> On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 15:03, Robert Blackstone wrote:
>
> Thank you, Hans, for your quick reply. Unfortunately it does not help
> me. The result is basically the same as when I write "on
> \at{page}[ref]", except that, instead of "on page 20", I get "at page
> 20", (with the float sitting on pa
On Mon, 7 May 2012 22:25:37, Wolfgang Schuster
wrote:
> Am 07.05.2012 um 15:03 schrieb Robert Blackstone:
>
>> On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Hans Hagen
>> wrote
>>>
>>> On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
>>
Sometimes however the example is placed at the same page as the text
Am 07.05.2012 um 15:03 schrieb Robert Blackstone:
> On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Hans Hagen
> wrote
>>
>> On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
>
>>> Sometimes however the example is placed at the same page as the text
>>> discussing it.
>>> Is there any trick to adapt the referen
On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Hans Hagen
wrote
>
> On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
>> Sometimes however the example is placed at the same page as the text
>> discussing it.
>> Is there any trick to adapt the reference to this situation, so that,
>> instead of saying, for instan
On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Dear list,
Presently I am working on a book that contains many musical examples, some of
them rather large (even page-filling). It is difficult to predict where they
will finally be placed, at least when I do not want to spoil the layout too
much b
Dear list,
Presently I am working on a book that contains many musical examples, some of
them rather large (even page-filling). It is difficult to predict where they
will finally be placed, at least when I do not want to spoil the layout too
much by forcing every example to be placed at the po