On 08/30/2017 02:50 AM, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Aug 2017, Hans Hagen wrote:
>> On 8/29/2017 9:02 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>>> [...]
>>> In that case, what enables [lines=yes] in \setuptyping?
>> linebreaks
>
> There is only a subtle difference between the two:
Many thanks for the
On 08/29/2017 11:28 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 8/29/2017 9:02 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>> [...]
>> In that case, what enables [lines=yes] in \setuptyping?
> linebreaks
Many thanks for your reply, Hans.
I’m afraid this isn’t what I get in the following sample:
\setuppapersize[A6]
On Tue, 29 Aug 2017, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/29/2017 9:02 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
On 08/29/2017 07:25 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/29/2017 4:43 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
[...]
I thought the lines key should display multiple lines when they are in
the code.
How should I got the multiple
On 8/29/2017 9:02 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
On 08/29/2017 07:25 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/29/2017 4:43 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
[...]
I thought the lines key should display multiple lines when they are in
the code.
How should I got the multiple lines in the sample above?
empty lines are
On 8/29/2017 9:56 PM, Otared Kavian wrote:
Hi Hans,
That’s wonderful! Indeed this is very handy and I’ll add it to the wiki.
However, before doing so, I would like to ask how is it possible to get the
command act entirely in math mode, that is respecting the distances and the
math fonts.
Hi Hans,
That’s wonderful! Indeed this is very handy and I’ll add it to the wiki.
However, before doing so, I would like to ask how is it possible to get the
command act entirely in math mode, that is respecting the distances and the
math fonts. Please see the attached output.
%%% begin
On 08/29/2017 07:25 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 8/29/2017 4:43 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>> [...]
>> I thought the lines key should display multiple lines when they are in
>> the code.
>>
>> How should I got the multiple lines in the sample above?
> empty lines are always collapsed
Many thanks
On 8/29/2017 4:43 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Dear list,
I have the following sample:
\setuptyping[TEX][lines=yes]
\starttext
\startTEX
code
one line before
two lines before
three lines before
\stopTEX
\stoptext
I thought the lines key should
On 8/29/2017 4:24 PM, Otared Kavian wrote:
Thanks Aditya,
Indeed the solution is already there in luatex-math.tex…
one can just use $\mathring{A}$ out of the box!
I see why I love ConTeXt :-)
I checked one of the stacker sub-mechanisms and fixed / extended something:
\starttext
In page-lay.mkvi I see, at lines 1591–1594:
\definepapersize
[doubleoversized]
[ \c!width=\dimexpr
\paperheight+\layouttargetparameter\c!distance\relax,
\c!height=\dimexpr2\paperwidth
+\layouttargetparameter\c!distance\relax]
I would expect to see:
Dear list,
I have the following sample:
\setuptyping[TEX][lines=yes]
\starttext
\startTEX
code
one line before
two lines before
three lines before
\stopTEX
\stoptext
I thought the lines key should display multiple lines when they are in
the code.
How
Thanks Aditya,
Indeed the solution is already there in luatex-math.tex…
one can just use $\mathring{A}$ out of the box!
I see why I love ConTeXt :-)
Best regards: OK
> On 29 Aug 2017, at 15:34, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
>
> On Tue, 29 Aug 2017, Otared Kavian wrote:
>
>> Hi,
On Tue, 29 Aug 2017, Otared Kavian wrote:
Hi,
How can I put a small circle on top of a character in math mode (for the
curious this is needed when one defines the interior of a set…).
I tried the following, but the small circle is too far away from the
character A. I am sure I had an ugly
Hi,
How can I put a small circle on top of a character in math mode (for the
curious this is needed when one defines the interior of a set…).
I tried the following, but the small circle is too far away from the character
A. I am sure I had an ugly solution for this in plain TeX some years ago
That's great, Hans, thank you!
Lukas
On Tue, 29 Aug 2017 13:30:48 +0200, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/29/2017 12:35 PM, Procházka Lukáš Ing. wrote:
Hello,
thank you, Hans...
On Mon, 28 Aug 2017 11:30:49 +0200, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/27/2017 9:15 PM, Procházka
On 8/29/2017 12:35 PM, Procházka Lukáš Ing. wrote:
Hello,
thank you, Hans...
On Mon, 28 Aug 2017 11:30:49 +0200, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/27/2017 9:15 PM, Procházka Lukáš Ing. wrote:
Hello,
is there a built-in (Lua-?)numeric format to produce big numbers with
spaces
On 8/29/2017 9:31 AM, Christoph Reller wrote:
Hi,
I noticed that the scite module (m-scite.mkiv) has undergone some
changes recently. When using this module to highlight source code, then
the escape mechanism does not seem to work anymore.
MWE:
\enabletrackers[buffers.visualize]
Hello,
thank you, Hans...
On Mon, 28 Aug 2017 11:30:49 +0200, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 8/27/2017 9:15 PM, Procházka Lukáš Ing. wrote:
Hello,
is there a built-in (Lua-?)numeric format to produce big numbers with
spaces delimiting thousands (widely used for currencies)?
E.g.:
Hi,
I noticed that the scite module (m-scite.mkiv) has undergone some changes
recently. When using this module to highlight source code, then the escape
mechanism does not seem to work anymore.
MWE:
\enabletrackers[buffers.visualize]
\usemodule[scite]
\setuptyping[TEX][escape={[[,]]}]
\starttext
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