On Tue, Oct 28, 2003 at 01:28:23PM +, Marc van Dongen wrote:
Klaus Guntermann ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: Indeed that would be nice. But I do not have an idea how to achieve
: that.
: The problem is that \pause inserts something into the resulting pdf/dvi
: output stream to control
Klaus Guntermann ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: Indeed that would be nice. But I do not have an idea how to achieve
: that.
: The problem is that \pause inserts something into the resulting pdf/dvi
: output stream to control the post processor. Thus there is some care
: needed to place the uses
Marc van Dongen writes:
If you put the pause at the start of a paragraph before which you want a pause
then in my experience the vertical layout frequently (if not always) screws up
Marc is right.
In such cases the sequence
\leavevmode\pause
may help though, if you cannot put the \pause
Klaus Guntermann ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: In such cases the sequence
: \leavevmode\pause
: may help though, if you cannot put the \pause at the end of the
: previous section, e.g. because that was verbatim material.
That worked and was useful.
For lecture presentations I have an environment
Jean-Christophe Dubacq writes:
Often enough, when using slides with ppower4 and little vertical space,
I am bothered by the fact that \pause corrupts the vertical spacing
(ie it does not act as equivalent to \let\pause\relax). I must take care
to put my \pause in awkward places (before