On Fri, 2007-11-23 at 16:58 -0800, Maura Edelweiss Monville wrote:
In the end of 2005 I installed CrossOver on my laptop running SuSE 9.3. It was necessary to produce plenty of slides (OO and PowerPoint are not completely compaticle when it comes to formulae containing math symbols and inserted images). My supervisor gave me a MathType license. MathType http://www.cymaths.co.uk/khxc/index.php?app=gbu0&ns=catshow&ref=MathType&prodsort=NAMEUP
allows for generating nice formulae on WIndows. I never had any problem with MathType running through CrossOver.
How about forgetting the ms programs altogether? I remember reading that serious academics use latex for math symbols and technical documents. As per this quote I found when googling for the original article (which I couldn't find again): "Lyx is a front end to LaTeX. It is great for producing academic documents, writing school projects, etc, all of those things that require a document nicely laid out. It uses LaTeX, which is THE standard in math academia, so it is great for producing documents with a lot of math symbols (MUCH better than any of those rubbishy equation editors that come with most word processors... this one is the "REAL THING" ). And, of course, it's free. This package is my pick for producing technical documents." Maybe check it out and convert your supervisor to linux! Gavin -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org