Hi all,
I am following up on a question I posted here a while ago to show my progress in
case it can help others and to ask for a few clarifications. I would appreciate
any feedback.
My goal is to add a label to source blocks on HTML export to indicate the name
of the file to which the block i
Adam Porter writes:
> Sharon Kimble writes:
>
>> In an org-mode document which is then converted I'm using the latex
>> glossary package, which shows my glossary items as '\gls{foo}'. I'm now
>> getting to the stage of having a paper copy of the latexed PDF but am
>> finding that the glossary it
Grant Rettke writes:
> On Sat, Oct 8, 2016 at 3:40 AM, Thierry Banel wrote:
>> But... Is Leslie killing LaTex?
>
> No. LaTeX is a markup/programming-language and it /could/ be compiled
> directly to whatever new ideal format arises, too.
See http://tug.org/tex4ht/ which converts TeX's dvi outpu
On Sat, Oct 8, 2016 at 3:40 AM, Thierry Banel wrote:
> But... Is Leslie killing LaTex?
No. LaTeX is a markup/programming-language and it /could/ be compiled
directly to whatever new ideal format arises, too.
Hello,
Michael Fiano writes:
> If you visit an empty file buffer (0 bytes), turn auto-revert-mode on, and
> capture something to this file, it will appear as if the buffer is still
> empty. The cursor appears to be on an empty first line, but in reality, the
> rest of the file contents are off s
Hello,
Michael Fiano writes:
> If I create a capture template that creates a headline such as:
>
> "* %? :note:\n", then upon capturing the note tag is correctly shifted over
> to org-tags-column.
>
> However, if I position the %? cursor to be:
>
> %?:note:
> :note:%?
>
> or anywhere in between,
Last week I attended a lecture by Leslie Lamport, author of LaTex:
"How to Write a 21st Century Proof".
His answer: write in a structured, hierarchical way.
At the deepest level lie obvious assertions on which the proof is built.
The best medium, he said, is hypertext.
Hypertext gives the ability
On 8 October 2016 at 03:31, Nick Dokos wrote:
> Philip Hudson writes:
>
>> On 7 October 2016 at 23:14, Nick Dokos wrote:
>>> E.g.
>>>
>>> #+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{palatino}
>
> I should have said that this changes the font for the whole document.
>
>> Right, that's one of the packages I found
On 8 October 2016 at 09:19, Philip Hudson wrote:
> On 8 October 2016 at 03:31, Nick Dokos wrote:
>> Philip Hudson writes:
>>
>>> On 7 October 2016 at 23:14, Nick Dokos wrote:
E.g.
#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{palatino}
>>
>> I should have said that this changes the font for the wh
First time out, very disappointing and confusing results.
Having created a styled example.odt file as per instructions in the manual...
(info "(org) Applying custom styles")
(BTW, the string "Stylist" does not appear anywhere in LibreOffice's
UI; there's more than enough difficulty here without
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