Aditya,Thanks, this worked.On Mar 21, 2006, at 6:18 PM, Aditya Mahajan wrote: <--- On Mar 21, David Arnold wrote ---> > All, > > Both this: > > %output=pdf > > \starttext > > We use the notation $(2,4)$ to denote what is called an {\em ordered > pair}. If you think of the positions taken by > \pla
I don't know either what the goal is, when I want to place a figure
left to the text
I use \startfiguretext etc.
Matthias
On Mar 21, 2006, at 9:18 PM, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
> <--- On Mar 21, David Arnold wrote --->
>
>> All,
>>
>> Both this:
>>
>> %output=pdf
>>
>> \starttext
>>
>> We use the
<--- On Mar 21, David Arnold wrote --->
> All,
>
> Both this:
>
> %output=pdf
>
> \starttext
>
> We use the notation $(2,4)$ to denote what is called an {\em ordered
> pair}. If you think of the positions taken by
> \placefigure
> [left][fig:ordpair]
> {}{\externalfigure[section1figs-mpgraph.1]}
>
All,
Both this:
%output=pdf
\starttext
We use the notation $(2,4)$ to denote what is called an {\em ordered
pair}. If you think of the positions taken by
\placefigure
[left][fig:ordpair]
{}{\externalfigure[section1figs-mpgraph.1]}
ordered pairs $(4,2)$ and $(2,4)$ in the coordinate plane
(se