Hi all,
thank you very much for your answers:
Sébastien Miquel writes:
> I think special blocks are a good fit for this purpose.
"Fraga, Eric" writes:
> Have you tried /special blocks/, as in […]
following this idea (also suggested by yantar92 on IRC) I tried this
approach but failed because o
On 17/10/2022 13:52, Damien Cassou wrote:
#+BOX: attention
This text will appear with a red background
If you have derived your export backend from ox-odt then you may use
something like
#+attr_odt: :type attention
or perhaps even
#+attr_linuxmag: :type attention
Does tha
Damien Cassou writes:
> I'm not sure what kind of markup to use nor how to transcode that
> markup. I tried with:
>
> #+BOX: attention
> This text will appear with a red background
>
> Does that make sense? Do you have a better suggestion?
Note that #+BOX is not a valid affiliated keywor
Hi Damien,
On Monday, 17 Oct 2022 at 08:52, Damien Cassou wrote:
> I'm not sure what kind of markup to use nor how to transcode that
> markup. I tried with:
Have you tried /special blocks/, as in
#+begin_attention
This text will appear with a red backround.
#+end_attention
? In LaTeX and HTML,
Hi,
Damien Cassou writes:
I'm implementing an odt-based exporter for a French magazine named
GNU/Linux Magazine. This magazine defines several kinds of boxes, which
are small paragraphs of a certain type among "Default", "Attention",
"Warning" and "PAO". When published, the magazine will change
Hi,
I'm implementing an odt-based exporter for a French magazine named
GNU/Linux Magazine. This magazine defines several kinds of boxes, which
are small paragraphs of a certain type among "Default", "Attention",
"Warning" and "PAO". When published, the magazine will change the
background of these