Hi Hans,
In fact, I was talking about functions that seemed to me "complicated" for
what I wanted to do.
Fabrice
Le sam. 9 nov. 2019 à 14:43, Hans Hagen a écrit :
> On 11/9/2019 11:42 AM, Fabrice Couvreur wrote:
> > Hi,
> > Thank you for your suggestions, the problem is solved. I searched, but
>
On 11/9/2019 11:42 AM, Fabrice Couvreur wrote:
Hi,
Thank you for your suggestions, the problem is solved. I searched, but
the solutions seemed too complex. Is it specific to Context with Lua. If
so, which document should you read ?
how do you mean complex ... anyway, if you refer to %g, one p
Hi,
Thank you for your suggestions, the problem is solved. I searched, but the
solutions seemed too complex. Is it specific to Context with Lua. If so,
which document should you read ?
Fabrice
Le sam. 9 nov. 2019 à 11:20, Hans Hagen a écrit :
> On 11/9/2019 11:03 AM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
> > O
On 11/9/2019 11:03 AM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
On 11/9/19 10:38 AM, Fabrice Couvreur wrote:
Hi,
In the table below, how to have numbers with only three decimals?
Hi Fabrice,
at least in your sample "0.4g" seems the way to go, such as in:
context.startxcell() context("%0.4g",1.031^i) contex
On 11/9/19 10:38 AM, Fabrice Couvreur wrote:
> Hi,
> In the table below, how to have numbers with only three decimals?
Hi Fabrice,
at least in your sample "0.4g" seems the way to go, such as in:
context.startxcell() context("%0.4g",1.031^i) context.stopxcell()
Just in case it might help,
Pab
On 11/9/19 10:38 PM, Fabrice Couvreur wrote:
> Hi,
> In the table below, how to have numbers with only three decimals ?
> Thank you.
> Fabrice
>
> \starttext
> \startluacode
> local letters_1 = { "A", "B", "C", "D", "E", "F", "G", "H", "I", "J" }
> local letters_2 = { "1", "Année", "1998", "1999",