On 4.07.08, Dov Feldstern wrote:
Pavel Sanda wrote:
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided
by his environment?
...
Pavel is correct, there are certain features which the keymap offers
which I think
On 4.07.08, Dov Feldstern wrote:
Pavel Sanda wrote:
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided
by his environment?
...
Pavel is correct, there are certain features which the keymap offers
which I think
On 4.07.08, Dov Feldstern wrote:
> Pavel Sanda wrote:
>>> On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
> Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided
> by his environment?
...
> Pavel is correct, there are certain features which the keymap offers
>
Pavel Sanda wrote:
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided by his
environment?
yes it is still used, i remember some screem last time we discussed
Pavel Sanda wrote:
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided by his
environment?
yes it is still used, i remember some screem last time we discussed
Pavel Sanda wrote:
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided by his
environment?
yes it is still used, i remember some screem last time we discussed
Furthermore, I don't get a single quote this way, but an isolated acute
accent. In other words, with such a keyboard remap, it's impossible to
get a single quote in LyX.
And at last, only the accents (acute, grave, circonflex...) exhibit this
behavior. The double quote retains its normal
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 07:55:21PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Furthermore, I don't get a single quote this way, but an isolated acute
accent. In other words, with such a keyboard remap, it's impossible to
get a single quote in LyX.
And at last, only the accents (acute, grave,
this keymap part of lyx is from days when changing keymaps was not so
easy as it is now under X. by default these things should be maintained
in X settings not in lyx. here lyx reacts as most other apps wrt keymaps.
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
this keymap part of lyx is from days when changing keymaps was not so
easy as it is now under X. by default these things should be maintained
in X settings not in lyx. here lyx reacts as most other apps wrt keymaps.
Should
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided by his
environment?
yes it is still used, i remember some screem last time we discussed
Furthermore, I don't get a single quote this way, but an isolated acute
accent. In other words, with such a keyboard remap, it's impossible to
get a single quote in LyX.
And at last, only the accents (acute, grave, circonflex...) exhibit this
behavior. The double quote retains its normal
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 07:55:21PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Furthermore, I don't get a single quote this way, but an isolated acute
accent. In other words, with such a keyboard remap, it's impossible to
get a single quote in LyX.
And at last, only the accents (acute, grave,
this keymap part of lyx is from days when changing keymaps was not so
easy as it is now under X. by default these things should be maintained
in X settings not in lyx. here lyx reacts as most other apps wrt keymaps.
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
this keymap part of lyx is from days when changing keymaps was not so
easy as it is now under X. by default these things should be maintained
in X settings not in lyx. here lyx reacts as most other apps wrt keymaps.
Should
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided by his
environment?
yes it is still used, i remember some screem last time we discussed
> Furthermore, I don't get a single quote this way, but an isolated acute
> accent. In other words, with such a keyboard remap, it's impossible to
> get a single quote in LyX.
>
> And at last, only the accents (acute, grave, circonflex...) exhibit this
> behavior. The double quote retains its
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 07:55:21PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
> > Furthermore, I don't get a single quote this way, but an isolated acute
> > accent. In other words, with such a keyboard remap, it's impossible to
> > get a single quote in LyX.
> >
> > And at last, only the accents (acute, grave,
> > this keymap part of lyx is from days when changing keymaps was not so
> > easy as it is now under X. by default these things should be maintained
> > in X settings not in lyx. here lyx reacts as most other apps wrt keymaps.
>
> Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
>
>
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
> > > this keymap part of lyx is from days when changing keymaps was not so
> > > easy as it is now under X. by default these things should be maintained
> > > in X settings not in lyx. here lyx reacts as most other apps wrt keymaps.
> >
> On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 09:13:27PM +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
> > > Should we get rid of our own keyboard mapping soonish then?
> > >
> > > Does anybody still use it and could not use alternatives provided by his
> > > environment?
> >
> > yes it is still used, i remember some screem last time
Hi Hellmut,
On Friday 27 June 2008 00:05 +0200, Hellmut Weber wrote:
[...]
