On 10/22/2017 10:16 PM, Rik Kabel wrote:
> Thank you, Pablo, for the workaround.
>
> As to your question, it originally came about because of the order in
> which environment files were included in a document (one general to many
> documents, one specific to a new document). Between the times I
Thank you, Pablo, for the workaround.
As to your question, it originally came about because of the order in
which environment files were included in a document (one general to many
documents, one specific to a new document). Between the times I created
them, I switched from \hyphenation to \st
On 10/22/2017 07:18 PM, Rik Kabel wrote:
> Or am I doing something wrong?
>
> With the following, Schwarzenegger is not hyphenated according to the
> instruction. I get:
Hi Rik,
is there any reason not to include Schwarzenegger in the exceptions?
In any case, either you use \hyphenation *after*
Or am I doing something wrong?
With the following, Schwarzenegger is not hyphenated according to the
instruction. I get:
\mainlanguage[en]
\hyphenation{Schwarz-en-egger}
\startexceptions[en]
epi-graphs
Mount-weazels
Mount-weazel
\stopexceptions
\starttext
\hyphenated
Hi olli,
Oliver Heins wrote:
> To comment on myself:
>
> Oliver Heins writes:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> when using |-| in a word as a non exclusive dash, this produces wrong
>> hyphenation.
>
Verified. Same problems here, in both mkii and mkiv.
Best wishes,
Taco
To comment on myself:
Oliver Heins writes:
> Hi,
>
> when using |-| in a word as a non exclusive dash, this produces wrong
> hyphenation.
[...]
> longer
> -word
> -to
> -be
> -hy-
> phen-
> ated
This is a workaround:
\definetextmodediscretionary {-}
{\prewordbreak\discretionary{\hbox{-}}{}
Hi,
when using |-| in a word as a non exclusive dash, this produces wrong
hyphenation.
For example, the word »longer-word-to-be-hyphenated« should be
hyphenated e.g. like this:
longer-
word-
to-
be-
hy-
phen-
ated
but actually it is hyphenated like this:
longer
-word
-to
-be
-hy-
phen-
ated
U
Hans van der Meer wrote:
> On 12 mei 2008, at 12:50, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
>> Hans van der Meer wrote:
>>> In dutch hyphenated accented characters loose there accent when
>>> hyphenated: oö becomes o-o instead of o-ö. But the latter happens
>>> when
>>> I process the code below. It happens both in
On 12 mei 2008, at 12:50, Hans Hagen wrote:
> Hans van der Meer wrote:
>> In dutch hyphenated accented characters loose there accent when
>> hyphenated: oö becomes o-o instead of o-ö. But the latter happens
>> when
>> I process the code below. It happens both in mkii and mkiv. The
>> number
>
Hans van der Meer wrote:
>
> In my recollection this worked like a charm in the LaTeX-Babel package!
Well, \usemodule[babel] has never worked either ;-)
Anyway, I just realised after posting my message that the input could
be made to work by making ö active and having it execute a macro like
On 12 mei 2008, at 13:01, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> Hans van der Meer wrote:
>> In dutch hyphenated accented characters loose there accent when
>> hyphenated: oö becomes o-o instead of o-ö. But the latter happens
>> when
>> I process the code below. It happens both in mkii and mkiv. The
>> numbe
Hans van der Meer wrote:
> In dutch hyphenated accented characters loose there accent when
> hyphenated: oö becomes o-o instead of o-ö. But the latter happens when
> I process the code below. It happens both in mkii and mkiv. The number
> of a's must be chosen so as to generate hyphenation be
Hans van der Meer wrote:
> In dutch hyphenated accented characters loose there accent when
> hyphenated: oö becomes o-o instead of o-ö. But the latter happens when
> I process the code below. It happens both in mkii and mkiv. The number
> of a's must be chosen so as to generate hyphenation be
In dutch hyphenated accented characters loose there accent when
hyphenated: oö becomes o-o instead of o-ö. But the latter happens when
I process the code below. It happens both in mkii and mkiv. The number
of a's must be chosen so as to generate hyphenation between the two
o's. I tried this
On Sat, 14 May 2005, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> No, as long as you remember to check all hyphenations of
> the words that end an inline quote (the ones with single
> or double apostrophs attached immediately to the word).
No problem, quoting in French goes « like this » :)
Cheers, Peter
--
http://
No, as long as you remember to check all hyphenations of
the words that end an inline quote (the ones with single
or double apostrophs attached immediately to the word).
Taco
Peter Münster wrote:
Ok, so this means, that there is no problem with
\startlanguagespecifics[nl,cz,sk,fr]
\lccode`\'=`\'
On Sat, 14 May 2005, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> Peter Münster wrote:
> > Hello Taco,
> > the last sentence is for you. Do you have an answer?
> > Cheers, Peter
>
> That \lccode assignment makes the ' a letter, making it count for
> \righthyphenmin, so that``et voila'' can be hyphenated as ``et voil-
I just noticed that my example is wrong, because french
hyphenates voi-la, but I hope you get the point anyway.
Taco
Taco Hoekwater wrote:
Peter Münster wrote:
Hello Taco,
the last sentence is for you. Do you have an answer?
Cheers, Peter
That \lccode assignment makes the ' a letter, making it cou
Peter Münster wrote:
Hello Taco,
the last sentence is for you. Do you have an answer?
Cheers, Peter
That \lccode assignment makes the ' a letter, making it count for
\righthyphenmin, so that``et voila'' can be hyphenated as ``et voil-
a''.
Taco
___
ntg-co
Peter Münster wrote:
Hello,
there is no hyphenation with "l'éducation".
Example:
\enableregime[il1]
\usetypescript[modern][\defaultencoding]
\setupbodyfont[modern]
\mainlanguage[fr]
\starttext
\dorecurse{66}x éducation
\dorecurse{65}x l'éducation
\stoptext
ConTeXt version is 2005.01.31
Could someon
Hello,
there is no hyphenation with "l'éducation".
Example:
\enableregime[il1]
\usetypescript[modern][\defaultencoding]
\setupbodyfont[modern]
\mainlanguage[fr]
\starttext
\dorecurse{66}x éducation
\dorecurse{65}x l'éducation
\stoptext
ConTeXt version is 2005.01.31
Could someone help please?
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