Le 08.03.2009 01:00, John Jason Jordan a écrit :
> On Sun, 08 Mar 2009 00:34:43 +0100
> Jean-Baptiste Faure <[email protected]> dijo:
>
>   
>> Le 07.03.2009 21:59, John Jason Jordan a écrit :
>>     
>>> I have a formula in Writer 3.01 (Ubuntu Intrepid) which almost works.
>>> The code is:
>>>
>>> left lbrace alignl stack {left [ +liquid right ]~"___"~"]"rsub word #
>>> left [ +nasal right ]~"___"~"]"rsub ~"___"~"]"rsub word # left [ stack
>>> {+syllabic} # {+front} right ]~"___"~"]"rsub word  # "___ " _word left
>>> [ +syllabic right ] }  right rbrace 
>>>
>>> You can test this by copying and pasting the above code into the
>>> formula editor in your installation of OOo. (But watch out for the line
>>> endings that my e-mail client may have entered.)
>>>
>>> The problem is "left [ stack {+syllabic} # {+front} right ]
>>> ~"___"~"]"rsub word." This is supposed to stack, but it does not. 
>>>
>>> The only thing I can think of is that there might be a limitation in
>>> OOo Math where you can have only one stack in a formula - i.e., you
>>> can't nest a stack within a stack. If that is so, then I am stuck. But
>>> if the problem is just that I haven't got the code right, I'm hoping
>>> there is an expert on formulas here who can tell me what is wrong.
>>>       
>
>   
>> Try : "stack {{+syllabic} # {+front}}"
>>     
>
> That didn't work either.
>   
Interesting!
Which version of OOo are you using ?

If I write stack "{{+syllabic} # {+front}}" in the Math editor of my OOo
3.0.1 I get something like that :

+syllabic
+front

But you're right, for two item it's better to use binom.

Regards
JBF

-- 
Jean-Baptiste Faure
French N-L project Lead
http://fr.openoffice.org

Seuls des formats ouverts peuvent assurer la pérennité de vos documents.



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