Re: Superscript SOLVED

2005-12-16 Thread Steve Litt
On Monday 12 December 2005 05:24 am, Geoffrey Lloyd wrote:
 On Sat, 10 Dec 2005, Steve Litt wrote:
  On Saturday 10 December 2005 02:12 pm, Charles de Miramon wrote:
  Steve Litt wrote:
  Hi all,
 
  I just went to write O2, as in two oxygen atoms stuck
  together, and saw no provision for superscripting the 2, at
  least not on the

 Sorry to be an accurate scientist but really the 2 should be
 SUBscripted if you want to write O2, else it is O^2 which really
 means nothing at all.

 Geoff

Dh

Thanks Geoff, I'll change it right now. Of course it's still solved, 
because you can do subscript the same way as superscript. Thanks 
for pointing this out, or my book would have had a rather 
embarrassing stupid error.

STeveT
 
Steve Litt
Author: 
   * Universal Troubleshooting Process courseware
   * Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful Technologist
   * Rapid Learning: Secret Weapon of the Successful Technologist
Webmaster
   * Troubleshooters.Com
   * http://www.troubleshooters.com



Re: Superscript SOLVED

2005-12-16 Thread Steve Litt
On Monday 12 December 2005 05:24 am, Geoffrey Lloyd wrote:
 On Sat, 10 Dec 2005, Steve Litt wrote:
  On Saturday 10 December 2005 02:12 pm, Charles de Miramon wrote:
  Steve Litt wrote:
  Hi all,
 
  I just went to write O2, as in two oxygen atoms stuck
  together, and saw no provision for superscripting the 2, at
  least not on the

 Sorry to be an accurate scientist but really the 2 should be
 SUBscripted if you want to write O2, else it is O^2 which really
 means nothing at all.

 Geoff

Dh

Thanks Geoff, I'll change it right now. Of course it's still solved, 
because you can do subscript the same way as superscript. Thanks 
for pointing this out, or my book would have had a rather 
embarrassing stupid error.

STeveT
 
Steve Litt
Author: 
   * Universal Troubleshooting Process courseware
   * Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful Technologist
   * Rapid Learning: Secret Weapon of the Successful Technologist
Webmaster
   * Troubleshooters.Com
   * http://www.troubleshooters.com



Re: Superscript SOLVED

2005-12-12 Thread Geoffrey Lloyd

On Sat, 10 Dec 2005, Steve Litt wrote:


On Saturday 10 December 2005 02:12 pm, Charles de Miramon wrote:

Steve Litt wrote:

Hi all,

I just went to write O2, as in two oxygen atoms stuck together, and saw
no provision for superscripting the 2, at least not on the


Sorry to be an accurate scientist but really the 2 should be SUBscripted 
if you want to write O2, else it is O^2 which really means nothing at all.


Geoff



Format-Character dialog box. There was also no subscript. I know this
can't be true -- how do I do it?

I'm using LyX 1.3.3.


You can insert a subscript with insert -- special character -- subscript.
It is a hack that will create a math inset with a subscript.
Or you can use in ERT O\textsuperscript{2}

The two solutions are not typographically equivalent, the superscript is
not placed at the same place. For abreviations superscripts like 12th for
example, or Mr. Dr., use textsuperscript for chemical symbols use a
mathematical inset.

I wish the actual superscript and subscript hacks could go away. They are a
pain when you export a LyX file to rtf (they are transformed in
mathematical formulas) and result in wrong typesetting. Lyx should default
to \textsuperscript and \textsubscript


Thanks Charles,

I tried these both, and they both worked. I chose the
Insert-Specialcharacter-superscript method for 2 reasons:

1) The 2 was visible in the LyX file, which is more clear
2) The 2 was bigger, which in this case I liked.

Thanks so much for the help.

SteveT

Steve Litt
Author:
  * Universal Troubleshooting Process courseware
  * Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful Technologist
  * Rapid Learning: Secret Weapon of the Successful Technologist
Webmaster
  * Troubleshooters.Com
  * http://www.troubleshooters.com



Re: Superscript SOLVED

2005-12-12 Thread Geoffrey Lloyd

On Sat, 10 Dec 2005, Steve Litt wrote:


On Saturday 10 December 2005 02:12 pm, Charles de Miramon wrote:

Steve Litt wrote:

Hi all,

I just went to write O2, as in two oxygen atoms stuck together, and saw
no provision for superscripting the 2, at least not on the


Sorry to be an accurate scientist but really the 2 should be SUBscripted 
if you want to write O2, else it is O^2 which really means nothing at all.


