On Sat, 14 May 2005, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> No, as long as you remember to check all hyphenations of
> the words that end an inline quote (the ones with single
> or double apostrophs attached immediately to the word).
No problem, quoting in French goes « like this » :)
Cheers, Peter
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http://
No, as long as you remember to check all hyphenations of
the words that end an inline quote (the ones with single
or double apostrophs attached immediately to the word).
Taco
Peter Münster wrote:
Ok, so this means, that there is no problem with
\startlanguagespecifics[nl,cz,sk,fr]
\lccode`\'=`\'
On Sat, 14 May 2005, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> Peter Münster wrote:
> > Hello Taco,
> > the last sentence is for you. Do you have an answer?
> > Cheers, Peter
>
> That \lccode assignment makes the ' a letter, making it count for
> \righthyphenmin, so that``et voila'' can be hyphenated as ``et voil-
I just noticed that my example is wrong, because french
hyphenates voi-la, but I hope you get the point anyway.
Taco
Taco Hoekwater wrote:
Peter Münster wrote:
Hello Taco,
the last sentence is for you. Do you have an answer?
Cheers, Peter
That \lccode assignment makes the ' a letter, making it cou
Peter Münster wrote:
Hello Taco,
the last sentence is for you. Do you have an answer?
Cheers, Peter
That \lccode assignment makes the ' a letter, making it count for
\righthyphenmin, so that``et voila'' can be hyphenated as ``et voil-
a''.
Taco
___
ntg-co