Under Linux there is a nice little program 'xev' which gives you the key
code for all keys.
Interesting. I didn't know this, I'll check this out.
You could try to define your personal bind file in
Hi Daniel,
Under Linux there is a nice little program 'xev' which gives you the key
code for all keys.
Interesting. I didn't know this, I'll check this out.
You could try to define your personal bind file in '$HOME/.lyx/bind/...'
You'll find info on global and local bind files somewhere in
On 27.06.08, Hellmut Weber wrote:
But as I said in my previous reply to Günter, I doubt that the bind file
can take care of a dead key (the acute accent in my case).
IIRC you must indicate somewhere, sorry I don't remember correctly, that
you want these special keys (accents, tilde and the
Dear LyX gurus: why does LyX ignore:
\bind cacute unicode-insert 0x00e7
while e.g.
\bind M-C-comma unicode-insert 0x00e7 # insert a ç (c with cedilla)
works?
because Qt::Key_Comma exists, while Qt::Key_cacute does not
(http://doc.trolltech.com/4.4/qt.html).
in case it doesn't
PS Here is what I tried: in american.kmap I put
\kmod ' acute aeiouAEIOU
# \kmod , cedilla native
\kxmod ' c ç
just a wild guess, what happen with this:
\kxmod acute c ç
pavel
On Friday 27 June 2008 17:29 +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
PS Here is what I tried: in american.kmap I put
\kmod ' acute aeiouAEIOU
# \kmod , cedilla native
\kxmod ' c ç
just a wild guess, what happen with this:
\kxmod acute c ç
pavel
This still gives me an accented c...
Hi Hellmut,
On Friday 27 June 2008 00:05 +0200, Hellmut Weber wrote:
[...]
Under Linux there is a nice little program 'xev' which gives you the key
code for all keys.
Interesting. I didn't know this, I'll check this out.
You could try to define your personal bind file in
Hi Daniel,
Under Linux there is a nice little program 'xev' which gives you the key
code for all keys.
Interesting. I didn't know this, I'll check this out.
You could try to define your personal bind file in '$HOME/.lyx/bind/...'
You'll find info on global and local bind files somewhere in
On 27.06.08, Hellmut Weber wrote:
But as I said in my previous reply to Günter, I doubt that the bind file
can take care of a dead key (the acute accent in my case).
IIRC you must indicate somewhere, sorry I don't remember correctly, that
you want these special keys (accents, tilde and the
Dear LyX gurus: why does LyX ignore:
\bind cacute unicode-insert 0x00e7
while e.g.
\bind M-C-comma unicode-insert 0x00e7 # insert a ç (c with cedilla)
works?
because Qt::Key_Comma exists, while Qt::Key_cacute does not
(http://doc.trolltech.com/4.4/qt.html).
in case it doesn't
PS Here is what I tried: in american.kmap I put
\kmod ' acute aeiouAEIOU
# \kmod , cedilla native
\kxmod ' c ç
just a wild guess, what happen with this:
\kxmod acute c ç
pavel
On Friday 27 June 2008 17:29 +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
PS Here is what I tried: in american.kmap I put
\kmod ' acute aeiouAEIOU
# \kmod , cedilla native
\kxmod ' c ç
just a wild guess, what happen with this:
\kxmod acute c ç
pavel
This still gives me an accented c...
Hi Hellmut,
On Friday 27 June 2008 00:05 +0200, Hellmut Weber wrote:
[...]
> Under Linux there is a nice little program 'xev' which gives you the key
> code for all keys.
Interesting. I didn't know this, I'll check this out.
> You could try to define your personal bind file in
Hi Daniel,
Under Linux there is a nice little program 'xev' which gives you the key
code for all keys.
Interesting. I didn't know this, I'll check this out.
You could try to define your personal bind file in '$HOME/.lyx/bind/...'
You'll find info on global and local bind files somewhere in
On 27.06.08, Hellmut Weber wrote:
>> But as I said in my previous reply to Günter, I doubt that the bind file
>> can take care of a dead key (the acute accent in my case).