Geoff



Format-Character dialog box. There was also no subscript. I know this
can't be true -- how do I do it?

I'm using LyX 1.3.3.


You can insert a subscript with insert -- special character -- subscript.
It is a hack that will create a math inset with a subscript.
Or you can use in ERT O\textsuperscript{2}

The two solutions are not typographically equivalent, the superscript is
not placed at the same place. For abreviations superscripts like 12th for
example, or Mr. Dr., use textsuperscript for chemical symbols use a
mathematical inset.

I wish the actual superscript and subscript hacks could go away. They are a
pain when you export a LyX file to rtf (they are transformed in
mathematical formulas) and result in wrong typesetting. Lyx should default
to \textsuperscript and \textsubscript


Thanks Charles,

I tried these both, and they both worked. I chose the
Insert-Specialcharacter-superscript method for 2 reasons:

1) The 2 was visible in the LyX file, which is more clear
2) The 2 was bigger, which in this case I liked.

Thanks so much for the help.

SteveT

Steve Litt
Author:
  * Universal Troubleshooting Process courseware
  * Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful Technologist
  * Rapid Learning: Secret Weapon of the Successful Technologist
Webmaster
  * Troubleshooters.Com
  * http://www.troubleshooters.com



Re: Superscript SOLVED

2005-12-10 Thread Steve Litt
On Saturday 10 December 2005 02:12 pm, Charles de Miramon wrote:
 Steve Litt wrote:
  Hi all,
 
  I just went to write O2, as in two oxygen atoms stuck together, and saw
  no provision for superscripting the 2, at least not on the
  Format-Character dialog box. There was also no subscript. I know this
  can't be true -- how do I do it?
 
  I'm using LyX 1.3.3.

 You can insert a subscript with insert -- special character -- subscript.
 It is a hack that will create a math inset with a subscript.
 Or you can use in ERT O\textsuperscript{2}

 The two solutions are not typographically equivalent, the superscript is
 not placed at the same place. For abreviations superscripts like 12th for
 example, or Mr. Dr., use textsuperscript for chemical symbols use a
 mathematical inset.

 I wish the actual superscript and subscript hacks could go away. They are a
 pain when you export a LyX file to rtf (they are transformed in
 mathematical formulas) and result in wrong typesetting. Lyx should default
 to \textsuperscript and \textsubscript

Thanks Charles,

I tried these both, and they both worked. I chose the 
Insert-Specialcharacter-superscript method for 2 reasons:

1) The 2 was visible in the LyX file, which is more clear
2) The 2 was bigger, which in this case I liked.

Thanks so much for the help.

SteveT
 
Steve Litt
Author: 
   * Universal Troubleshooting Process courseware
   * Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful Technologist
   * Rapid Learning: Secret Weapon of the Successful Technologist
Webmaster
   * Troubleshooters.Com
   * http://www.troubleshooters.com


Re: Superscript SOLVED

2005-12-10 Thread Steve Litt
On Saturday 10 December 2005 02:12 pm, Charles de Miramon wrote:
 Steve Litt wrote:
  Hi all,
 
  I just went to write O2, as in two oxygen atoms stuck together, and saw
  no provision for superscripting the 2, at least not on the
  Format-Character dialog box. There was also no subscript. I know this
  can't be true -- how do I do it?
 
  I'm using LyX 1.3.3.

 You can insert a subscript with insert -- special character -- subscript.
 It is a hack that will create a math inset with a subscript.
 Or you can use in ERT O\textsuperscript{2}

 The two solutions are not typographically equivalent, the superscript is
 not placed at the same place. For abreviations superscripts like 12th for
 example, or Mr. Dr., use textsuperscript for chemical symbols use a
 mathematical inset.

 I wish the actual superscript and subscript hacks could go away. They are a
 pain when you export a LyX file to rtf (they are transformed in
 mathematical formulas) and result in wrong typesetting. Lyx should default
 to \textsuperscript and \textsubscript

Thanks Charles,

I tried these both, and they both worked. I chose the 
Insert-Specialcharacter-superscript method for 2 reasons:

1) The 2 was visible in the LyX file, which is more clear
2) The 2 was bigger, which in this case I liked.

Thanks so much for the help.

SteveT
 
Steve Litt
Author: 
   * Universal Troubleshooting Process courseware
   * Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful Technologist
   * Rapid Learning: Secret Weapon of the Successful Technologist
Webmaster
   * Troubleshooters.Com
   * http://www.troubleshooters.com