As I understand, whenever org sees something like "\something" it will
understand that this is a latex command and it will just write it as it is
in the exported latex file. Therefore, if you put something like
#+LATEX_HEADER: \newcommand{\blue}[1] {\textcolor{blue}{#1}}
in the beginning of the or
Darlan,
Thank you again. I think I understand the problem now.
On 2010-03-25 20:02, Darlan Cavalcante Moreira wrote:
Summarizing, define your macros as Latex macros instead of TeX ones and
they should work. That is, something like \J{XXX}.
Currently, the definition is
\newfontfamily{\J}[
I think this behavior in org-mode is correct.
For instance, suppose we have the heading below
,
| * Some heading
| - \textbf{lalala}
| - {\textbf lelele}
| - \alert{lilili}
`
In the first item org will recognize this is a Latex command and the
brackets will be passed to Latex withou
Dear Darlan,
Thanks for your detailed explanation. I now got it working and am
really happy with it.
Now there is one remaining problem with my presentation (which is
different, which is why I changed the header line): I do have some
words on some heading line that are in a different language a
In Beamer, you may specify the overlay for each item as below
\begin{itemize}
\item <+-> appear from start (could be <1->, but <+-> is better in case we
change item order)
\item <2> only showed in the second "page of the slide"
\item <3-4> showed in pages 3 and 4
\item <4-> showed fro
Dear Matt,
On 2010-03-24 9:01, Matt Lundin wrote:
You need to set the default overlay argument on the frame (i.e., [<+-]).
This instructs LaTeX to create slides that reveal the items in the frame
one by one.
If you want to enable this behavior for all slides, you can place the
following line be
Hi Christian,
Christian Wittern writes:
> On 2010-03-24 1:08, Thomas S. Dye wrote:
>>
>>
>> Aloha Christian,
>>
>> Please see the beamer documentation for
>> \beamerdefaultoverlayspecification. You can likely set it to yield
>> the behavior you're after.
>>
> Thomas,
> Hmm, there does not seem