> IIRC you must indicate somewhere, sorry I don't remember correctly, that
> you want these special keys (accents, tilde
> Dear LyX gurus: why does LyX ignore:
>
> \bind "cacute" "unicode-insert 0x00e7"
>
> while e.g.
>
> \bind "M-C-comma" "unicode-insert 0x00e7" # insert a ç (c with cedilla)
>
> works?
because Qt::Key_Comma exists, while Qt::Key_cacute does not
(http://doc.trolltech.com/4.4/qt.html).
> PS Here is what I tried: in american.kmap I put
>
> \kmod ' acute aeiouAEIOU
>
> # \kmod "," cedilla native
>
> \kxmod ' c ç
just a wild guess, what happen with this:
\kxmod acute c ç
pavel
On Friday 27 June 2008 17:29 +0200, Pavel Sanda wrote:
> > PS Here is what I tried: in american.kmap I put
> >
> > \kmod ' acute aeiouAEIOU
> >
> > # \kmod "," cedilla native
> >
> > \kxmod ' c ç
>
> just a wild guess, what happen with this:
>
> \kxmod acute c ç
>
> pavel
This still gives
Günter,
The more I try, the less I understand... Nothing seems to work as it
should! See the reports of my attempts below
On Wednesday 25 June 2008 à 17:56 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
Could you find
On 26.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 June 2008 à 17:56 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
I am quite sure that combo-key ´ c is inserted by LyX as unicode char ć
(cacute), at least it is here. Also
At least something that works!
On Tuesday 26 June 2008 à 09:36 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
[...]
Dear LyX gurus: why does LyX ignore:
\bind cacute unicode-insert 0x00e7
while e.g.
\bind M-C-comma unicode-insert 0x00e7 # insert a ç (c with cedilla)
works?
YES it does! Thanks!
Hi Daniel,
I fear your solution is too general for my case: wouldn't it interfere
with my keyboard settings in other programs?
I wouldn't think so. You don't have to use this 'feature' in other
contexts.
If you heavily use the caps lock key then the situation is different.
But in that case
Günter,
The more I try, the less I understand... Nothing seems to work as it
should! See the reports of my attempts below
On Wednesday 25 June 2008 à 17:56 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
Could you find
On 26.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 June 2008 à 17:56 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
I am quite sure that combo-key ´ c is inserted by LyX as unicode char ć
(cacute), at least it is here. Also
At least something that works!
On Tuesday 26 June 2008 à 09:36 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
[...]
Dear LyX gurus: why does LyX ignore:
\bind cacute unicode-insert 0x00e7
while e.g.
\bind M-C-comma unicode-insert 0x00e7 # insert a ç (c with cedilla)
works?
YES it does! Thanks!
Hi Daniel,
I fear your solution is too general for my case: wouldn't it interfere
with my keyboard settings in other programs?
I wouldn't think so. You don't have to use this 'feature' in other
contexts.
If you heavily use the caps lock key then the situation is different.
But in that case
Günter,
The more I try, the less I understand... Nothing seems to work as it
should! See the reports of my attempts below
On Wednesday 25 June 2008 à 17:56 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
> On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
> > On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
>
> > > Could you
On 26.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
> On Wednesday 25 June 2008 à 17:56 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
> > On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
> > > On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
I am quite sure that "combo-key ´ c" is inserted by LyX as unicode char ć
(cacute), at least it is
At least something that works!
On Tuesday 26 June 2008 à 09:36 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
[...]
>
> Dear LyX gurus: why does LyX ignore:
>
> \bind "cacute" "unicode-insert 0x00e7"
>
> while e.g.
>
> \bind "M-C-comma" "unicode-insert 0x00e7" # insert a ç (c with cedilla)
>
> works?
YES
Hi Daniel,
I fear your solution is too general for my case: wouldn't it interfere
with my keyboard settings in other programs?
I wouldn't think so. You don't have to use this 'feature' in other
contexts.
If you heavily use the caps lock key then the situation is different.
But in that case
[sorry if double post, previous one did not work]
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 18:31 +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
[...]
