Hi,
I want to create a frame that should occupy the remaining space on the
page. For example, if I call this frame when the page is 1/3rd full, I
want the frame to have an height of 0.667\textheight. How can I do that?
In other words, how to I find out how much space is left on the current
p
>> You need “location=middle” for the *inner* frames.
I'm so sure that I've tried that already, anyhow.
It works as expected, so thanks!
Adam
___
If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry t
Am 06.04.2011 um 18:11 schrieb Reviczky, Adam:
> Hi
>
> If I have two frames within one frame, how can I vertically align the first
> (well, or both) framed to top or middle.
> Here's a minimal example:
>
> \starttext
> \framed[strut=no,height=fit,framecolor=green,background=screen,backgrounds
Hi
If I have two frames within one frame, how can I vertically align the first
(well, or both) framed to top or middle.
Here's a minimal example:
\starttext
\framed[strut=no,height=fit,framecolor=green,background=screen,backgroundscreen=.80]
{\framed[height=fit,width=100pt,background=screen,back
Thanks for your tips Wolfgang! I switched to a solution as on the
wiki, using overlays and frames in place of layers. After setting the
boudingboxes right it works! I have to increase the \objectoffset
though, because otherwise the graphic is chopped of:
\setuppapersize[A5][A5]
\setuppagenumbering
Hi,
that was helpful. I managed to get what I wanted. Maybe this is
Wiki-Material:
If the opentype font you are using contains special glyphs for
superscript ('sups' feature) you might consider using them for
footnotes. The open source font Linux Libertine has it, for example.
Advantage: The de
Am 06.04.2011 um 08:35 schrieb Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o.:
> Thanks W&H, both solutions work perfectly.
I see, characters.upper is also mentioned in Hans Lua manual:
http://www.pragma-ade.com/show-man-44.htm
Wolfgang