Thanks Wolfgang and Luigi. Luigi's solution worked well.
Unfortunately, left={hspace[normal]} did not give the desired outcome.
The item symbols were still at their original location.
I have a follow up question. Based on your solution I also tried
left=\hskip 2.10em, which works too? Is there a
Curiouslearn wrote:
Can someone please say whether it is possible to do what I am trying
to do below?
According to the docs 'margin' should do something, but I am not sure
what and it seems to have no effect over here. You can try if 'width'
does what you want.
Best wishes,
Taco
Thanks.
I suppose you can think of 'margin=dimension' option as increasing the
margin by the specified dimension for the list. It works without any
problems for a list that is not nested within another list. However,
with nesting, as in the example I emailed, it does not work.
I tried the 'width' command
Am 12.12.2009 um 02:22 schrieb Curiouslearn:
I suppose you can think of 'margin=dimension' option as increasing the
margin by the specified dimension for the list. It works without any
problems for a list that is not nested within another list. However,
with nesting, as in the example I
On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 4:11 PM, Curiouslearn curiousle...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone please explain why the margin command does not work in
this example? What can I do to obtain the margin.
Thanks.
\setuppapersize[letter][letter]
\starttext
\input tufte
\startitemize
\item
Can someone please say whether it is possible to do what I am trying
to do below?
Thanks.
On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 10:11 AM, Curiouslearn curiousle...@gmail.com wrote:
Can someone please explain why the margin command does not work in
this example? What can I do to obtain the margin.
Thanks.
Can someone please explain why the margin command does not work in
this example? What can I do to obtain the margin.
Thanks.
\setuppapersize[letter][letter]
\starttext
\input tufte
\startitemize
\item This is the first item of outer list.
\startitemize[a][stopper=)]