Maybe try this:
\bind 'c unicode-insert 0x00e7
Abdel.
It looked promising, but it did not work (still gives accented c).
I don't know why
\kxmod ' c ç
in the kmap
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
[sorry if double post, previous one did not work]
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 18:31 +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
[...]
Maybe try this:
\bind 'c unicode-insert 0x00e7
It looked promising, but it did not work (still gives accented c).
...
It looks like
Hi Daniel,
my system is gentoo linux, KDE-3.5, LyX 1.5.3 1.5.5 1.6svn (a few weeks old
I have the problem that I sometimes wnat to have ç (in french texts) and
also å (in swedish texts).
The solution I found already several years ago is to have a bash start
script in the Autostart folder, in
Günter,
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
[...]
Could you find out whether the character inserted via dead-´ + c is
*one* character (c with accent) or
*two* characters (c + combining acute acctent)
Not quite sure how to check this but I'd bet on single character...
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
Could you find out whether the character inserted via dead-´ + c is
*one* character (c with accent) or
*two* characters (c + combining acute acctent)
Not quite sure how to check this but I'd bet
[sorry if double post, previous one did not work]
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 18:31 +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
[...]
Maybe try this:
\bind 'c unicode-insert 0x00e7
Abdel.
It looked promising, but it did not work (still gives accented c).
I don't know why
\kxmod ' c ç
in the kmap
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
[sorry if double post, previous one did not work]
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 18:31 +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
[...]
Maybe try this:
\bind 'c unicode-insert 0x00e7
It looked promising, but it did not work (still gives accented c).
...
It looks like
Hi Daniel,
my system is gentoo linux, KDE-3.5, LyX 1.5.3 1.5.5 1.6svn (a few weeks old
I have the problem that I sometimes wnat to have ç (in french texts) and
also å (in swedish texts).
The solution I found already several years ago is to have a bash start
script in the Autostart folder, in
Günter,
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
[...]
Could you find out whether the character inserted via dead-´ + c is
*one* character (c with accent) or
*two* characters (c + combining acute acctent)
Not quite sure how to check this but I'd bet on single character...
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
Could you find out whether the character inserted via dead-´ + c is
*one* character (c with accent) or
*two* characters (c + combining acute acctent)
Not quite sure how to check this but I'd bet
[sorry if double post, previous one did not work]
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 18:31 +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
[...]
> Maybe try this:
>
> \bind "'c" "unicode-insert 0x00e7"
>
> Abdel.
>
It looked promising, but it did not work (still gives accented c).
I don't know why
\kxmod ' c ç
in
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
> [sorry if double post, previous one did not work]
> On Tuesday 24 June 2008 18:31 +0200, Abdelrazak Younes wrote:
> [...]
> > Maybe try this:
> > \bind "'c" "unicode-insert 0x00e7"
> It looked promising, but it did not work (still gives accented c).
...
> It
Hi Daniel,
my system is gentoo linux, KDE-3.5, LyX 1.5.3 1.5.5 1.6svn (a few weeks old
I have the problem that I sometimes wnat to have ç (in french texts) and
also å (in swedish texts).
The solution I found already several years ago is to have a bash start
script in the Autostart folder, in
Günter,
On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
[...]
> Could you find out whether the character inserted via dead-´ + c is
> *one* character (c with accent) or
> *two* characters (c + combining acute acctent)
Not quite sure how to check this but I'd bet on "single
On 25.06.08, Daniel Clément wrote:
> On Wednesday 25 june 2008 à 12:19 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
> > Could you find out whether the character inserted via dead-´ + c is
> > *one* character (c with accent) or
> > *two* characters (c + combining acute acctent)
> Not quite sure how to check this but
Hello,
I use a US int'l keyboard --though I am French-- for more convenient
access to brackets, parentheses... in scientific software.
I have the dead keys setup, getting accented characters by typing the
accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by acute accent + c.
On 24.06.08, Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
I use a US int'l keyboard I have the dead keys setup, getting
accented characters by typing the accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by acute accent + c. This is the
case in almost every program. But LyX gives me an accented c!
