mirror of
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b04ba1da11
somebody interested in this will have to do it. Read ChangeLog for a few other changes. git-svn-id: svn://svn.lyx.org/lyx/lyx-devel/trunk@274 a592a061-630c-0410-9148-cb99ea01b6c8
550 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
550 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
### This file is part of
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### =====================================================
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###
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### LyX, the High Level Word Processor
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###
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### Copyright 1995-1997 Matthias Ettrich & the LyX Team
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###
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### =====================================================
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# The file lyxrc.example is a template to write your own lyxrc file.
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# If you copy/rename it to lyxrc in the current directory, it will
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# give global options for all LyX users. It is also possible to copy
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# this file to $HOME/.lyx/lyxrc so that the configuration applies to a
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# particular user.
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#
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# Several of these settings have defaults that are auto-detected when you use
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# the menu option Options->Reconfigure. You can see their value by looking at
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# the file $HOME/.lyx/lyxrc.defaults. Any setting in this file will override
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# the defaults.
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#
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# BIND SECTION ###########################################################
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#
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# Before defining your own key-bindings, select one of the available default
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# binding sets. These are resource files (like this one) that define a
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# large set of (keyboard) bindings. These files live in bind directory of
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# the LyX system directory and have in general the .bind suffix.
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# Currently, you can choose from the following flavors:
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#
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# cua.bind for Windows-, Mac- and Motif-like bindings
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# emacs.bind for Emacs-like bindings.
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#
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# The \bind_file command looks in the LyX bind directory for a file
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# of the given name, but a full path can also be given. If you have
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# a bind file in your ~/.lyx/bind/ directory, it will be preferred
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# over a system wide bind file. Default is `cua'.
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#\bind_file cua
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#\bind_file emacs
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# Based on the default, you can now change part or all of it with the
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# \bind command. For example, when you want the delete key to do the
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# backspace action, uncomment the following line:
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#\bind "Delete" "delete-backward"
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# However, if you're not at all happy with the default bindings,
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# the most logical thing to do would be to use one of the system
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# wide bind files as a template and place your own version in
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# ~/.lyx/bind/mine_is_best.bind and change the above \bind_file
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# to this instead:
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#\bind_file mine_is_best
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# Tip: Use "lyx -dbg 4" to survey how LyX interprets your keybindings.
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#
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# MISC SECTION ###########################################################
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#
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# Set to false if you don't want the current selection to be replaced
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# automatically by what you type. Default is true.
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#\auto_region_delete false
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# This is the time interval between auto-saves (in seconds).
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# 0 means no auto-save, default is 300 for five minutes.
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#\autosave 600
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# LyX asks for a second confirmation to exit if you exit with changed
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# documents that you don't want to save. You can turn this confirmation off
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# (LyX will still ask to save changed documents) with the following line.
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# We recommend to keep the confirmation, though.
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#\exit_confirmation false
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# LyX continously displays names of last command executed, along with a list
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# of defined short-cuts for it in the minibuffer.
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# It requires some horsepower to function, so you can turn it off, if LyX
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# seems slow to you, by uncommenting this line:
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#\display_shortcuts false
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# Define which program to use to view dvi files here.
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# You can include any options you need by "quoting" the entire command.
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# You don't need to specify the paper-size and orientation, which is done
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# automatically by LyX (hence, your viewer has to interpret the -paper
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# option like xdvi does)
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# The default is "xdvi".
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# Example: the next line would use xdvi and display with shrink 2:
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#\view_dvi_command "xdvi -s 2"
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# It can get more involved. Expert users might prefer something like:
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#\view_dvi_command "xdvi -s 2 -expert -geometry 1014x720+0+0 -keep -margins 1.5"
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# LyX assumes that the default papersize should be usletter. If this is not
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# true for your site, use the next line to specify usletter, legal,
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# executive, a3, a4, a5, or b5 as the default papersize.
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#\default_papersize "a4"
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# Define which program to use to view postscript files here.
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# You can include any options you need by "quoting" the entire command
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# The default is auto-detected, but you might want to override it.
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# It is possible to get nice anti-aliased text (slower, but as nice as
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# xdvi) by using something like
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#\view_ps_command "ghostview -swap -sDEVICE=x11alpha"
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# Define which program to use to full screen view included postscript
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# pictures. You can not include any options. The default is auto-detected.
