S_2, i.e. elements in S_1 \oplus S_2 are members of the set
>
> { (x,y) : x \in S_1, y \in S_2 }
> http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DirectProduct.html
>
> Related to this is a tendency for academicians to assume that everyone
> reading what they write (or listening to them speak) is as knowledgeable as
> they are in the subject being discussed.
Which is a valid assumption since the people reading what most academics write
are other
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