[EMAIL PROTECTED] said this at Tue, 21 Dec 2004 08:56:40 +0100:
In Latex the combination \{a} can mean two things:
1. in most fonts: show the charachter on the a given numerical position,
which means that there is one character ä.
2. in some other fonts \{a} means: combine with a and make an ä.
Here's a short version of my question:
How do I enable unicode encoded characters (just normal accented latin
characters) to be typeset in (any font) in ConTeXt, like the
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} in LaTeX?
And here the long one:
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
But when I switched to ConTeXt I came against that problem again.
In LaTeX I used
\v{c}\v{s}\v{z}
this also works in context
at first, later
\usepackage{csz} ... csz
in this case, i assume that csz makes active and such; if you really want that
, we shoul dmake an
Hans Hagen wrote:
and alike; if you want utf, you should say (at the top of the file)
\enableregime[utf]
Thanks for many other advices also, but especially for this one: I
probably already tried this out. Well, almost ;). Since niether
\enableregime[utf8] nor \enableregime[utf-8] resulted in
On Mon, 20 Dec 2004 21:52:17 +0100, Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
[...]
The second problem: This works under Windows when typesetting in code
page 1250. How can I use accented characters if text is typeset in
Unicode (or latin2) in Linux?
you probably need to
Mojca,
In reply to your question:
I don't really understand how accented characters are typeset in
(Con)TeX(t). One of the main reasons for switching to LaTeX (maybe 8
years ago) someone mentioned was: You don't have to worry about accented
characters. You can make any accented character and