Re: [NTG-context] Figure [left]

2006-03-22 Thread David Arnold
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

Re: [NTG-context] Figure [left]

2006-03-21 Thread Matthias Weber
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

Re: [NTG-context] Figure [left]

2006-03-21 Thread Aditya Mahajan
<--- 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]} >

[NTG-context] Figure [left]

2006-03-21 Thread David Arnold
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