Re: Less or equal sign (\leq) appearing as a dot in Arch Linux
Thank you very much Pavel. I manually added /usr/share/lyx/fonts/ to /etc/fonts/fonts.conf and updated fc-cache . The font cmsy10 (and many others) appear as systems fonts, but the \leq sign still appears as a dot :/ On 7/29/19 5:22 PM, Pavel Sanda wrote: On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 12:07:13PM +0200, HAROLDO GAMBINI SANTOS wrote: Any suggestions ? Sounds like your system is not aware of symbols in the file cmsy10.ttf (and probably other font files normally installed with lyx into /usr/share/lyx/fonts/). If you have standard lyx install I would report this problem to to arch package maintainer. HTH, Pavel -- = Haroldo Gambini Santos Computing Department Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto - UFOP email: haro...@ufop.edu.br home/research page: www.decom.ufop.br/haroldo It has long been an axiom of mine that the little things are infinitely the most important. -- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, "A Case of Identity"
Re: [ANNOUNCE] LyX 2.3.3
On 7/29/19 1:26 PM, Liviu Andronic wrote: Hi all, On 7/11/19, Scott Kostyshak wrote: On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 11:00:57AM -0400, Maria Gouskova wrote: Any idea when Liviu's PPA and/or the official Debian release are going to be updated to 2.3.3? I'm CC'ing Liviu. I think he's busy but he'll let us know when he can update the PPA. Sorry for the delay. I've now uploaded the Ubuntu packages on the PPA: https://launchpad.net/~lyx-devel/+archive/ubuntu/release Please test and report back if it works as expected for you. Regards, Liviu Thanks Liviu! I updated this morning, and it seems to be working fine on Linux Mint Sylvia. Paul
Re: [ANNOUNCE] LyX 2.3.3
Hi all, On 7/11/19, Scott Kostyshak wrote: > On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 11:00:57AM -0400, Maria Gouskova wrote: > >> Any idea when Liviu's PPA and/or the official Debian release are going to >> be updated to 2.3.3? > > I'm CC'ing Liviu. I think he's busy but he'll let us know when he can > update the PPA. > Sorry for the delay. I've now uploaded the Ubuntu packages on the PPA: https://launchpad.net/~lyx-devel/+archive/ubuntu/release Please test and report back if it works as expected for you. Regards, Liviu > Maria, if you are by chance interested in compiling LyX, start a > separate email thread and we can help you get it set up. This way, if > you are interested, you could use the 2.3.x branch, which is a > development version (i.e., updated every day), but is quite stable and > is what most developers use for daily work (I believe). I know this was > not the suggestion you were looking for, but I offer it nonetheless. > > Best > > Scott >
Re: Less or equal sign (\leq) appearing as a dot in Arch Linux
On Mon, Jul 29, 2019 at 12:07:13PM +0200, HAROLDO GAMBINI SANTOS wrote: > Any suggestions ? Sounds like your system is not aware of symbols in the file cmsy10.ttf (and probably other font files normally installed with lyx into /usr/share/lyx/fonts/). If you have standard lyx install I would report this problem to to arch package maintainer. HTH, Pavel
Re: Bug in LyX regarding page format and hyperref
On 27-Jul-19 9:32 AM, Marius Shekow wrote: > Hi again, > > I forgot to mention that you also need to set custom page margins. An > example file is attached. > > Best regards! > > Am 26.07.2019 um 20:14 schrieb Marius Shekow: >> Hi, >> >> I've noticed that the recent Lyx versions (2.3.x) generate a PDF that >> is of "US Letter" size, even though I've explicitly set up A4 in the >> document settings (Page Layout -> Format). This happens once I enable >> Hyperref support in the document settings. >> >> As suggested in >> https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/356545/why-does-the-hyperref-package-change-the-paper-size >> >> >> it seems that adding "a4paper" as custom option to the documentclass >> seems to work. This is extreme expert knowledge that you should not >> expect your users to have. When a normal/novice user sets up A4, then >> the generated PDF should be A4 (and the same goes for any other page >> format). >> >> Is this something that you could fix? >> >> Best regards! >> Marius >> Hello Marius, As you may be aware of that LyX serves as a front-end for the LaTeX system. When you select a paper size in LyX, LyX -probably- simply adds that paper size as an option to the document class in the generated tex file. On the other hand, LaTeX is a sophisticated typesetting system, where many packages and classes are used. Sometimes, some of these packages and classes have conflicts and associated rules. When you try to use some specific packages for a given class, you may not be allowed to change some settings. As far as I observe, LyX developers are trying to identify these conflicts and implement LyX-based solutions for some of them. However, it is not always possible to follow every single one of these conflicts/rules since there are so many of these packages and classes. Further, LaTeX packages are being updated constantly and may result a conflict after an update, which makes it very difficult to track them. To put this in another way, if you are not using LyX, but using conventional text-based LaTeX typesetting, you will probably encounter these issues as well. If this issue is a well-known issue, LyX developers might have provided a solution in LyX. However, it is not always possible for LyX to have a solution. In this case, you are supposed to identify the issue and provide a solution by yourself, which we LyX-used do all the time. Best Regards, Baris -- ↓↓ Please bottom-post. Start your reply here:
Less or equal sign (\leq) appearing as a dot in Arch Linux
Hi, I know that this was asked before here, but I tried the proposed solutions (install computer modern fonts) and it didn't work. I'm using LyX 2.3.3 on Arch Linux and the \leq symbol (less-or-equal) is displayed as a dot. I tried to select other fonts in Tools -> Preferences -> Screen fonts without success. Any suggestions ? I included attached an screenshot. [image: leqnotshow.jpg] Thanks ! -- = Haroldo Gambini Santos Computing Department Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto - UFOP email: haro...@ufop.edu.br home/research page: www.decom.ufop.br/haroldo It has long been an axiom of mine that the little things are infinitely the most important. -- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, "A Case of Identity"