Hello Marek
In TexLive 2009 you should just need to say:
\uselanguage{czech}
If the surrounding text isn't in Czech put \begingroup before and \endgroup
after the Czech passage, and whatever language you are using outside that
context will retain its hyphenation patterns. I think it's also
John Was wrote:
!-- /* Style Definitions */ p.MsoNormal, li.MsoNormal, div.MsoNormal
{mso-style-parent:; margin:0cm; margin-bottom:.0001pt;
mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:Times New
Roman; mso-fareast-font-family:Times New Roman;} p
{mso-margin-top-alt:auto;
Am 24.06.2010 um 12:25 schrieb Venkatesan. S.K. (TNQ):
But I am not able to break any word at all.
Could you try it with the \fontspec line in the preamble and not
inside the proper document text?
--
Greetings
Pete
Math illiteracy affects 7 out of every 5 Americans.
Am Thu, 24 Jun 2010 15:55:50 +0530 schrieb Venkatesan. S.K. (TNQ):
Hi,
I am trying to demo XeTeX for a Tamil conference coming up in a couple of
days from now.
I am not able to make words break although I try different things.
I found that Santhosh Thottingal's hyphenation patterns is
On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 06:07:53PM +0200, Pablo RodrÃguez wrote:
Hi there,
I have installed TL 2010 from TUG and XeLaTeX crashes with rather
large documents (books not written by me). It crashes also with
--no-pdf option activated.
I'm afraid that I cannot provide a minimal sample, I
On 6/24/2010 9:07 AM, Pablo RodrÃguez wrote:
Hi there,
I have installed TL 2010 from TUG and XeLaTeX crashes with rather
large documents (books not written by me). It crashes also with
--no-pdf option activated.
I'm afraid that I cannot provide a minimal sample, I cannot make the
texts