[NTG-context] context/luatex on amd64

2007-09-04 Thread zs
Hi, have you working installation of latest context and luatex on linux/amd64? Drop some info please. I have no problem with installation on 32bit machine. The same system (gentoo) on 64bit doesn't generate cont-en.fmt. Lua and luatex are installed from source. Zdenek

Re: [NTG-context] Bib module and dutch commands

2007-09-04 Thread Taco Hoekwater
Hi Tristan, Can you send me a small test file (offlist)? Tristan Gerstung wrote: Hello! I have to say that I am new to ConteXt and never worked with LateX. I tried to use the bib-module for my .bib-files (which I created with BibDesk) It works fine when I am using english commands like

Re: [NTG-context] context/luatex on amd64

2007-09-04 Thread Taco Hoekwater
zs wrote: Hi, have you working installation of latest context and luatex on linux/amd64? Drop some info please. Soprry, not yet (I have to reformat a machine) Taco ___ If your question is of interest to

Re: [NTG-context] Lulu

2007-09-04 Thread Pascal de Bruijn
On Tue, 2007-09-04 at 01:43 +0200, Andrea Valle wrote: In my last post I was saying that I'm tinkering about the idea of using Lulu. It seems to be difficult with ConTeXt: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lulu.com#_note-3 (Lack of full support for open formats) I did this with

Re: [NTG-context] fonts from scratch: what's the way?

2007-09-04 Thread Arthur Reutenauer
Fonts are really a mysterious topics. Fonts have always been a complicated subject indeed, but there's no reason why they should be a mystery. this is really a horror film for a newbie: http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Mark_IV What exactly do you find horrible there? It's of course not a

Re: [NTG-context] fonts from scratch: what's the way?

2007-09-04 Thread Andrea Valle
On 4 Sep 2007, at 23:00, Arthur Reutenauer wrote: Fonts have always been a complicated subject indeed, but there's no reason why they should be a mystery. Of course, but I have to say that I wasn't able to find an introductory document explaining the whole stuff from the beginning.

Re: [NTG-context] Lulu

2007-09-04 Thread Andrea Valle
Thanks Pascal, good news and very relevant infos. Best -a- -- Andrea Valle -- CIRMA - DAMS Università degli Studi di Torino -- http://www.cirma.unito.it/andrea/ -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]

[NTG-context] hairline in a matrix

2007-09-04 Thread Peter Schorsch
Hi, I could not figure out how to add a hairline between two rows of a matrix. Following example is compiling but only results in a bigger vertical space. Infos/Hints are welcome... \startformula \startmatrix    \NC {a_1 } \NC {a_2 } \NC {a_3 }  \NC  \ldots      \NC {a_X }  \NR    \NC {b_1 }

Re: [NTG-context] context/luatex on amd64

2007-09-04 Thread Arthur Reutenauer
have you working installation of latest context and luatex on linux/amd64? Drop some info please. contextgarden.net runs on AMD64. It always has the latest version of ConTeXt, and a recent luatex (beta-0.11.0 as I speak). Everything is compiled from source. I have no problem with

Re: [NTG-context] fonts from scratch: what's the way?

2007-09-04 Thread Arthur Reutenauer
Of course, but I have to say that I wasn't able to find an introductory document explaining the whole stuff from the beginning. There is no such thing, because there is not one beginning. “Fonts” is far too generic a concept anyway, and can probably not be covered within one single document

Re: [NTG-context] hairline in a matrix

2007-09-04 Thread Aditya Mahajan
On Wed, 5 Sep 2007, Peter Schorsch wrote: Hi, I could not figure out how to add a hairline between two rows of a matrix. Following example is compiling but only results in a bigger vertical space. Infos/Hints are welcome... \startformula \startmatrix    \NC {a_1 } \NC {a_2 } \NC {a_3 }  

Re: [NTG-context] context/luatex on amd64

2007-09-04 Thread Peter Münster
On Tue, 4 Sep 2007, Taco Hoekwater wrote: Soprry, not yet (I have to reformat a machine) In the meantime, you could just replace the executable with the i586 version: http://foundry.supelec.fr/frs/download.php/513/luatex-beta-0.10.2-linux-i586.tar.bz2 Cheers, Peter --