On Monday 18 April 2005 02:33 am, Alexander Blüm wrote:
> hello,
>
> I am still a convinced LyX user and I've "infected" a few people around
> me to use it aswell. My girlfriend uses it for all kinds of documents
> now and gets good grades for homework (the professor likes the the
> layout - hehe).
> But I've also met a few very stubborn people, like most of my school.
> They say that you can solve any problem you're approaching with
> WORD2000...
> I'm running out of arguments.. They've not even tried LyX and knock it
> already. Any good arguments why one should use LyX instead of word?

I think a person should use Word (or in my case OpenOffice) for most stuff. If 
it's under 10,000 words, LyX is a hassle unless you're willing to accept ALL 
LyX's defaults. Here's why...

In WordPerfect 5.1, Word or OpenOffice, modifying a style is a 5 minute 
procedure. For very sophisticated styles it might take an hour. But in LyX, 
I've spent 2 days modifying one paragraph style (Environment in LyX speak). 
Meanwhile, although WordPerfect 5.0 had character styles in May 1988, and 
Word had styles at least as early as the early 1990's, LyX still does not 
have character styles (something I keep urging the developers to put in). In 
summary, changing the default look of a document class is a HUGE time sink.

How different things become when your document exceeds 20,000 words. Now Word, 
WordPerfect and OpenOffice start having problems. I know for a fact that Word 
97's table of contents is inaccurate, and I've had to come back through and 
hand tweak page numbers. You've seen other posts in this thread mentioning 
that cross references are inaccurate. Unlike LyX/LaTeX, Word is not at heart 
a typesetter -- it doesn't know how to lay out a page just right -- the 
resulting document isn't as good looking. Bottom line -- if you're writing a 
150 page book, LyX produces a much better looking product without all the 
fine tuning you'd need with Word. Considering that a 150 page book is at 
least a 2 month project, so what if you spend a week tweaking styles? The 
result is more than worth it.

Another winning point for LyX is the LyX mailing list. If U have trouble with 
Word, I have no idea where you'd go or who you'd ask, but if you email the 
LyX list, there are probably at least 50 LaTeX experts who have seen your 
problem before and can give you guidance. Herbert's page 
(http://www.texnik.de/) has ways to do almost anything. Kathryn Andersen's 
excellent "Using LyX For DTP" page at 
http://www.katspace.net/lyx/lyxhow.html. I've laid out "Writing 
Self-Published Books with Lyx" at 
http://www.troubleshooters.com/linux/lyx/index.htm and "LyX Quickstart" at 
http://www.troubleshooters.com/lpm/200210/200210.htm.

In summary, my opinion is that you'd have to have rocks in your head to use 
LyX for a doc under 10,000 words, unless you're willing to accept every 
default of your document class. However, as the doc surpasses 20,000 words, 
and certainly 40,000 words, you'd have to have rocks in your head to use 
Word, or any similar wordProcessor, because LyX does a much better job of 
creating a uniform document.

SteveT

Steve Litt
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