not appear
on one line
e.g.
1) question on foo
i) specifically bar
a).
for my second assignment I separated the blank levels of enumerate
with phantom. The lower level appears on a different line in the LyX
interface, but in the final
document appears as desired on the same line
stephen's mailinglist account stephen4mailinglists at googlemail.com writes:
I had a look for documentation on Phantom and could not find anything
relating to this. Is this a feature of phantom, or just a handy side
effect?
Not sure, but I'd guess side effect. You might want to try a
Am 08.05.2010 21:21, schrieb stephen's mailinglist account:
I had a look for documentation on Phantom and could not find anything
relating to this. Is this a feature of phantom, or just a handy side
effect?
I don't know. But a description of phantoms can be found in the Math manual
sec. 3.7
not appear
on one line
e.g.
1) question on foo
i) specifically bar
a).
for my second assignment I separated the blank levels of enumerate
with phantom. The lower level appears on a different line in the LyX
interface, but in the final
document appears as desired on the same line
stephen's mailinglist account stephen4mailinglists at googlemail.com writes:
I had a look for documentation on Phantom and could not find anything
relating to this. Is this a feature of phantom, or just a handy side
effect?
Not sure, but I'd guess side effect. You might want to try a
Am 08.05.2010 21:21, schrieb stephen's mailinglist account:
I had a look for documentation on Phantom and could not find anything
relating to this. Is this a feature of phantom, or just a handy side
effect?
I don't know. But a description of phantoms can be found in the Math manual
sec. 3.7
not appear
on one line
e.g.
1) question on foo
i) specifically bar
a).
for my second assignment I separated the blank levels of enumerate
with phantom. The lower level appears on a different line in the LyX
interface, but in the final
document appears as desired on the same line
stephen's mailinglist account googlemail.com> writes:
> I had a look for documentation on Phantom and could not find anything
> relating to this. Is this a feature of phantom, or just a handy side
> effect?
>
Not sure, but I'd guess side effect. You might want to try a lone percent sign
(%)
Am 08.05.2010 21:21, schrieb stephen's mailinglist account:
I had a look for documentation on Phantom and could not find anything
relating to this. Is this a feature of phantom, or just a handy side
effect?
I don't know. But a description of phantoms can be found in the Math manual
sec. 3.7