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Re: binding a command and a parameter
From: |
Nikola Skoric |
Subject: |
Re: binding a command and a parameter |
Date: |
Sun, 14 Oct 2007 20:46:06 +0000 (UTC) |
User-agent: |
slrn/0.9.8.1pl1 (Debian) |
Dana 14 Oct 2007 19:54:55 GMT,
Joost Kremers <joostkremers@yahoo.com> kaze:
> Nikola Skoric wrote:
>> Of course dvi file is up-to-date since I'm editing .tex file which is then
>> \included to .tex file I'm compiling (main fail doesn't change). So, my
>> default
>> option is always view :-)
>
> then there is something not entirely right about your setup. my first guess
> would be that you don't have a TeX-master set in your included files. if
> you do, AUCTeX will know that the file you're editing is not the master
> file, and will do the right thing if you compile your document. (what i
> mean is, you can then type C-c C-c in your included file, the one you're
> editing, and AUCTeX will know that it should actually compile the master
> file; it will also know that even though the master file hasn't changed, it
> must still run LaTeX on in, instead of xdvi.)
Wow. I constanty forget that both latex and emacs are older than me so every
problem I have has already been solved.
> the way to do this is to include a block of Local Variables in all of your
> latex files, right at the end:
>
> %%% Local Variables:
> %%% mode: latex
> %%% TeX-master: "thesis"
> %%% End:
Hm. Interesting thing happens now. If I now do the C-c C-c latex thing from
main file - everything's fine. But, if I do it from included file, I get
errors. I then click the yellow triangle error icon and it opens *main_file
output* which has no errors in it. When I click that icon it usualy opens
*TeX Help* buffer and points to the line with error, but not this time...
So I just can't figure out where the error is.
>>> however, the prompt sports TAB-completion, so all you really need to type
>>> to get latex is just `l', then hit RETURN.
>>
>> Arrow up works fine to, but I'd really like to learn how to bind this kind of
>> commands. :-D
>
> well, i guess binding a command plus interactive input to a key isn't the
> most common thing to do.
OK, fair enough :-)
--
"Now the storm has passed over me
I'm left to drift on a dead calm sea
And watch her forever through the cracks in the beams
Nailed across the doorways of the bedrooms of my dreams"
- binding a command and a parameter, Nikola Skoric, 2007/10/13
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Peter Dyballa, 2007/10/13
- Message not available
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Nikola Skoric, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Maarten Bergvelt, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Nikola Skoric, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Nikola Skoric, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Joost Kremers, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Nikola Skoric, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Joost Kremers, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter,
Nikola Skoric <=
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Nikola Skoric, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Joost Kremers, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, David Kastrup, 2007/10/14
- Re: binding a command and a parameter, Joost Kremers, 2007/10/15