This is perfect, as it works also with mupdf-gl and firefox!
Thank you, Hans
Kind regards
Marcus Vinicius
On Mon, Aug 7, 2023 at 4:58 PM Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> On 8/7/2023 8:58 PM, Marcus Vinicius Mesquita wrote:
> > @ Ulrike: This is what my client wants, and the client is always right.
> You
On 8/7/2023 8:58 PM, Marcus Vinicius Mesquita wrote:
@ Ulrike: This is what my client wants, and the client is always right.
You can try this:
\starttext
\protected\def\ProofOfConcept#1#2%
{{#1\llap{\effect[hidden]{#2
test test \ProofOfConcept{föö}{foo} test
\stoptext
but forget
@ Ulrike: This is what my client wants, and the client is always right.
Regards
Marcus Vinicius
On Mon, Aug 7, 2023 at 2:23 PM Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
>
> Am 07.08.23 um 14:17 schrieb Marcus Vinicius Mesquita:
> > Thank you for the answers, Bruce, Pablo and Hraban. I was not aware of
> >
Am 07.08.23 um 14:17 schrieb Marcus Vinicius Mesquita:
Thank you for the answers, Bruce, Pablo and Hraban. I was not aware of
ActualText.
I work on a manjaro linux, and I tested the example Pablo sent on
several programs:
mupdf-gl or mupdf: fails! [mupdf-gl is what I customarily use for its
Am Mon, 7 Aug 2023 09:17:19 -0300 schrieb Marcus Vinicius Mesquita:
> Thank you for the answers, Bruce, Pablo and Hraban. I was not aware of
> ActualText.
>
> But \pdfbackendactualtext is actually just what I needed since it can
> be used also for other things like:
I don't think that it would
Thank you for the answers, Bruce, Pablo and Hraban. I was not aware of
ActualText.
I work on a manjaro linux, and I tested the example Pablo sent on
several programs:
mupdf-gl or mupdf: fails! [mupdf-gl is what I customarily use for its
blazing speed]
firefox: fails
vivaldi: passes
okular:
Am 06.08.23 um 20:37 schrieb Pablo Rodriguez:
Hans provides this jewel in back-imp-pdf.mkxl and back-pdf.mkiv (adapter
for your needs):
\starttext
text \pdfbackendactualtext{whatever you want}{filia} text
\stoptext
In any case, the PDF viewer used to search must have ActualText
On 8/5/23 21:16, Marcus Vinicius Mesquita wrote:
> Dear List,
>
> I have a lot of latin words in a document with the length of the
> vowels indicated by diacritics, for example: fīlĭa.
>
> Is it possible somehow to make these words searchable without the diacritics?
> That is, if I make a search
In Adobe Reader there is an option Preferences › Categories › Search › [ ]
Ignore Diacritics and Accents which you can tick to search on the underlying
letter only.
If the search is for your own use only then this might be a solution rather
than change the generated PDF.
> On 5 Aug 2023, at