On Monday 11 June 2007 18:59, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Monday 11 June 2007 17:42, you wrote:
> > On Mon, Jun 11, 2007 at 02:33:31PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> > > LyX math is so new to me that I don't know exactly what I want, yet I
> > > need to have it pretty much nailed down before I begin the boo
On Monday 11 June 2007 17:42, you wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 11, 2007 at 02:33:31PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> > LyX math is so new to me that I don't know exactly what I want, yet I
> > need to have it pretty much nailed down before I begin the book.
>
> Yet you decided already that typing in LaTeX and
On Mon, Jun 11, 2007 at 02:33:31PM -0400, Steve Litt wrote:
> LyX math is so new to me that I don't know exactly what I want, yet I need to
> have it pretty much nailed down before I begin the book.
Yet you decided already that typing in LaTeX and hitting C-m is easier.
Quite interesting.
Andre
Yup, I did exactly that, from the beggining. But the text is right aligned.
That's why I changed to tables in my solution.
On 6/11/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Monday 11 June 2007 14:33, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Monday 11 June 2007 14:19, Julio Rojas wrote:
> > Now I know. Sorry E
On Monday 11 June 2007 14:33, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Monday 11 June 2007 14:19, Julio Rojas wrote:
> > Now I know. Sorry Enrico for beeing such a pain.
> >
> > BTW Steve, doesn't matter that the text is right aligned?
>
> Hi Julio,
>
> On my test.lyx, the explanation text is left aligned, not right
On Monday 11 June 2007 14:19, Julio Rojas wrote:
> Now I know. Sorry Enrico for beeing such a pain.
>
> BTW Steve, doesn't matter that the text is right aligned?
Hi Julio,
On my test.lyx, the explanation text is left aligned, not right. Don't worry
about being a pain. Now that I've seen how good
Now I know. Sorry Enrico for beeing such a pain.
BTW Steve, doesn't matter that the text is right aligned?
On 6/11/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 20:13, Enrico Forestieri wrote:
> Steve Litt writes:
> > =
> > \d
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 20:13, Enrico Forestieri wrote:
> Steve Litt writes:
> > =
> > \documentclass[12pt]{amsbook}
> > \newcommand{\cn}[1]{\texttt{\char92 #1}}
> >
> > \begin{document}
> > \begin{align*}
> > x&=5y+3z+221a+43621&&\qquad\text{hellox}\
Nope, you're right Enrico. Steve only wants to achieve the task at hand with
as little ERT as possible.
On 6/6/07, Enrico Forestieri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Julio Rojas writes:
> He knows that Enrico, it's only that, when you're writing a book, it's a
> little cumbersome to do it with LaTeX
Julio Rojas writes:
> He knows that Enrico, it's only that, when you're writing a book, it's a
> little cumbersome to do it with LaTeX all the time.
I think I was also suggesting how to get that layout in LyX, or am I missing
something here?
--
Enrico
He knows that Enrico, it's only that, when you're writing a book, it's a
little cumbersome to do it with LaTeX all the time.
On 6/6/07, Enrico Forestieri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Steve Litt writes:
> =
> \documentclass[12pt]{amsbook}
> \newcomm
Steve Litt writes:
> =
> \documentclass[12pt]{amsbook}
> \newcommand{\cn}[1]{\texttt{\char92 #1}}
>
> \begin{document}
> \begin{align*}
> x&=5y+3z+221a+43621&&\qquad\text{hellox}\\
> 436x+227y+488z+221& = a&&\qquad\text{Steve was here}\\
> a&=b&&\qq
Yep, that did it. Thanks Julio.
It's not exactly how I want, but I'm pretty sure I can fix it so it lines up
exactly how I want.
I like the method I showed earlier, *if I were using pure LaTeX*. But your
method is much easier and less complex from within LyX.
The one thing I still need to chec
Steve, I believe it is solved. Check the attached files.
On 6/5/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks Julio,
Your example was beautiful, but when I modified the equations a little
bit,
the equal signs no longer lined up. See the attached modification of your
file to see the problem.
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 10:17, Todd Denniston wrote:
> Out of curiosity I looked in my TLC2 and noticed the title of the section
> is "Multiple alignments: align and flalign"
>
> A quick google
> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=align+flalign&btnG=Google+Search
> on those keys gets the followi
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
My first try at explanations with equations failed:
Preamble
\newlength{\expsize}
\setlength{\expsize}{2in}
\newcommand{\mathexp}[1]{\qquad\qquad \makebox[\expsize][c]{#1}}
\newcommand{\boldd}[1]{\textbf{#1}}
EndPreamble
CharStyle mathexp
LatexType Command
LatexName
Thanks Julio,
Your example was beautiful, but when I modified the equations a little bit,
the equal signs no longer lined up. See the attached modification of your
file to see the problem.
Too bad -- it would have been much easier than anything else I can think of.
Now I'm considering creating
Sorry Steve, my mistake. Attached is the 1.4.x version. Hope it works.
On 6/5/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 10:16, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 June 2007 09:58, Julio Rojas wrote:
> > I don't really follow what you mean by "aligned equal signs". So,
> >
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 10:16, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 June 2007 09:58, Julio Rojas wrote:
> > I don't really follow what you mean by "aligned equal signs". So,
> > attached is a new LyX document and the resulting PDF. Check the four
> > cases, because I believe there lies the solution.
