\citet{gur+04} have demonstrated that authors should not have umlauts
in their names. It's OK to use them in the man\"{u}script, though.
\begin{thebibliography}{References}
+\bibitem[M\"{o}stl et~al.(2010)]{Mostl2010} Gürkan, M.~A., Freitag,
+M., \& Rasio, F.~A. 2004, ApJ, 604, 632
\bibitem[{{G\"{u}rkan et~al.}(2004)}]{gur+04} Gürkan, M.~A., Freitag,
M., \& Rasio, F.~A. 2004, ApJ, 604, 632\end{thebibliography}
\include{\string"Dummy Document\string".tex}
\include{\string"Dummy\string~Document\string"}
\include{\string"Dummy\string~Document\string".tex}
-File names containg double quotes are not legal on windows, so no test file
+File names containing double quotes are not legal on windows, so no test file
is provided. Nevertheless, they are legal on unix, so we test at least the
parsing. File names containing spaces can not be handled by automake
(make dist would fail), so no test file is provided as well.
We can also import chess diagrams:
-\loadgame{../../../lib/examples/iecc05}\showboard
+\loadgame{../../../lib/examples/Graphics_and_Insets/iecc05}\showboard
Spreadsheets:
-\def\inputGnumericTable{}\input{../../../lib/examples/longsheet.tex}
+\def\inputGnumericTable{}\input{../../../lib/examples/External_Material/longsheet.tex}
XFig drawings:
and PDF pages:
-\includepdf[pages=-,angle=22,origin=Bl,width=5cm,height=40mm,keepaspectratio]{../../../lib/examples/beamer-icsi-logo}
+\includepdf[pages=-,angle=22,origin=Bl,width=5cm,height=40mm,keepaspectratio]{../../../lib/examples/Presentations/beamer-icsi-logo}
If you prefer verbatim input, you can choose
between~\verbatiminput{foo} or~\verbatiminput*{foo}.
\end{table}
+A table using decimal alignment:
+
+\begin{table}
+\begin{tabular}{ccr@{\extracolsep{0pt}.}lr@{\extracolsep{0pt}.}lr@{\extracolsep{0pt}.}l}
+One & Two & \multicolumn{2}{c}{Three} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{Four} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{Five}\tabularnewline
+\hline
+one & two & \multicolumn{2}{c}{three} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{four} & \multicolumn{2}{c}{five}\tabularnewline
+He & 2 & 2&77234 & 45672& & 0&69 \tabularnewline
+C & C & 12537&64 & 37&66345 & 86&37 \tabularnewline
+\end{tabular}
+\end{table}
+
+
\section{Macros}
LyX supports several kinds of macros:
{\Huge \lyxline{\Huge}}{\Huge \par}
-\subsection{rules}
+\subsection{Rules}
+
+test
+
+{\tiny \rule[0.5ex]{1\linewidth}{1pt}}{\tiny \par}
test\rule[0.001\textwidth]{1\columnwidth}{0.05\textheight}
\textsublhalfring{e}
\textsubplus{e}
\=*{e}
-\b{e}
+(don't mix up with \b{e})
\"{e}
\textovercross{e}
\s{e}
TIPA code in math:
$\textipa{\tone{55}|\text{\!b{}\!d{}\!g{}\!G{}\textglobfall{}\textvertline{}\textdoublevertline{}}}$
+\subsection{Other symbols}
+All three should be converted to U+00C5: \AA{} \r A \r{A} (not U+212B).
+All three should be converted to U+00E5: \aa{} \r a \r{a}.
+
\subsection{Line breaks\sindex[breaks]{Line breaks}}
They can also or be broken by a newline\\
ellipsis\ldots, and end-of-sentence\@. LyX also supports a menu
separator\lyxarrow{}and a spif\textcompwordmark{}fy ligature break.
+There are dashes: endash in short form -- and long form \textendash,
+emdash is alike: --- and \textemdash. If we really want several hyphens
+in a row, we need to separate them: -{}-, -{}-{}-, -{}-{}-{}- etc.
+
LyX translates the phrases LyX, TeX, LaTeX2e and LaTeX
to the commands \LyX{}, \TeX{}, \LaTeXe{} and \LaTeX{}.
If these phrases occur as part of other words (like 1LyX or aTeX or LaTeX3)
%EndExpansion
$.
+\[
+\begin{array}{rclccc}
+1 + 2 & = & 3
+\multicolumn{3}{c}{4 < 5 \leq 6 }
+\end{array}
+\]
+
\section{Lists/Indices}