Waluyo Adi Siswanto wrote:
> How can I get the index with an alphabetical separator as I mention above?
>
> Thanks you for any help or information
If you use xindy (texindy) instead of makeindex, you will get the desired
layout out of the box.
If you use makeindex, you will have to set up an in
On 2009-11-03, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
> Adam Gustafson schrieb:
>> Could someone please let me know how to create the following symbol within
>> LyX, I presume within a Math macro? The LaTeX code that one puts in the
>> preamble is:
>> \newcommand\independent{\protect\mathpalette{\protect\independenT}
> If you use xindy (texindy) instead of makeindex, you will get the desired
> layout out of the box.
>
> If you use makeindex, you will have to set up an index style file (*.ist).
>
> I'd recommend xindy, because it is way ahead of makeindex in many respects.
>
Thanks Jurgen
It works,
I just repla
On 3 nov 2009, at 08.15, Manveru wrote:
...
First of all, thanks for answering.
I've just installed MacTex again, restarted Lyx, nothing changed.
When I try
to convert the document in any damned format, nothing happens. Please
somebody help. I never needed to install ps2pdf and even googlin
at the beginning of every lyx document there is a:
"#LyX 1.6.2 created this file. For more info see http://www.lyx.org/";
is there an option anywhere to skip this?
The reason is when using version control systems and users with
different versions of lyx, just opening and saving changes the file,
w
2009/11/3 Anders Ekberg
> On 3 nov 2009, at 08.15, Manveru wrote:
>
> ...
First of all, thanks for answering.
>>> I've just installed MacTex again, restarted Lyx, nothing changed. When I
>>> try
>>> to convert the document in any damned format, nothing happens. Please
>>> somebody hel
On 11/03/2009 06:41 AM, Jes Andersen wrote:
at the beginning of every lyx document there is a:
"#LyX 1.6.2 created this file. For more info see http://www.lyx.org/";
is there an option anywhere to skip this?
No, unless you edit source.
rh
On 10/30/2009 02:17 PM, Rob Oakes wrote:
Dear Richard and other LyX Users,
I managed to solve a few of the formatting problems. To change the
section labels from numbers to letters, I added the following to the
nih.cls file:
\def\thesection{\Alph{section}}
That solved the output problem. Now
On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 12:41:06PM +0100, Jes Andersen wrote:
> at the beginning of every lyx document there is a:
> "#LyX 1.6.2 created this file. For more info see http://www.lyx.org/";
> is there an option anywhere to skip this?
>
> The reason is when using version control systems and users wit
2009/11/1 Egon Alter :
> Hi,
>
> I like to use the pdfx package which needs some external files (icc profile,
> xmpdata file) in the lyx_tmpbuf folder. The filenames are hardcoded. How can
> tell lyx to copy these files to the tmpbuf folder before compiling?
>
> thanks
Oh yes, I was thinking about
Dear list,
I am working right now with a long document that has chapters as
separate files, included in a master document. I'm having the following
problem: chapter 5 exports to pdf perfectly on its own but, when
included in the master document, this latter document does not export
-although
Dear Richard and other LyX Users,
Thank you very much for the recommendation, it worked perfectly. The
final formatting worked out to be:
Counter subsection
LabelString "\Alph{section}.\{subsection}"
End
Since this is one of those "Write it down or forget it" type of things,
I also put togeth
rgheck writes:
> A fix has been committed: disabling fork() on OSX. We don't know why
> it suddenly stopped working, but it is a limitation of OSX itself.
The workaround has been committed to trunk only, but since I got nobody to
build a binary for testing nothing is happening for branch. Since t
On 11/03/2009 10:12 AM, Manolo Martínez wrote:
Dear list,
I am working right now with a long document that has chapters as
separate files, included in a master document. I'm having the
following problem: chapter 5 exports to pdf perfectly on its own but,
when included in the master document,
Dear LyX Users,
I'm currently working on a book which shows how professional and
scientific writing can be done using purely open source tools. Any book
about Scientific/Technical/Professional writing on Linux has to include
one (if not more) chapters on LyX. Other chapters will look at LaTeX,
B
On Tue, 03 Nov 2009 09:09:49 -0700
Rob Oakes wrote:
> But are there other things that you would like to see? The standard LyX
> documentation is so good that I've found myself struggling to find other
> topics that need to be covered, other than a tremendously quick overview
> of the program and
That's not the problem, apparently. I have moved everything to the
master document's preamble and the strange behaviour recurs. Chapter 5
compiles. Master document w/o Ch. 5 compiles, but Master document with
Ch. 5 does not.