>
> On Tuesday 05 June 2007 09:45, Alan G Isaac wrote:
>> See section 8.2.7 of The LaTeX Companion 2nd edition,
>> an indispensible aid to mathbook writing projects
>> (and otherwise excellent).
On Tue, 5 Jun 2007, Steve Litt apparently wrote:
> I don't have that book -- I have Guide to LaTeX b
Steve Litt wrote:
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 09:45, Alan G Isaac wrote:
See section 8.2.7 of The LaTeX Companion 2nd edition,
an indispensible aid to mathbook writing projects
(and otherwise excellent).
Cheers,
Alan Isaac
Thanks Alan,
I don't have that book -- I have Guide to LaTeX by Kopka and
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 09:58, Julio Rojas wrote:
> I don't really follow what you mean by "aligned equal signs". So, attached
> is a new LyX document and the resulting PDF. Check the four cases, because
> I believe there lies the solution.
Thanks Julio,
What version of LyX is this in? I got an e
Hi all,
My first try at explanations with equations failed:
Preamble
\newlength{\expsize}
\setlength{\expsize}{2in}
\newcommand{\mathexp}[1]{\qquad\qquad \makebox[\expsize][c]{#1}}
\newcommand{\boldd}[1]{\textbf{#1}}
EndPreamble
CharStyle mathexp
LatexType Command
LatexName mathexp
Font
On Tuesday 05 June 2007 09:45, Alan G Isaac wrote:
> See section 8.2.7 of The LaTeX Companion 2nd edition,
> an indispensible aid to mathbook writing projects
> (and otherwise excellent).
>
> Cheers,
> Alan Isaac
Thanks Alan,
I don't have that book -- I have Guide to LaTeX by Kopka and Daly. Coul
I don't really follow what you mean by "aligned equal signs". So, attached
is a new LyX document and the resulting PDF. Check the four cases, because I
believe there lies the solution.
On 6/5/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks Julio,
I compiled and examined your LyX file, and for
See section 8.2.7 of The LaTeX Companion 2nd edition,
an indispensible aid to mathbook writing projects
(and otherwise excellent).
Cheers,
Alan Isaac
Thanks Julio,
I compiled and examined your LyX file, and for me, the equal signs didn't line
up. The explanations lined up beautifully, but not the equal signs or for
that matter the things to the left and right of the equal signs.
For the purposes of my book, I think it's pretty important that
I still believe the table is the easier way. I'm attaching an example.
Please, check it.
On 6/5/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Monday 04 June 2007 21:48, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Monday 04 June 2007 04:47, you wrote:
> > To put text in equations, I use \mbox
> > Jean
>
> Thanks Je
On Monday 04 June 2007 21:48, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Monday 04 June 2007 04:47, you wrote:
> > To put text in equations, I use \mbox
> > Jean
>
> Thanks Jean,
>
> I tested that and it works, but stuff doesn't line up the way I'd like.
> What I'd really like is an \eqnarray* with 4 columns instead
On Monday 04 June 2007 04:47, you wrote:
> To put text in equations, I use \mbox
> Jean
Thanks Jean,
I tested that and it works, but stuff doesn't line up the way I'd like. What
I'd really like is an \eqnarray* with 4 columns instead of 3, so I could do
something like this:
\begin{eqnarray*}
Thanks Jean,
If have a nice automated set of environments/charstyles to do this from within
LyX, so that you simply type the equation and explanation with their proper
environment or charstyle, I'd like to see them. Otherwise hopefully I can
make my own (and show them to the list if/when they w
To put text in equations, I use \mbox
Jean
Le 2 juin 07 à 17:15, Steve Litt a écrit :
Hi all,
I'd like to have an explanation to the left of each equation,
something like
this:
2x +4 = 3x -14 Given
2x +4 - 4 = 3x - 14 -4 Subtract 4 from each side
2x = 3x - 18Simplify
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
I'd like to have an explanation to the left of each equation, something like
this:
2x +4 = 3x -14 Given
2x +4 - 4 = 3x - 14 -4 Subtract 4 from each side
2x = 3x - 18Simplify
2x - 3x = 3x - 18 - 3x Subtract 3x from each side
-1x = -18
Steve Litt wrote:
Hi all,
I'd like to have an explanation to the left of each equation, something like
this:
2x +4 = 3x -14 Given
2x +4 - 4 = 3x - 14 -4 Subtract 4 from each side
2x = 3x - 18Simplify
2x - 3x = 3x - 18 - 3x Subtract 3x from each side
-1x = -18
I believe the best way to do this is with a table.
On 6/2/07, Steve Litt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
I'd like to have an explanation to the left of each equation, something like
this:
2x +4 = 3x -14 Given
2x +4 - 4 = 3x - 14 -4 Subtract 4 from each side
2x = 3x - 18
Hi all,
I'd like to have an explanation to the left of each equation, something like
this:
2x +4 = 3x -14 Given
2x +4 - 4 = 3x - 14 -4 Subtract 4 from each side
2x = 3x - 18Simplify
2x - 3x = 3x - 18 - 3x Subtract 3x from each side
-1x = -18 Simplify
x = 1
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