On Mon, 7 May 2012 22:25:37, Wolfgang Schuster
schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com wrote:
Am 07.05.2012 um 15:03 schrieb Robert Blackstone:
On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl
wrote
On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Sometimes however the example is placed at
On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 15:03, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Thank you, Hans, for your quick reply. Unfortunately it does not help
me. The result is basically the same as when I write on
\at{page}[ref], except that, instead of on page 20, I get at page
20, (with the float sitting on page 20).
On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Dear list,
Presently I am working on a book that contains many musical examples, some of
them rather large (even page-filling). It is difficult to predict where they
will finally be placed, at least when I do not want to spoil the layout too
much
On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl
wrote
On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Sometimes however the example is placed at the same page as the text
discussing it.
Is there any trick to adapt the reference to this situation, so that,
instead of saying, for
Am 07.05.2012 um 15:03 schrieb Robert Blackstone:
On Mon, May 7, 2012 at 12:00 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl
wrote
On 6-5-2012 23:18, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Sometimes however the example is placed at the same page as the text
discussing it.
Is there any trick to adapt the reference
Dear list,
Presently I am working on a book that contains many musical examples, some of
them rather large (even page-filling). It is difficult to predict where they
will finally be placed, at least when I do not want to spoil the layout too
much by forcing every example to be placed at the