Hans Hagen wrote: >> should be something similar DocbookInConTeXt, but I don't know whether >> it uses the eXaMplE framework (I don't even know whether . >> > the example framework is some ongoing experiment with web related > tex/xml things; you don't need that, just stick to the built in xml > handler (as described in example.pdf, but more extensive examples can be > found in the x-*.tex files in the distribution >> Could anyone comment on this topic? I mean, whether the described task >> could be achieved with ConTeXt, which issues may arise, whether this is >> the best approach to the issue, whether I miss something, and so on. >> > most of the projects we run at pragma involve xml -> pdf processing; > using a dedicated dtd works most convenient > > using tei is ok, as long as you stick to structural elements and keep > away from layour-related coding
Thanks for your answer, Hans. Sorry for not answering before (these days I find myself installing a new computer and moving data into it). It seems that the task is more difficult than I thought (although x-contm.tex seems a very interesting example to begin with). But my problem right now is ConTeXt itself. My PhD thesis (that was typeset with LaTeX [for the examination board], Lambda [for the electronic publication] and XeLaTeX [just for fun ;-)]) contains quotes and some fragments in ancient Greek. And I would like to be able to do similar things (in a fancier way, of course ;-)) with ConTeXt. For those ones who were newbies not so long ago or that come from a humanities background, which are the best documents to start learning ConTeXt? Thanks for your help, Pablo _______________________________________________ ntg-context mailing list [email protected] http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
