Indeed, the combination Amsterdam-Buitenveldert is the culprit.
The solution therefore is to use (it is ConTeXt afterall)
Amsterdam|-|Buitenveldert, then the word Amsterdam doesn't even needs an
exception.
Thanks for the help.
Hans van der Meer
On 07 Jul 2015, at 18:00, Pablo Rodriguez mailto:
On 07/07/2015 05:41 PM, Arthur Reutenauer wrote:
> [...]
> That's because the word you're trying to hyphenate is
> "Amsterdam-Buitenveldert", not "Amsterdam". Compound words are by
> default hyphenated only at the hyphen in TeX.
\setbreakpoints[compound] works in the following sample:
\lan
On Tue, Jul 07, 2015 at 03:29:11PM +, Meer, H. van der wrote:
> The \hyphenatedword works here too. But it does not work out when the word
> Amsterdam occurs in the text. See tthe two examples. In the first Amsterdam
> is not broken according to the \hyphenation{Am-ster-dam}-rule. In the seco
The \hyphenatedword works here too. But it does not work out when the word
Amsterdam occurs in the text. See tthe two examples. In the first Amsterdam is
not broken according to the \hyphenation{Am-ster-dam}-rule. In the second
example the linebreak is forced by the explicit use of Am\-ster\-dam
On 07/07/2015 03:33 PM, dr. Hans van der Meer wrote:
> Has something happened to hyphenation?
>
> The following does not work
> \language[nl]
> \startexceptions[nl]
> Am-ster-dam
> \stopexceptions
>
> Neither does\hyphenation{Am-ster-dam}
Hi Hans,
using latest beta from 2015.07.01 21:40, both o
Has something happened to hyphenation?
The following does not work
\language[nl]
\startexceptions[nl]
Am-ster-dam
\stopexceptions
Neither does \hyphenation{Am-ster-dam}
Only in the context-source Am\-ster\-dam is working.
How to load a series of hyphenation exceptions instead of explicitely spe
Am 2006-01-30 um 15:06 schrieb Hans Hagen:
>> thanks, this is a nice little feature! Is it already documented
>> somewhere,
> it's an old feature so there should be docu in several places (at
> least it's shown here and there)
But a wiki page on hyphenation won't hurt.
\hyphenation, \setuphyph
� wrote:
> On Sun, 29 Jan 2006, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
>
>
>> Write: $\beta$||Verkn�pfung instead. The two bars break the single
>> word in two seperate ones, and both are hyphenated normally ($\beta$
>> will not hyphenate of course, but you get the idea, I hope). A few
>> things can be inbetween
On Sun, 29 Jan 2006, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> Write: $\beta$||Verknüpfung instead. The two bars break the single
> word in two seperate ones, and both are hyphenated normally ($\beta$
> will not hyphenate of course, but you get the idea, I hope). A few
> things can be inbetween the ||'s, for words
� wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I don't want to tell TeX about hyphenation exceptions in the text, only
> once for all in an environment file. How can I do this with words like
> "DNA-Fragmente" or "$\beta$-Verkn�pfung" ?
> \hyphenation{...} does not seem to work here, and I don't want to write
> DNA-Frag\-m
Peter Münster wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I don't want to tell TeX about hyphenation exceptions in the text, only
> once for all in an environment file. How can I do this with words like
> "DNA-Fragmente" or "$\beta$-Verknüpfung" ?
Write: $\beta$||Verknüpfung instead. The two bars break the single
word i
Hello,
I don't want to tell TeX about hyphenation exceptions in the text, only
once for all in an environment file. How can I do this with words like
"DNA-Fragmente" or "$\beta$-Verknüpfung" ?
\hyphenation{...} does not seem to work here, and I don't want to write
DNA-Frag\-men\-te nor $\beta$-Ver
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