Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Sam Liddicott
In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. I have to use ctrl-space and insert a hard space to get the phantom to take any effect. I'm also thinking what about a phantom text style (as text styles can be nested) but this might need whatever magic is

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Uwe Stöhr
Sam Liddicott schrieb: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. This is by design. To change this, you can either add a zero space (width of 0pt) before the phantom or you force a line break before the phantom, see attached. I'm also thinking what

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Steve Litt
On Wednesday 11 November 2009 05:02:47 Sam Liddicott wrote: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. I have to use ctrl-space and insert a hard space to get the phantom to take any effect. I think the following URL answers your question:

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Steve Litt
On Wednesday 11 November 2009 09:36:07 Uwe Stöhr wrote: Sam Liddicott schrieb: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. This is by design. To change this, you can either add a zero space (width of 0pt) before the phantom or you force a line break

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Uwe Stöhr
Steve Litt schrieb: What are some of the situations in which you might want to use phantoms. Phantoms are used several times in the EmbeddedObjects manual. The Math manual describes how to use phantoms for math. regards Uwe

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread William Adams
On Nov 11, 2009, at 10:40 AM, Steve Litt wrote: What are some of the situations in which you might want to use phantoms. The whole concept sounds so Geeky I want to use them, but can't figure out a situation that calls for them. If memory serves, Peter Wilson's memoir manual has an

Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Sam Liddicott
In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. I have to use ctrl-space and insert a hard space to get the phantom to take any effect. I'm also thinking what about a phantom text style (as text styles can be nested) but this might need whatever magic is

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Uwe Stöhr
Sam Liddicott schrieb: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. This is by design. To change this, you can either add a zero space (width of 0pt) before the phantom or you force a line break before the phantom, see attached. I'm also thinking what

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Steve Litt
On Wednesday 11 November 2009 05:02:47 Sam Liddicott wrote: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. I have to use ctrl-space and insert a hard space to get the phantom to take any effect. I think the following URL answers your question:

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Steve Litt
On Wednesday 11 November 2009 09:36:07 Uwe Stöhr wrote: Sam Liddicott schrieb: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. This is by design. To change this, you can either add a zero space (width of 0pt) before the phantom or you force a line break

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Uwe Stöhr
Steve Litt schrieb: What are some of the situations in which you might want to use phantoms. Phantoms are used several times in the EmbeddedObjects manual. The Math manual describes how to use phantoms for math. regards Uwe

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread William Adams
On Nov 11, 2009, at 10:40 AM, Steve Litt wrote: What are some of the situations in which you might want to use phantoms. The whole concept sounds so Geeky I want to use them, but can't figure out a situation that calls for them. If memory serves, Peter Wilson's memoir manual has an

Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Sam Liddicott
In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. I have to use ctrl-space and insert a hard space to get the phantom to take any effect. I'm also thinking what about a phantom text style (as text styles can be nested) but this might need whatever magic is

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Uwe Stöhr
Sam Liddicott schrieb: In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in a new-line. This is by design. To change this, you can either add a zero space (width of 0pt) before the phantom or you force a line break before the phantom, see attached. I'm also thinking what

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Steve Litt
On Wednesday 11 November 2009 05:02:47 Sam Liddicott wrote: > In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in > a new-line. I have to use ctrl-space and insert a hard space to get the > phantom to take any effect. I think the following URL answers your question:

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Steve Litt
On Wednesday 11 November 2009 09:36:07 Uwe Stöhr wrote: > Sam Liddicott schrieb: > > In the attached lyx file, phantom at the beginning of a line results in > > a new-line. > > This is by design. To change this, you can either add a zero space (width > of 0pt) before the phantom or you force a

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread Uwe Stöhr
Steve Litt schrieb: What are some of the situations in which you might want to use phantoms. Phantoms are used several times in the EmbeddedObjects manual. The Math manual describes how to use phantoms for math. regards Uwe

Re: Phantom spaces

2009-11-11 Thread William Adams
On Nov 11, 2009, at 10:40 AM, Steve Litt wrote: What are some of the situations in which you might want to use phantoms. The whole concept sounds so Geeky I want to use them, but can't figure out a situation that calls for them. If memory serves, Peter Wilson's memoir manual has an