On Apr 6, 2007, at 14:58, Vincent Hennebert wrote:
Hi Jeff / Vincent,
- or you enable hyphenation and use ZWSP instead of the regular hyphen
character. Thus FOP will break inside words that it is able to
hyphenate; if they aren't normal English words this may not work
well
and you may
Hi Jeff,
Jeff Vannest a écrit :
>> Just FYI: the other known workaround (which fits some scenarios
>> better than inserting ZWSPs) would be to activate hyphenation, and
>> use a ZWSP as hyphenation-character... In that case, FOP will
>
> This is new to me, so let me see if I understand: A ZWS
> Just FYI: the other known workaround (which fits some scenarios
> better than inserting ZWSPs) would be to activate hyphenation, and
> use a ZWSP as hyphenation-character... In that case, FOP will
This is new to me, so let me see if I understand: A ZWSP is implicit between
characters. For ex
On Apr 5, 2007, at 14:45, Manuel Mall wrote:
Hi Jeff / Manuel,
Does FOP only wrap text on spaces? What I'm seeing is that text
placed in a cell will overrun the cell boundaries if the text does
not contain a space.
Assuming you are using the lastest FOP version instead of actually
modifying
On Thursday 05 April 2007 20:32, Jeff Vannest wrote:
Assuming you are using the lastest FOP version instead of actually
modifying FOP you could make your stylesheet insert a zero width space
after each underscore as that would create a line break opportunity.
Manuel
> Does FOP only wrap text o
Does FOP only wrap text on spaces? What I'm seeing is that text placed in a
cell will overrun the cell boundaries if the text does not contain a space.
I've attached a PNG showing the symptom. The example contains four cells
(with four column headings) each containing boundary text as follows:
Me