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 15:13 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
On 24.06.08, Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
I use a US int'l keyboard I have the dead keys setup, getting
accented characters by typing the accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by acute accent + c. This is the
Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
... neither worked (still getting ć). I miss the correct syntax!
Maybe try this:
\bind 'c unicode-insert 0x00e7
Abdel.
Hello,
I use a US int'l keyboard --though I am French-- for more convenient
access to brackets, parentheses... in scientific software.
I have the dead keys setup, getting accented characters by typing the
accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by acute accent + c.
On 24.06.08, Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
I use a US int'l keyboard I have the dead keys setup, getting
accented characters by typing the accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by acute accent + c. This is the
case in almost every program. But LyX gives me an accented c!
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 15:13 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
On 24.06.08, Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
I use a US int'l keyboard I have the dead keys setup, getting
accented characters by typing the accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by acute accent + c. This is the
Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
... neither worked (still getting ć). I miss the correct syntax!
Maybe try this:
\bind 'c unicode-insert 0x00e7
Abdel.
Hello,
I use a US int'l keyboard --though I am French-- for more convenient
access to brackets, parentheses... in scientific software.
I have the "dead keys" setup, getting accented characters by typing the
accent, then the character.
However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by "acute accent + c".
On 24.06.08, Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
> I use a US int'l keyboard I have the "dead keys" setup, getting
> accented characters by typing the accent, then the character.
> However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by "acute accent + c". This is the
> case in almost every program. But LyX gives me an
On Tuesday 24 June 2008 15:13 +0200, G. Milde wrote:
> On 24.06.08, Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
> > I use a US int'l keyboard I have the "dead keys" setup, getting
> > accented characters by typing the accent, then the character.
>
> > However, the cedilla-c: ç is obtained by "acute accent + c". This
Daniel CLEMENT wrote:
... neither worked (still getting ć). I miss the correct syntax!
Maybe try this:
\bind "'c" "unicode-insert 0x00e7"
Abdel.
Hi,
sorry for the silly question, but perhaps someone knows an easy
answer. I've been searching the web, but so far to no avail.
How do you call the i with two dots, and how can I enter in into
LyX?
In LaTeX, it would be \{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX,
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 05:49:22PM +, Andreas Busch wrote:
In LaTeX, it would be \{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX, but it would be more fun if i
could convince my XWindows to do it directly via keyboard...
Compose-i- works here.
Andre'
--
Those who
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 19:15:37 +0100, Andre Poenitz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 05:49:22PM +, Andreas Busch wrote:
In LaTeX, it would be \{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX, but it would be more fun if i
could convince my XWindows
Hi,
sorry for the silly question, but perhaps someone knows an easy
answer. I've been searching the web, but so far to no avail.
How do you call the i with two dots, and how can I enter in into
LyX?
In LaTeX, it would be \{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX,
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 05:49:22PM +, Andreas Busch wrote:
In LaTeX, it would be \{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX, but it would be more fun if i
could convince my XWindows to do it directly via keyboard...
Compose-i- works here.
Andre'
--
Those who
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 19:15:37 +0100, Andre Poenitz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 05:49:22PM +, Andreas Busch wrote:
In LaTeX, it would be \{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX, but it would be more fun if i
could convince my XWindows
Hi,
sorry for the silly question, but perhaps someone knows an easy
answer. I've been searching the web, but so far to no avail.
How do you call the "i" with two dots, and how can I enter in into
LyX?
In LaTeX, it would be \"{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
Of course, I could use ERT in LyX,
On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 05:49:22PM +, Andreas Busch wrote:
> In LaTeX, it would be \"{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
>
> Of course, I could use ERT in LyX, but it would be more fun if i
> could convince my XWindows to do it directly via keyboard...
Compose-i-" works here.
Andre'
--
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 19:15:37 +0100, Andre Poenitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 16, 2002 at 05:49:22PM +, Andreas Busch wrote:
> In LaTeX, it would be \"{\i} (in case that helps...) ;-)
>
> Of course, I could use ERT in LyX, but it would be more fun if i
> could convince my
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