Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Rainer M Krug
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 9:57 PM, John McCabe-Danstedgma...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:44 PM, Rainer M Krugr.m.k...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi

 I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal 
 instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
 code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

 You can insert  as ERT (Ctrl-L ). However for computer code it is

Thanks for that - that is what I was looking for.

 common to import it verbatim
  Insert-File-Child Document-Include Type-Verbatim (or Program Listing)

 (see also
 http://www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/textprocessing/teTeX/latex/latex2e-html/ltx-79.html)

 This may look more appropriate for code, as well as solving the 

I tried that (or at least Program Listing environment), but it does
not work with beamer. In Addition, I have the commands in normal text,
so I resorted to make the commands bold and typewriter. I will use the
ERT.

 problem. Is this what you wanted?

I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
inverted commas, but I can live with it.


Thanks a lot,

Rainer








-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Helge Hafting

Rainer M Krug wrote:


I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
inverted commas, but I can live with it.


When I type  , I get guillemets because of language settings.
But if I hold down CTRL while typing , I get the plain 
ERT isn't really needed, I think.

Helge Hafting


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Rainer M Krug
On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 11:34 AM, Helge Haftinghelge.haft...@hist.no wrote:
 Rainer M Krug wrote:

 I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
 inverted commas, but I can live with it.

 When I type  , I get guillemets because of language settings.
 But if I hold down CTRL while typing , I get the plain 
 ERT isn't really needed, I think.

Thanks a lot - that is very useful. I'll use that from now on.

Cheers

Rainer


 Helge Hafting





-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Rainer M Krug
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 9:57 PM, John McCabe-Danstedgma...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:44 PM, Rainer M Krugr.m.k...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi

 I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal 
 instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
 code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

 You can insert  as ERT (Ctrl-L ). However for computer code it is

Thanks for that - that is what I was looking for.

 common to import it verbatim
  Insert-File-Child Document-Include Type-Verbatim (or Program Listing)

 (see also
 http://www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/textprocessing/teTeX/latex/latex2e-html/ltx-79.html)

 This may look more appropriate for code, as well as solving the 

I tried that (or at least Program Listing environment), but it does
not work with beamer. In Addition, I have the commands in normal text,
so I resorted to make the commands bold and typewriter. I will use the
ERT.

 problem. Is this what you wanted?

I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
inverted commas, but I can live with it.


Thanks a lot,

Rainer








-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Helge Hafting

Rainer M Krug wrote:


I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
inverted commas, but I can live with it.


When I type  , I get guillemets because of language settings.
But if I hold down CTRL while typing , I get the plain 
ERT isn't really needed, I think.

Helge Hafting


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Rainer M Krug
On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 11:34 AM, Helge Haftinghelge.haft...@hist.no wrote:
 Rainer M Krug wrote:

 I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
 inverted commas, but I can live with it.

 When I type  , I get guillemets because of language settings.
 But if I hold down CTRL while typing , I get the plain 
 ERT isn't really needed, I think.

Thanks a lot - that is very useful. I'll use that from now on.

Cheers

Rainer


 Helge Hafting





-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use " instead of the "fancy" ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Rainer M Krug
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 9:57 PM, John McCabe-Dansted wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:44 PM, Rainer M Krug wrote:
>> Hi
>>
>> I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal "
>> instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
>> code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.
>
> You can insert " as ERT (Ctrl-L "). However for computer code it is

Thanks for that - that is what I was looking for.

> common to import it verbatim
>  Insert->File->Child Document->Include Type->Verbatim (or Program Listing)
>
> (see also
> http://www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/textprocessing/teTeX/latex/latex2e-html/ltx-79.html)
>
> This may look more appropriate for code, as well as solving the "

I tried that (or at least Program Listing environment), but it does
not work with beamer. In Addition, I have the commands in normal text,
so I resorted to make the commands bold and typewriter. I will use the
ERT".

> problem. Is this what you wanted?

I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
inverted commas, but I can live with it.


Thanks a lot,

Rainer

>






-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use " instead of the "fancy" ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Helge Hafting

Rainer M Krug wrote:


I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
inverted commas, but I can live with it.


When I type " , I get guillemets because of language settings.
But if I hold down CTRL while typing ", I get the plain "
ERT isn't really needed, I think.

Helge Hafting


Re: Use " instead of the "fancy" ones in pdf

2009-07-07 Thread Rainer M Krug
On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 11:34 AM, Helge Hafting wrote:
> Rainer M Krug wrote:
>
>> I hoped, that there would be a global option which would keep the
>> inverted commas, but I can live with it.
>
> When I type " , I get guillemets because of language settings.
> But if I hold down CTRL while typing ", I get the plain "
> ERT isn't really needed, I think.

Thanks a lot - that is very useful. I'll use that from now on.

Cheers

Rainer

>
> Helge Hafting
>




-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-06 Thread Rainer M Krug
Hi

I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal 
instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

Is there a way to achieve this, preferably a setting for the whole document?

Rainer

-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-06 Thread John McCabe-Dansted
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:44 PM, Rainer M Krugr.m.k...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi

 I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal 
 instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
 code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

You can insert  as ERT (Ctrl-L ). However for computer code it is
common to import it verbatim
  Insert-File-Child Document-Include Type-Verbatim (or Program Listing)

(see also
http://www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/textprocessing/teTeX/latex/latex2e-html/ltx-79.html)

This may look more appropriate for code, as well as solving the 
problem. Is this what you wanted?


Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-06 Thread Rainer M Krug
Hi

I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal 
instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

Is there a way to achieve this, preferably a setting for the whole document?

Rainer

-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use instead of the fancy ones in pdf

2009-07-06 Thread John McCabe-Dansted
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:44 PM, Rainer M Krugr.m.k...@gmail.com wrote:
 Hi

 I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal 
 instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
 code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

You can insert  as ERT (Ctrl-L ). However for computer code it is
common to import it verbatim
  Insert-File-Child Document-Include Type-Verbatim (or Program Listing)

(see also
http://www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/textprocessing/teTeX/latex/latex2e-html/ltx-79.html)

This may look more appropriate for code, as well as solving the 
problem. Is this what you wanted?


Use " instead of the "fancy" ones in pdf

2009-07-06 Thread Rainer M Krug
Hi

I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal "
instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

Is there a way to achieve this, preferably a setting for the whole document?

Rainer

-- 
Rainer M. Krug, Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa


Re: Use " instead of the "fancy" ones in pdf

2009-07-06 Thread John McCabe-Dansted
On Mon, Jul 6, 2009 at 8:44 PM, Rainer M Krug wrote:
> Hi
>
> I use beamer to create a handout and would like to have the normal "
> instead of the fancy ones. The reason is that they are in computer
> code and it should be possible to copy-paste them.

You can insert " as ERT (Ctrl-L "). However for computer code it is
common to import it verbatim
  Insert->File->Child Document->Include Type->Verbatim (or Program Listing)

(see also
http://www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/textprocessing/teTeX/latex/latex2e-html/ltx-79.html)

This may look more appropriate for code, as well as solving the "
problem. Is this what you wanted?