> All along I have been assuming that Context was like LaTeX: a
> system for end-users, a language where an author could easily
> manipulate the appearance of his document. Apparently, it's more like
> a supporting infrastructure for that. Maybe it needs a layer of
> macros sitting on top of it
Philipp:
Thank you---I appreciate your effort on glossarium.lua very much, but
I don't want to be dependent on you every time I want to tweek my
glossary. I find it difficult to change the appearance and behavior
of anything in Context, but I think my chances are better with it than
with trying t
On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 6:36 AM, Michael Saunders wrote:
> About glossaries:
>
> Thank you, everyone. I'm not much of a TeXpert and certainly not a
> lua expert, but I'm trying to understand your different solutions and
> integrate them into a working system. There seem to be three
> approaches:
Just being helpful here:
Hans Hagen wrote:
Aangezien een antwoord in het engels voor jou meer vragen oproept dan
antwoorden, reageer ik maar even in het Nederlands. Wellicht dat de
google translator je een perfecte vertaling oplevert.
Since an answer in English you calls more questions tha
On 4-5-2010 11:44, Michael Saunders wrote:
Thanks, but that looks like it's just some extracts from cont-eni
translated from Engijsh into Engrish along with a distracting
background that makes it hard to read. The stuff about the not very
useful abbreviation command is there again, but I'm draw
... forgot the attachment.
--
() ascii ribbon campaign - against html e-mail
/\ www.asciiribbon.org - against proprietary attachments
--
-- FILE: glossarium.lua
--USAGE: ConTeXt MkIV only
-- DES
On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 7:36 AM, Michael Saunders wrote:
> II. Marius's modified index solution is the only one to successfully
> link the entry back to a point in the text, but the resulting
> "glossary" really just looks like an index.
>
You can modify the look of an index with \setupregister
h
Hello again,
On 2010-05-04 <23:36:17>, Michael Saunders wrote:
> III. Philipp Gesang's lua-based solution connects headwords to
> entries just as \definesynonyms[gentry][gentries][\infull][\inshort]
> does, and it produces something that looks like a glossary, but the
> entries have no link back
Michael Saunders wrote:
>> Wolfgang Schuster:
>> http://pragma-ade.com/general/manuals/cont-enp.pdf -> page 159
>
> That rambling entry is like the webpage but worse. It still doesn't
> say what arguments 2--4 do, why \infull is necesarry, or anything else
> with any clarity. It's just another
About glossaries:
Thank you, everyone. I'm not much of a TeXpert and certainly not a
lua expert, but I'm trying to understand your different solutions and
integrate them into a working system. There seem to be three
approaches:
I. Willi Egger---synonym-based
II. Marius---modified index
III. Phi
Hey Michael,
I'm the author of that terrible document.
On Tue, May 04, 2010 at 08:32:36AM -0500, Michael Saunders wrote:
> > No, it's plain English. Unfamiliar phrases are just one consequence of a
> > language becoming the world standard. Do you want to flame Italians or
> > French for not adher
On 2010-05-04 <08:32:36>, Michael Saunders wrote:
> > (Preliminary remark to M.S.: please, please, configure your MUA to
> > correctly reply to the current thread!)
>
> (What's wrong with my subject line? I'm merely hitting "reply" in gmail.)
Strange, judging from my inbox some of your replies ar
On Tue, May 4, 2010 at 12:44 PM, Michael Saunders wrote:
> What I would really, really, like is to add short definitions to each
> glossary record that could pop up as tooltips when the reader hovers
> over an unfamiliar word. Since there is no mechanism for glossaries
> in Context, there is no m
> (Preliminary remark to M.S.: please, please, configure your MUA to
> correctly reply to the current thread!)
(What's wrong with my subject line? I'm merely hitting "reply" in gmail.)
> No, it's plain English. Unfamiliar phrases are just one consequence of a
> language becoming the world stand
Hi,
Why do you complain about other user's English? - Let us be happy, that people
of another mother tong including my self do participate on the list and share
their experience with others!
According to what I tested the basic functionality is already available in
Context:
\definesynonyms[Gl
(Preliminary remark to M.S.: please, please, configure your MUA to
correctly reply to the current thread!)
Hi Michael,
I'm cc'ing you in case the list eats the attachments.
On 2010-05-04 <04:44:21>, Michael Saunders wrote:
> Marius:
>
> > Try this one: http://www.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/info/co
Marius:
> Try this one: http://www.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/info/context-top-ten/cmds.pdf
> -> page 14
Thanks, but that looks like it's just some extracts from cont-eni
translated from Engijsh into Engrish along with a distracting
background that makes it hard to read. The stuff about the not very
On Tue, May 4, 2010 at 4:40 AM, Michael Saunders wrote:
>> Wolfgang Schuster:
>> http://pragma-ade.com/general/manuals/cont-enp.pdf -> page 159
>
> That rambling entry is like the webpage but worse. It still doesn't
> say what arguments 2--4 do, why \infull is necesarry, or anything else
> with a
> Wolfgang Schuster:
> http://pragma-ade.com/general/manuals/cont-enp.pdf -> page 159
That rambling entry is like the webpage but worse. It still doesn't
say what arguments 2--4 do, why \infull is necesarry, or anything else
with any clarity. It's just another bundle of bad writing concealing
wh
Am 03.05.10 21:18, schrieb Michael Saunders:
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Reference/en/definesynonyms
If you read that page, you'll notice it doesn't say what the second
and third arguments of \definesynonyms do, what the command
\definesynonyms itself does, nor does it hint at what \infu
>> Also, is there no Context method to produce a glossary? It might be
>> enough to produce a secondary .bib file with special entries and to
>> print this out as a secondary "References" section, but I don't know
>> how to do this or how to control the appearance of the printed
>> "references".
Am 03.05.10 00:51, schrieb Michael Saunders:
Does Context have a mechanism for placing tooltips on text? I think
the usual PDF way is to put an invisible button over the test and set
its "short description". Does anyone know how to do this?
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Widgets
Wolfgang
Am 03.05.10 00:51, schrieb Michael Saunders:
Also, is there no Context method to produce a glossary? It might be
enough to produce a secondary .bib file with special entries and to
print this out as a secondary "References" section, but I don't know
how to do this or how to control the appearanc
Does Context have a mechanism for placing tooltips on text? I think
the usual PDF way is to put an invisible button over the test and set
its "short description". Does anyone know how to do this?
Also, is there no Context method to produce a glossary? It might be
enough to produce a secondary .
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