Hi Rob,
See this thread and Eric's response to it afterward (click "Next message by thread" at the bottom of the page:
It seems that @ isn't really a markup tool in beamer. Perhaps someone can add Eric's fix to orgmode proper? Here it is:
-----------------
(setq org-emphasis-alist (quote (("*" bold "<b>" "</b>")
("/" italic "<i>" "</i>")
("_" underline "<span
style=\"text-decoration:underline;\">" "</span>")
("=" org-code "<code>" "</code>" verbatim)
("~" org-verbatim "<code>" "</code>" verbatim)
("+" (:strike-through t) "<del>" "</del>")
("@" org-warning "<b>" "</b>")))
org-export-latex-emphasis-alist (quote
(("*" "\\textbf{%s}" nil)
("/" "\\emph{%s}" nil)
("_" "\\underline{%s}" nil)
("+" "\\texttt{%s}" nil)
("=" "\\verb=%s=" nil)
("~" "\\verb~%s~" t)
("@" "\\alert{%s}" nil)))
-----------------
You can just used \alert{text} and that will make alert text...
John
On Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 10:57 AM, Rob Patro
<rob.patro@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to use org-beamer to create a presentation. I'm following the Worg tutorial, but I've found that surrounding a word with '@' does not properly translate to the alert directive in Beamer. Whenever I place a word in '@'s, they pass through directly to the presentation. For example instead of @alert@ translating to a bold red alert in the output presentation, I just get the string "@alert@". Any idea why this might be happening? I also grabbed the example presentation from the git repository and noticed the same issue with that.
Thanks,
Rob
_______________________________________________
Emacs-orgmode mailing list
Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list.
Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode