Thanks Wolfgang, that worked well.
Are there more reasons to use start & stop over start{}?
On August 31, 2014 9:32:31 PM PDT, Wolfgang Schuster
wrote:
>
>Am 01.09.2014 um 00:18 schrieb Mica Semrick :
>
>> Hello!
>>
>> Given:
>> \starttext
>>
>>
>\framed[frame=on,width=local,offset=0in,loffs
Am 02.09.2014 um 23:49 schrieb Keith McKay :
> Colleagues
>
> I'm setting up a document which at the end of each chapter will have a
> Glossary of word definitions. To get to these definitions one would click on
> the word in the chapter which would take them to the page where the
> definiti
Colleagues
I'm setting up a document which at the end of each chapter will have a
Glossary of word definitions. To get to these definitions one would
click on the word in the chapter which would take them to the page where
the definition of the word is in the Glossary. Once the user has done
Many thanks for your help, Hans.
Pablo
On 09/02/2014 08:02 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 9/2/2014 5:08 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>> Dear list,
>>
>> I have the following sample:
>>
>> \startsetups[footssetups]
> ^^ 2
>
>> \setupinterlinespace[line=5ex]
>>
On 9/2/2014 5:08 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Dear list,
I have the following sample:
\startsetups[footssetups]
^^ 2
\setupinterlinespace[line=5ex]
\stopsetups
\setupnote[footnote][setups=footsetups]
^ 1
Thank you Aditya!
Your hint to using the narrower environment lead me to \startnarrower
\stopnarrower on the wiki which was exactly what I was looking for.
Thanks again
Best Wishes
Keith McKay
On 02/09/2014 17:22, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
If you just want to reduce the width of paragraphs, use
If you just want to reduce the width of paragraphs, use the narrower
environment. If you also want frames or background colors that break
across page, use the background environment. If you want floats and
parshape to also work, use the textbackground environment.
Aditya
On Tue, 2 Sep 2014, K
Colleagues
I've been struggling today with trying to change paragraph width of
selected paragraphs within the body text of a novel I'm typesetting. I
thought that the way to do this would be by framing the text that I
would like to reduce the paragraph width off. However the framed text
does
Dear list,
I have the following sample:
\startsetups[footssetups]
\setupinterlinespace[line=5ex]
\stopsetups
\setupnote[footnote][setups=footsetups]
\starttext
\footnote{\input zapf}\input knuth
\stoptext
AFAIK, the footnote should have extra interline space. But
On 09/01/2014 09:20 PM, Sandra Snan wrote:
> [...]
> PS
> Extra thanks if there’s a way to get ligatures and protrusion to work for it.
Hi Sandra,
I’m afraid I cannot help you with font names, since I use system fonts.
But standard ligatures an protrusion work with these commands:
\definefontfe
Hi Wolfgang,
I have to put myself in the head that the command \framed[] is very
important with ConteXt !
Fabrice
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Am 02.09.2014 um 12:43 schrieb Fabrice Couvreur :
>
> Hi,
> In this code, the figure is placed on the base line. How to make the
> numbering at the top of the figure ?
>
> \starttext
> \startitemize[n][stopper=),style=bf]
> \item \midaligned{\externalfigure[figure1_reperage.pdf]}
\item
\fr
Hi,
In this code, the figure is placed on the base line. How to make the
numbering at the top of the figure ?
\starttext
\startitemize[n][stopper=),style=bf]
\item \midaligned{\externalfigure[figure1_reperage.pdf]}
\startitemize[a][stopper=),style=bf]
\item Donner les coordonnées des points $A$
This is probably a pretty basic question, but how do I find out the name
of the font that \definefontfamily expects in the third argument?
For example,
\definefontfamily [dejavu] [serif] [DejaVu Serif]
works fine and sets the text in DejaVu Serif, but that’s not a name I
can find with mtxrun –sc
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