Sorry for this followup to my own posting. > Manuel Hendel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > > > Hi All, > > > > > > > > I'm looking for a latex file like g-brief.cls which is especialy for > > > > business letters. What I need to do is to define the footnote by > > > > myself. Can anyone give me a hint. > > > > > > You lost me. You always define footnote contents by yourself. Do you > > > mean > > > redesigning the entire footnote format? > > > > > > Mike > > > > > > > I tried this. But if I do \footnote{The Text I want}, I always get a > > line above and number in the front. Can I change this in a way? > > I need to write my address, "Aufsichtsrat" (sorry I don't know the english > > meaning) and bankaccount there. > > > > Manuel > > This normal for a footnote, which usually doesn't appear in > letters. You should read the .dvi file that comes with packages like > g-brief.
If there's none, latex the .dtx. >I suggest you also read a book about LaTeX, Vol. 1 of Kopka's > LaTeX book is very good, or the LaTeX Companion, to get an idea about > the underlying concepts. > > For now I'd take a look at lyx, a graphical frontend to LaTeX. It's > _very_ easy to use, and has g-brief set up in the way you're probably > looking for (Layout - Document - letter (g-brief, german)). It's actually Layout - Document - -Class - letter (g-brief, german) And the best way to get what I had in mind is to use the "File - New from template" (Datei - Neu von Vorlage oder so) function. First you enter the name of your document, second you chose from the templates. -- Andre