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#\view_pspic_command ghostview
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# Define which program to use to use as postscript interpreter for included
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# images.
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# You can not include any options. The default is "gs" if it can be found.
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# If you have a slow computer, you should consider turning off the WYSIWYG
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# display of includes images, by using this command:
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#\ps_command ""
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# Define which program to use to run "chktex".
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# You should include options that turn different warnings on and off.
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# Default is "chktex -n1 -n3 -n6 -n9 -n22 -n25 -n30 -n38"
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# Check the ChkTeX documentation for info on what the flags mean.
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# Example: use this to ignore warnings about using "\ldots" instead of "..."
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#\chktex_command "chktex -n11 -n1 -n3 -n6 -n9 -22 -n25 -n30 -n38"
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# Define which program to use to translate latex to HTML.
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# You should include options. The default is autodetected: the programs
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# checked are tth, latex2html and hevea, and the default command lines
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# used are:
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#\html_command "tth -t '$$Fname'"
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#\html_command "latex2html -no_subdir -split 0 -show_section_numbers '$$FName'"
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#\html_command "hevea -s '$$FName'"
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# The variable name $$FName is replaced with the name of the .tex
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# file, and $$OutName is replaced with the name of the html file.
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# Example: use this to let math be italic with tth.
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#\html_command "tth -t -i $$FName"
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# If you want to pass extra flags to the LinuxDoc sgml scripts, insert them
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# here.
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# Example: the next line activates iso-latin1 support:
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#\sgml_extra_options -l
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# Keyboard Mapping. Use this to set the correct mapping file for your
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# keyboard, that is if you need one. You'll need one if you for instance
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# want to type German documents on an American keyboard. In that case,
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# uncomment these three lines:
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#\kbmap true
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#\kbmap_primary german
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#\kbmap_secondary american
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# The following keyboards are supported: american, czech, francais,
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# french, german, german-2, magyar, magyar-2, portuges, romanian,
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# slovak, slovene, transilvanian, turkish and turkish-f. Check
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# the lib/kbd directory if you want to write support for your language.
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# If you do, please submit it to lyx-devel@lists.lyx.org.
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# The Pause button is defined to be a three-way switch between primary
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# keyboard, secondary keyboard, and no keyboard mapping with the
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# following command. It is useful if you want to write in a language
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# not directly supported by your keyboard and you have defined a
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# custom keyboard mapping above.
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#\bind "Pause" "keymap-toggle"
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# This starts the lyxserver. The pipes get an additional extension
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# '.in' and '.out'. Only for advanced users.
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# \serverpipe "/home/chb/.lyxpipe"
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# Which command to use to invoke the reLyX script to convert
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# LaTeX files to LyX files. This setting is automatically
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# disabled if you do not have the appropriate Perl version
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# installed. In that case, the File->Import LaTeX command
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# will be disabled. If the reLyX command does work for you,
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# you can override that here by uncommenting this line:
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#\relyx_command "reLyX"
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#
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# If it doesn't work, you can disable the command by uncommenting
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# this line:
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#\relyx_command "none"
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#
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# SCREEN & FONTS SECTION #################################################
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#
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# DPI (dots per inch) of your monitor is auto-detected by LyX. If that goes
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# wrong, you can override the setting here:
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#\screen_dpi 100
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# The zoom percentage for screen fonts.
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# A setting of 100% will make the fonts roughly the same size as on paper.
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# However, since a screen is wider than a piece of paper, the default setting
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# is 150%.
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#\screen_zoom 100
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# LyX offers a faster method for drawing selected text if you uncomment the
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# following line. The trick is to invert the color-information. This will
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# switch between white and black and give almost random results for
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# other colors, so a white background is necessary. Any other settings of
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# the background color will be ignored for this reason. This setting
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# is useful on monochrome screens and on slow systems. Fast selection
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# can cause cosmetic problems with a few broken X servers.
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#\fast_selection true
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# If you don't like the default background or selection color, you can
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# set your own here:
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#\background_color white
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#\background_color lightyellow
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#
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# For reference, the defaults are:
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#\background_color linen
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#\selection_color lightblue
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# LyX normally doesn't update the cursor position if you move the scrollbar.
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# If you scroll the cursor off the screen and then start typing LyX will
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# move you back to where the cursor was. If you'd prefer to always have the
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# cursor on screen, bounded by the topmost and bottommost visible lines
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# -- much like XEmacs for example -- then uncomment the next line.
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#\cursor_follows_scrollbar true
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# The screen fonts used to display the text while editing
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# The defaults are:
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#\screen_font_roman "-*-times"
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#\screen_font_sans "-*-helvetica"
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#\screen_font_typewriter "-*-courier"
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# For some, this font looks better:
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#\screen_font_roman "-*-utopia"
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# Allow the use of scalable screen fonts? Default is true.
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# If you choose "false", LyX will use the closest existing size for a match.
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# Use this if the scalable fonts look bad and you have many fixed size fonts.
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#\screen_font_scalable false
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# Tip: Run lyx as "lyx -dbg 512" to learn which fonts are used.
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# The norm for the screen fonts. The default is iso8859-1, which is
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# the same as what LaTeX calls latin1.
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#\screen_font_encoding iso8859-2
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# The font for popups. It is set to
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# <font_popup>-*-*-*-?-*-*-*-*-<font_encoding>.
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# The default is:
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#\screen_font_popup "-*-helvetica-medium-r"
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# The font for menus (and groups titles in popups). It is set to
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# <font_menu>-*-*-*-?-*-*-*-*-<font_encoding>.
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# The default is:
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#\screen_font_menu "-*-helvetica-bold-r"
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# The font sizes used for calculating the scaling of the screen fonts.
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# You should only have to change these if the fonts on your screen look bad,
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# in which case you can fine tune the font selection size by size. LyX selects
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# font size according to this table, the monitor DPI setting and the current
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# zoom setting.
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# The format is:
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#\screen_font_sizes tiny smallest smaller small normal large larger largest huge huger
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#
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# This is the default in LyX (exactly what LaTeX does):
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#\screen_font_sizes 5.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 10.0 12.0 14.4 17.28 20.74 24.88
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#
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# TOOLBAR SECTION ########################################################
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#
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# Setup your favorite Toolbar here:
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# Only three commands are allowed inside the begin_toolbar and end_toolbar
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# directives:
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# \add <action> [<parameter>] adds an icon to the toolbar performing
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# "<action> <parameter>"
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# Examples:
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# \add font-size small
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# \add set-emph
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#
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# \layouts adds the layouts combo-box to the toolbar
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#
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# \separator adds some spacing to the toolbar
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#
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# These actions have icons (please give us more :-):
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# buffer-open, buffer-close, buffer-print, buffer-write, font-emph,
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# font-noun, font-free, footnote-insert, depth-next, copy, cut, paste,
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# tex-mode, math-mode, marginpar-insert, figure-insert, table-insert,
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# melt, lyx-quit, buffer-export ascii|latex, font-bold, font-sans,
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# buffer-typeset, buffer-view, buffer-view-ps, symbol_insert [parameter]
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#
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# All other lyx commands will get a "unknown" icon.
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#
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# This is the default toolbar:
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#\begin_toolbar
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#\layouts
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#\add buffer-open
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#\add buffer-write
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#\add buffer-print
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#\separator
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#\add cut
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#\add copy
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#\add paste
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#\separator
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#\add font-emph
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#\add font-noun
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#\add font-free
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#\separator
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#\add footnote-insert
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#\add marginpar-insert
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#\add depth-next
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#\separator
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#\add tex-mode
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#\add math-mode
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#\separator
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#\add figure-insert
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#\add table-insert
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#\end_toolbar
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#
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# PRINTER SECTION ########################################################
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#
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# The default printer to print on. If none is specified, LyX will use
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# the environment variable PRINTER. If that fails, the default is empty.
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#\printer ""
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# If you have setup (as we recommend you to do) your print program
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# (e.g. dvips) to take advantage of the particularities of the various
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# printers you have access to, then you should set the following to
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# true. Then LyX will pass the name of the destination printer to your
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# print command.
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# The default is false, because we have unfortunately to cope with
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# people who refuse to take the time to configure their system.
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# Note that you will probably have to change \print_spool_command below.
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#\print_adapt_output true
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# If you don't use dvips, you may specify your favorite print program
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# here. See other options at the end of this section to adapt LyX to
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# your print program.
