e.g. \documentclass[reqno]{article} for "right equation numbers"
or \documentclass[leqno]{article} for "left equation numbers"
link here
To change equation numbering between the right and left side, I found a solution which just modifies a simple argument in the \documentclass:
e.g. \documentclass[reqno]{article} for "right equation numbers" or \documentclass[leqno]{article} for "left equation numbers" link here
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Fast Latex table generator!
http://www.tablesgenerator.com/latex_tables from http://latex-beamer-class.10966.n7.nabble.com/a-watermark-in-beamer-td679.html
To keep the template changes local to a frame, do it like this { \usebackgroundtemplate{\includegraphics[width=\paperwidth]{Portada_marca2.jpg}} \begin{frame} \titlepage \end{frame} } The outer {} pair are scope delimiters. Hope this helps! Regards Kjell Magne Fauske
This technique (the split environment) is intended for single equations that span multiple lines, but it works for this purpose. Following code comes from the top answer here.
See here: http://web.stanford.edu/~dgleich/notebook/2009/05/appendix_slides_in_beamer_cont_1.html
For Greek letters, put \boldsymbol in front of the Greek letter and you'll get the bold vector notation. e.g. \boldsymbol\alpha. For non-Greek stuff, see below. I got the solution here. First put the following in your preamble (text copyable below the colored stuff): % following block from http://www.tapdancinggoats.com/bold-vectors-in-latex.htm \let\oldhat\hat \let\oldvec\vec % I made this one up so I can still use arrow vectors when I want. \renewcommand{\vec}[1]{\mathbf{#1}} \renewcommand{\hat}[1]{\oldhat{\mathbf{#1}}} Then the following main LaTeX code ... ... produces this result:
I got this from http://goo.gl/CZ4WPZ. Use the enumitem package, and pass the [noitemsep] option. Below is a code sample. This trick came from http://goo.gl/3CMU90
Check out the suggestions at this link.
I like #3: Use the shrink option for the frame, e.g. \begin{frame}[shrink=20]{Title} ... See Section 3.5.7 starting page 12 of this document. For fast compilation of the whole presentation, change \documentclass{beamer} to \documentclass[draft]{beamer}. This will show (properly-sized) placeholders where images/figures go. To edit / compile while focusing on only a select few slides, label those slides e.g. \begin{frame}[label=current]{Here's a title} and then add the line \includeonlyframes{current} to preamble. On my work (Linux) machine, I followed the readme at this address. Here are some modifications/notes.
From
http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/11622/add-space-between-paragraphs-in-beamer My hack solution was to append the following latex code to the end of the paragraph that should have the space. \\~\\ For example, try inserting this into a Beamer latex file: \frame{ This is text that should have a blank line after it. \\~\\ Here is text following a blank line. } Tom Lodewyckx created a quick, easy, effective tutorial for graphical models in LaTeX. The .ZIP file for the tutorial is below.
Quick example of how, within R, to prepare xtable() tables which:
This code is taken from 20140403-seeJournal.resultstable.R. x.myres = xtable(myres, align='ll|rr')
print(x.myres, include.rownames=FALSE, hline.after=c(0,2,7,12,17,22)) |
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AboutThis blog is mainly for statistics, R, or Duke-related stuff that is not directly relating to research activity. |