On 11/10/2013 10:12 AM, Francisco Gracia wrote:
*Fleurons* are small decorative pieces that were often used in the
past for filling big blank spaces in books. They are seldom used
nowdays. As besides they will not appear more than a few times in any
book (mainly at the end of chapters), the
Bill Meahan
11. November 2013
18:51
The following has worked quite well for me. I hate using a centered
"* *
*" for a thematic break so I use a fleuron. I write fiction, not
math-filled academic-journal articles or textbooks so this may not be
applicable in your case.
Thanks for your contributions.
You are right in your remark about the path to images, Wolfgang. I was not
using any
\setupexternalfigure[location=default]
instruction. With your formulations the figure is recovered without problem.
Unfortunately the results of your rewrite of the macro are not
Francisco Gracia
11. November 2013
22:40
Thanks
for your contributions.You are right in your remark about
the path to images, Wolfgang. I was not using any\setupexternalfigure[location=default]
instruction. With your formulations the figure is recovered
without
*Fleurons* are small decorative pieces that were often used in the past for
filling big blank spaces in books. They are seldom used nowdays. As besides
they will not appear more than a few times in any book (mainly at the end
of chapters), the easiest thing to do if one insists in using them (for
Francisco Gracia
10. November 2013
16:12
*Fleurons* are small decorative pieces that were often used in
the past for filling big blank spaces in books. They are seldom used
nowdays. As besides they will not appear more than a few times in any
book (mainly at the end of