Thanks for your help, Richard.
Manolo
rgheck escribió:
Is there
I'm no unix geek, but if the kernel version is enough, that can be
found by parsing the output of "uname -a" or "hostinfo". I'm sure
there are better ways of doing this, but I just wanted to add my 5
cents to this discussion (not notally selfless, though: I am eagerly
waiting for this issue
On Tuesday 03 November 2009 10:09:49 Rob Oakes wrote:
> Dear LyX Users,
>
> I'm currently working on a book which shows how professional and
> scientific writing can be done using purely open source tools. Any book
> about Scientific/Technical/Professional writing on Linux has to include
> one (if
On Nov 3, 2009, at 9:03 AM, Manolo Martí nez wrote:
That's not the problem, apparently. I have moved everything to the
master document's preamble and the strange behaviour recurs. Chapter
5 compiles. Master document w/o Ch. 5 compiles, but Master document
with Ch. 5 does not.
Thanks for
Stefano Baroni writes:
> I'm no unix geek, but if the kernel version is enough, that can be
> found by parsing the output of "uname -a" or "hostinfo". I'm sure
> there are better ways of doing this, but I just wanted to add my 5
> cents to this discussion (not notally selfless, though: I am eager
Rob Oakes schrieb:
The standard LyX
documentation is so good that I've found myself struggling to find other
topics that need to be covered, other than a tremendously quick overview
of the program and instructions on where to find the docs.
Wow, what a compliment for the docs!
I also don't kno
Thanks for the suggestion. Surprisingly, LaTeX does compile; with a
bunch of errors in the .log, to be sure, but none of them fatal.
How can I find out what the compiler was doing when it stumbled upon the
things that LyX finds offending? The part of the .log file that seems
relevant is:
[16
Rob
But are there other things that you would like to see? The standard LyX
documentation is so good that I've found myself struggling to find other
topics that need to be covered, other than a tremendously quick overview
of the program and instructions on where to find the docs.
I wonder if
On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 06:14:30PM +0100, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
> But have a look at wiki.lyx.org, you find there many useful
information around LyX and also some HowTo.
Dealing with Word is a very common question on list, and in
professional and academic circumstances discussing it -- at exhaustive
On 11/03/09, Uwe Stöhr wrote:
Rob Oakes schrieb:
> The standard LyX
> documentation is so good that I've found myself struggling to find other
> topics that need to be covered, other than a tremendously quick overview
> of the program and instructions on where to find the docs.
Wow, what a compl
Hello
On 11/3/09, Graham M Smith wrote:
> I wonder if something on Lyx/Sweave/R/Beamer might be useful. This
> combination is unbeatable (and I think unique, ignoring working with
> straight Latex) for anyone with scientific/statistics related
> teaching/writing/presentations to do, but not imm
On 11/03/2009 05:46 PM, stefano franchi wrote:
Could anyone tell me what I am still missing?
Try --without-included-boost.
rh
> Since this is one of those "Write it down or forget it" type of things,
> I also put together a blog post that describes the whole process.
> Granted, most of it is just stolen out of the LyX documentation, but I
> find it handy to put together these types of cheat sheets for myself.
>
> If inter
Hi,
I'm trying to set up some custom file converters (which take psfrag'd
EPS files from matlab, do some "stuff" to the annotations then render
them to a PDF), and am distinguishing between what "stuff" gets done
by file extension. That is, for operation A, I might call the file
someplot.
I am trying to compile the latest stable version of Lyx on a fresh install
of Kubuntu 9.10. After installaiton of qt4 devel libs and g++, the
configuraiton process went through. Compilation fails, though, with this
error:
g++ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. "-DBOOST_USER_CONFIG=" -I../boost -O2
-MT named
I wrote:
When the layout works for you, ca you please create a new page at our
Wiki where you provide this layout file and give some installation
instructions?:
http://wiki.lyx.org/Layouts/Layouts
I've done this now:
http://wiki.lyx.org/Layouts/HMCMathematicsHomeworkClass
regards Uwe
On Nov 3, 2009, at 11:23 AM, Manolo Martí nez wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion. Surprisingly, LaTeX does compile; with a
bunch of errors in the .log, to be sure, but none of them fatal.
How can I find out what the compiler was doing when it stumbled upon
the things that LyX finds offending
Helge Hafting wrote:
> Roland Clobus wrote:
> > I’m wondering if someone encountered this situation before:
> >
> > I’ve written a LyX document in language A, and now I want to have the
> > same contents/images/layout/etc. in language B.
> >
> > When something changes In the master document in lan
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