Le 13/10/2015 18:47, Steve Litt a écrit :
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 09:02:17 +0200 Jean-Marc Lasgouttes
wrote:
Le 12/10/15 18:19, Steve Litt a écrit :
What's so special about void linux?
Minimal, solid, modular, adaptable, DIY friendly. Matter of fact,
the only software that didn't run on it was
I don't know how much other things there are but
they are compressed HTML files.
Wikipedia gives quite good list of tools which can
extract files from them. Rebuilding back to CHM
might be harder.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Compiled_HTML_Help
Best regards,
Hannu Vuolasaho
--
Thanks for the replies. The file is the help section of
a CAD programme with 400 pages and many graphics.
I can print it directly to pdf but it needs editing, which
would be easier in Lyx, hence the question.
Richard, will look at importing into LO.
Gordon.
On Tue, 13 Oct 2015 09:02:17 +0200
Jean-Marc Lasgouttes wrote:
> Le 12/10/15 18:19, Steve Litt a écrit :
> >> What's so special about void linux?
> >
> > Minimal, solid, modular, adaptable, DIY friendly. Matter of fact,
> > the only software that didn't run on it was LyX.
>
> A bit too minimal,
On 10/13/2015 12:33 AM, Gordon Cooper wrote:
I need to edit an elderly .chm help file and produce it in pdf. The
easiest edit looks to be with Lyx.
What program produced this file? If it can import into LibreOffice,
then you can export LaTeX from there, and import that into LyX.
Richard
I'm writing a MS using revtex class, V. 4.1.
How do I insert specific commands for the RevTeX class 4.1, such as
\onlinecite?
I've found this post:
https://www.mail-archive.com/lyx-cvs@lists.lyx.org/msg09818.html
claiming that revtex4-1.layout supports \onlinecite.
Thanks.
--
Rudi Gaelzer
Insti
Le 12/10/15 18:19, Steve Litt a écrit :
What's so special about void linux?
Minimal, solid, modular, adaptable, DIY friendly. Matter of fact, the
only software that didn't run on it was LyX.
A bit too minimal, then. Complain to them :)
JMarc