Thank you very much, but still does not work to me..
%%%
\definedescription
[proof]
[text=Proof.]
\setupdescriptions
[proof]
[width=broad,
distance=0.5em,
location=serried,
headstyle=it,
indentnext=yes,
indenting=yes,
closesymbol=\mathematics{\square},
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010 10:54:52 +0200
Emanuele Sacco emanuelesa...@gmail.com wrote:
Thank you very much, but still does not work to me..
%%%
\definedescription
[proof]
[text=Proof.]
\setupdescriptions
[proof]
[width=broad,
distance=0.5em,
location=serried,
headstyle=it,
You are absolutely right.
Thanks to all.
2010/8/7 Thomas Schmitz tschm...@uni-bonn.de:
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010 10:54:52 +0200
Emanuele Sacco emanuelesa...@gmail.com wrote:
Thank you very much, but still does not work to me..
%%%
\definedescription
[proof]
[text=Proof.]
In latest beta the punk module was normal and the PunkNova font is working.
Thanks to all.
--
Best regards,
Huang Ze
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Hi all,
I would like to get some advice concerning a problem, or rather a
nuisance, with internal references.
I am making a longish document with several chapters, all of which are
separate .tex-files to be input into the main file, which contains all
setups and the skeleton of the document. There
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010 14:22:32 +0200
Robert Blackstone blackstone.rob...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I would like to get some advice concerning a problem, or
rather a
nuisance, with internal references.
I am making a longish document with several chapters,
all of which are
separate .tex-files to
Hi Hans:
This is asking Armin Varmaz' question in a different way, although I
know even less. I would like to define a macro that is just an
abbreviation.
For example, say I want to define a snippet \NPV which provides the
text NPV$_0$, and NPV is in textfont while 0 is in mathfont. This
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010, ivo welch wrote:
Hi Hans:
This is asking Armin Varmaz' question in a different way, although I
know even less. I would like to define a macro that is just an
abbreviation.
For example, say I want to define a snippet \NPV which provides the
text NPV$_0$, and NPV is in
How can I define a command by reusing the already defined command?
\def \HelloTwo #1#2 {Hello, #1 and #2!}
\def \HelloOne #1 {\HelloTwo{#1}{Vedran}}
This gives me a Runaway argument.
--
Vedran Miletić
___
If your
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010 18:03:22 +0200
Vedran Miletić riva...@gmail.com scribit:
How can I define a command by reusing the already defined command?
\def \HelloTwo #1#2 {Hello, #1 and #2!}
\def \HelloOne #1 {\HelloTwo{#1}{Vedran}}
This gives me a Runaway argument.
--
Vedran Miletić
where
2010/8/7 R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr:
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010 18:03:22 +0200
Vedran Miletić riva...@gmail.com scribit:
How can I define a command by reusing the already defined command?
\def \HelloTwo #1#2 {Hello, #1 and #2!}
\def \HelloOne #1 {\HelloTwo{#1}{Vedran}}
This gives me a Runaway
On Sat, 7 Aug 2010, Vedran Miletić wrote:
How can I define a command by reusing the already defined command?
\def \HelloTwo #1#2 {Hello, #1 and #2!}
\def \HelloOne #1 {\HelloTwo{#1}{Vedran}}
This gives me a Runaway argument.
Can you post a complete example? This works for me
2010/8/7 Aditya Mahajan adit...@umich.edu:
Can you post a complete example? This works for me
\def\HelloTwo#1#2{Hello, #1 and #2!}
\def\HelloOne#1{\HelloTwo{#1}{Vedran}}
\starttext
\HelloOne {One}
\stoptext
Same here, it works. From what I see, you removed the spacing, and if
I add it
Are there any rules where the space should be and where it should not?
The way you wrote the macro originally, the spaces were part of the
macro. If you use your original definition of \HelloTwo, you can write
\HelloOne as follows:
\def \HelloOne #1 {\HelloTwo {#1}{Vedran} }
Even if this is completely unrelated to ConTeXt, allow me to mention
this since I find it so funny:
The message to which I'm replying has the following weird subject:
# Subject: Re: [NTG-context] Commands based on previously defined commands,
# DA with fixed values for šrguments
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