Greetings Vit, all,

Thanks for the response.
I'm finally getting around to looking into this again. My first attempts haven't yielded any good results. Could you (or someone) say a little more (newbie-explicit)? I assume that the enco-*.tex files you're referring to are in .../context/base/, where there are a series of 30 or so such files. It isn't clear to me which one to use. Does the encoding refer to font encoding? —in which case there is no "enco-8r.tex"— or to something else? — enco-pdf.tex for example.


Thanks very much,
David Wooten

On Mar 26, 2005, at 11:35 AM, Vit Zyka wrote:

David Wooten wrote:
Greetings all,
Taco mentioned the command \uppercased{to get all uppercase letters}, and it works just fine…until I try to use my self-installed fonts. The quirks come up with diacritics, and this leads me to believe that there is an [encoding] or [regime]/ /issue here, as I had similar issues

Yes, \uccode and \lccode are encoding-dependent and are defined in enco-*.tex files. So, look into the encoding file you are using and add the their definition between
\startmapping[st1]
\definecasemap 152 184 152
\stopmapping
with meaning: character 152 has lower counterpart 184 and upper one 152 (152 is uppercase letter).


(or for continuous sequence there is abbreviation
  \definecasemaps 160 to 188 lc +32 uc 0
 with meaning:
  \definecasemap 160 182 160
  \definecasemap 161 183 161
  ...
  \definecasemap 188 220 188
)

vit

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