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#\print_command dvips
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# Extra options to pass to printing program after everything
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# else, but before the filename of the DVI file to be printed.
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#\print_extra_options ""
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# When set, this printer option automatically prints to a file
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# and then calls a separate print spooling program on that file
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# with the given name and arguments.
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# This is set by default to 'lp' or 'lpr', depending on what your
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# system uses.
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# Set this to "" if you have set up dvips so that it sends
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# output to the right printer (remember to also use \print_adapt_output).
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#\print_spool_command ""
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# If you specify a printer name in the print dialog,
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# the following argument is prepended along with the printer name
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# after the spool command. The default is autodetected, along with
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# \print_spool_command determination.
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#\print_spool_printerprefix ""
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# Other print related options
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# The following options are only of interest to people who do not
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# use dvips as print command. You may safely skip to the end of this
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# section otherwise.
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# These specify the options to pass to the printer program to select the
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# corresponding features. These default to the options used for the dvips
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# program. Look at the man page for your favorite print program to learn
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# which options to use.
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# Normally you don't need to change this unless you use something other
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# than dvips.
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#\print_evenpage_flag -B
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#\print_oddpage_flag -A
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#\print_reverse_flag -r
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#\print_landscape_flag "-t landscape"
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#\print_pagerange_flag -pp
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#\print_copies_flag -c
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#\print_collcopies_flag -C
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#\print_paper_flag -t
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#\print_paper_dimension_flag -T
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# Option to pass to the print program to print on a specific printer.
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#\print_to_printer -P
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# Option to pass to the print program to print to a file.
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#\print_to_file -o
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# Extension of printer program output file. Usually .ps
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#\print_file_extension .ps
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# Sample configuration to use with dvilj4 for a HP Laserjet IV (or
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# better) printer [provided by Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>]:
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#\print_command dvilj4
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#\print_extra_options -q
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#\print_evenpage_flag "-D2 -r"
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#\print_oddpage_flag -D1
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#\print_reverse_flag -r
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#\print_landscape_flag -l
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#\print_pagerange_flag -p
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#\print_to_file -e
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#\print_file_extension .lj
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#\print_copies_flag -c
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#\print_collcopies_flag -c
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#\print_adapt_output false
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#
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# EXPORT SECTION ########################################################
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#
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# With this you can send a LyX-Document to a User-defined program. You
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# can specify by adding the tag $$FName where the filename should be
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# put on the defined command. if no $$FName is specified the file is
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# sent in standard input (stdin). There is no default command
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# specified. Example:
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#\custom_export_command "kghostview $$FName"
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# This is the default for the type of contents to be sent to the export
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# command: possible values are lyx, dvi, tex, ps and ascii.
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#\custom_export_format ps
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#
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# TEX SECTION ###########################################################
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#
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# LyX tries to auto-detect which command to use to invoke LaTeX(2e).
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# If the auto-detection for some reasons fail, you can override it
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# here:
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#\latex_command latex2e
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# The font encoding used for the LaTeX2e fontenc package.
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# T1 is highly recommended for non-English languages. LyX uses T1 as a
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# default if you have the ec fonts installed on your system.
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#\font_encoding T1
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# Choose "default" if T1 doesn't work for you for some reason:
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#\font_encoding default
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#
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# FILE SECTION ##########################################################
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#
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# The default path for your documents.
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# Default is $HOME
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#\document_path ~/Documents/
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# The file where the last-files information should be stored.
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# Default is ~/.lyx/lastfiles
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#\lastfiles ~/.lyx_lastfiles
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# Maximal number of lastfiles. Up to nine can appear in the file menu.
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# Default is four.
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#\num_lastfiles 9
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# Flag telling whether the lastfiles should be checked for existence.
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# Files that does not exist are left out of the lastfiles entries.
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# Default is true. If you use slow or removable media, such as networks
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# or floppy disks, you can speed up the starting time of LyX by disabling
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# this feature.
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#\check_lastfiles false
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# The path that LyX will set when offering you to choose a template.
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# Default is (System LyX dir)/templates
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#\template_path ~/.lyx/templates
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# The path that LyX will use to put temporary TeX outputs.
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# Default is /tmp/<unique directory for each instance of LyX>
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# containing <unique subdirectory for each buffer>
|
||
# If you set it, it will be /directory/<unique subdirectory for each buffer>
|
||
# (unless set to /tmp).
|
||
#\tempdir_path /usr/tmp
|
||
|
||
# If you set this flag, LyX will always use a temporary directory
|
||
# to put TeX outputs into. It is enabled by default.
|
||
# This directory is deleted when you quit LyX.
|
||
# You might want to avoid using a temporary directory in several
|
||
# cases:
|
||
# - LaTeX cannot find some files it needs;
|
||
# - you have a large number of include files, and you get messages
|
||
# saying that some LaTeX buffers overflow.
|
||
# Note that, even if tell LyX not to use a temporary directory, there
|
||
# will be cases where it will be forced to: this happens for example
|
||
# when typesetting a file in a read-only directory (documentation).
|
||
#\use_tempdir false
|
||
|
||
# This is the maximum line length of an exported ASCII file (LaTeX,
|
||
# SGML or plain text). Default is 75.
|
||
#\ascii_linelen 80
|
||
|
||
|
||
#
|
||
# FAX SECTION #############################################################
|
||
#
|
||
|
||
# In the following, the <$$something> strings are substituted by
|
||
# reasonable values by LyX. The 's are important as there may be spaces in
|
||
# the string. The default is auto-detected.
|
||
# This one is what is used with HylaFax:
|
||
#\fax_command "sendfax -n -h '$$Host' -c '$$Comment' -x '$$Enterprise' -d '$$Name'@'$$Phone' '$$FName'"
|
||
# Use this for the efax-command:
|
||
#\fax_command "faxsend '$$Phone' '$$FName'"
|
||
|
||
# This is the name of your phone book. It's per default situated in ~/.lyx/,
|
||
# but you can override that with an absolute path.
|
||
#\phone_book phonebook
|
||
|
||
# This is how to call an external FAX-program instead of the built-in.
|
||
# You may also insert $$FName to reference the PostScript file.
|
||
#\fax_program "myfaxprg '$$FName'"
|
||
#\fax_program tkhylafax
|
||
|
||
#
|
||
# ASCII EXPORT SECTION ###################################################
|
||
#
|
||
|
||
# The following entry can be used to define an external program to
|
||
# render tables in the ASCII output. If you specify "none", a simple
|
||
# internal routine is used. The default is auto-detected.
|
||
# The following line will use groff and output using latin-1 encoding
|
||
# (here $$FName is the input file and the output goes to stdout):
|
||
#\ascii_roff_command "groff -t -Tlatin1 $$FName"
|
||
|
||
#
|
||
# SPELLCHECKER SECTION ####################################################
|
||
#
|
||
|
||
# What command runs the spell checker? Default is "ispell" if it is
|
||
# installed, "none" otherwise.
|
||
# If you have aspell (http://metalab.unc.edu/kevina/aspell/)
|
||
# installed and configured, you might want to uncomment the line below.
|
||
#\spell_command aspell
|
||
|
||
# Consider run-together words, such as "notthe" for "not the", as legal
|
||
# words? Default is no.
|
||
#\accept_compound true
|
||
|
||
# Specify an alternate language. The default is to use the language of
|
||
# document. Uncomment both to enable.
|
||
#\use_alt_language true
|
||
#\alternate_language dansk
|
||
|
||
# Specify additional chars that can be part of a word.
|
||
#\use_escape_chars true
|
||
#\escape_chars "<22><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>"
|
||
|
||
# Specify an alternate personal dictionary file. If the file name does not
|
||
# begin with "/", $HOME is prefixed. The default is to search for a personal
|
||
# dictionary in both the current directory and $HOME, creating one in $HOME
|
||
# if none is found. The preferred name is constructed by appending ".ispell_"
|
||
# to the base name of the hash file. For example, if you use the English
|
||
# dictionary, your personal dictionary would be named ".ispell_english".
|
||
#\use_personal_dictionary true
|
||
#\personal_dictionary .ispell_dansk
|
||
|
||
# Specify whether to pass the -T input encoding option to ispell (only if the
|
||
# language is different than "default".) Enable this if you can't spellcheck
|
||
# words with international letters in them. There have been reports that this
|
||
# does not work with all dictionaries, so this is disabled by default.
|
||
#\use_input_encoding true
|