On 16.08.19 18:08, Paul A. Rubin wrote:
On 8/16/19 11:30 AM, Wolfgang Engelmann wrote:

On 16.08.19 17:13, Daniel wrote:
On 2019-08-16 07:18, Anders Ekberg wrote:

On 2019Aug15, at 22:16, Daniel <xraco...@gmx.de> wrote:

On 2019-08-15 07:07, Andrew Parsloe wrote:
On 15/08/2019 1:28 PM, Daniel wrote:
On 2019-08-14 20:23, Paul A. Rubin wrote:
On 8/14/19 7:35 AM, Dr Eberhard Lisse wrote:
Me three :-)-O

el

On 14/08/2019 07:15, Daniel wrote:
Hi,

I just discovered the new feature to edit the preamble externally.
However, I couldn't find where to set the editor for this of any
documentation about it.  On MacOS it opens XCode which asks me to install additional application or Quit.  This renders the function pretty useless for me.  I have set a different application as default for TeX files but LyX seems ignore this.  How can I make LyX open my
favorite editor?

Best,
Daniel


Tools > Preferences > File Formats > LaTeX (plain) > Editor.

Paul


Thanks. So, I take it, there is no documentation of this.

Next, question: how do I set a Custom editor then? I tried "/Applications/texmaker.app" but nothing happens though "open /Applications/texmaker.app" in the terminal works just fine.

Daniel

Following Paul's response, I chose Custom and entered notepad++ (my preferred text editor) in the adjacent window. I've included C:\Program Files\Notepad++ (preceded and followed by semicolons) in the path string at Tools > Settings > Paths. It works (at least in windows).
Andrew
Thanks for checking. Might be a macos bug then.

Daniel
Tried to get it to work on MacOS (with BBEdit, but didn’t succeed. I think what I get wrong is what to put in the path (tried bot Application and into the BBEdit package) and what to put in the command.

Anders



I managed to get LyX to work with the default application by just using the command "open" (without quotes) as Custom Editor.

Daniel

Daniel, this is for MacOS? Could somebody describe how to do if not MacOS and not Windows? Is it described somewhere?

Wolfgang

Wolfgang: You are on Linux, correct? The menu sequence I specified above (Tools > Preferences > File Formats > LaTeX (plain) > Editor) is how you do it for Linux. If your editor does not appear in the drop-down list, you select "Custom" and put the command to run the editor in the box next to the word Custom.

Paul

Thanks, Paul!


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