paper.cls formats the description label without bold, so LyX should do the
same on screen. Note that simply removing the Series line does not help,
because Description is already defined in some include.
polyglossia is used by default and \make@lr is only defined
by babel. Modifying the preamble fixes XeTeX export and pdfTeX
continues to work.
See the following thread for more information:
http://www.mail-archive.com/lyx-devel@lists.lyx.org/msg181220.html
Thanks to Enrico for the patch.
Without this, the template gives a BibTeX error because
there are two \bibstyle commands in the .aux.
This would have broken backwards compatibility but RJournal.layout
has not yet been in a LyX release. Further, the journal made a
significant change (moving to a single column instead of two)
so any submitter would need to update the .sty anyway.
This fixes an option conflict error when using
RJournal.sty v0.12 (the newest).
Previous versions of the .sty also provided 'url'
so they should still work with the layout.
- Additional.lyx: update description and convert some TeX code to the multicolumn inset
- multicol.module: restore the preamble settings that was accidentally removed bin the previous commit
- mention that the aa class loads natbib to avoid compilation errors
- the aa package contains an outdated an customized version of natbib.sty. This file only works with aa, but breaks the compilation of many other files on your system, therefore remove the bibliography and replace it by BibTeX
- add a note about the encoding
- make template compilable
- update it according to the latest AEA guidelines
- add 4 missing styles to the layout:
* \keywords
* \JEL
* figurenotes environment
* tablenotes environment
The layout now takes care of \begin{article} and \end{article}
by using \AtBeginDocument and \AtEndDocument.
This cleans up the template a little by removing some ERT. The
user no longer needs to read the two notes explaining why the
ERT boxes were necessary. The user also does not need to think
about why this LaTeX environment exists.
The default citation capability of LaTeX is not a true numerical
citation engine, rather it uses a mixture of labels/numbers. Thus
we now distinguish them: "numerical" always increments the bibitem
counter and uses its value as a numerical citation label, while
"default" only uses the bibitem counter when no label is provided.
LyX file format incremented to 471.