Hi all,
The following code produces framed text areas, each having different
justification:
\definefont [TextFontEmoji] [OpenSansEmoji]
\definefontfamily [TextFont] [rm] [LibreBaskerville]
\setupbodyfont [TextFont]
\starttext
\startframedtext
\TextFontEmoji
\input ward
\stopframedtex
Hey Amine,
LibreOffice (along with loads of other software) uses Hunspell
dictionaries for spell-checking. You can get them here [1].
Hunspell [2] is a spell checker similar to Aspell. (A Windows port is
available in the EZWinPorts [3].) Unlike Aspell, it can’t parse TeX
files. One way aroun
Hi Alain,
Yes that's what I mean, spellchecking any content which is not a control
sequence. That should include things like section titles and footnotes.
Though I'm afraid that might be asking for too much.
I'd rather not make it part of my editor (I use vim) and have it as an
extra step which I
On 4/2/22 09:40, Hans Hagen via ntg-context wrote:
> [..]
> and how about
>
> context --luatex --generate
Many thanks for your reply, Hans.
I’m afraid it doesn’t work. It still generates data under
$HOME/.texlive2021/, but it tries to read data (to generate the format
file) from $HOME/backup-cont
Hi Amine!
Do you mean spellchecking the content
of your document (not the ConTeXt commands)?
This depends on your editor!
I use TeXworks and there is spellchecking using the dictionaries
of LibreOffice. You should copy the .aff and .dicfiles from
On 4/1/2022 9:19 PM, Denis Maier via ntg-context wrote:
Same here... I haven't managed to run mkiv for months. Not a huge deal, but
anyway.
Best,
Denis
Von: ntg-context im Auftrag von Pablo Rodriguez via
ntg-context
Gesendet: Freitag, 1. April 2022 20
Dear All,
I'm currently using ConTeXt on a windows machine. I'd like to incorporate
some sort of automated spell-checking in my workflow. I've seen that there
are two options:
1. spell check the .tex source file
2. spell check the resulting pdf
For the first option many resources online se