Dotan Cohen wrote: >> Templates are invaluable when you want to use a consistent style across >> documents. Otherwise you would need to copy the styles from one document >> to another all the times. >> > > But they can be switched after the document is created? I'm at the
I supposed you can make a document use the default template, effectively stripping your custom styles from it. But I have never tried this with OOo. If you could report back your experiences, it would be much appreciated. > university right now, so I can't play around with it. But I will do > that soon. I really need to read TFM more. > >> I supposed it depends on what you want the final product to be. LaTeX >> supports glyphs, ligatures, macros and very sophisticated typesetting >> algorithms. For serious documents, I bet LaTeX can outperform HTML >> anytime in the final 'look and feel'. >> > > That was never a question. But I don't think that I'm the "serious > documents" range, and the learning curve is worse than emacs: > http://unix.rulez.org/~calver/pictures/curves.jpg Nope, nothing can beat emacs! :D (BTW, I use emacs all the time, and vim for some system related tasks) -- Please reply to this list only. I read this list on its corresponding newsgroup on gmane.org. Replies sent to my email address are just filtered to a folder in my mailbox and get periodically deleted without ever having been read. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
