...interesting.....so it is possible to printf(" Unicode \n") ?
printf(<<...>>) Am Mo., 15. Apr. 2019 um 08:55 Uhr schrieb Dang Ngoc Chan, Christophe < christophe.d...@sidel.com>: > Hello, > > > De : Antoine Monmayrant > > Envoyé : vendredi 12 avril 2019 19:39 > > > > > Le Vendredi, Avril 12, 2019 11:47 CEST, P M <p.muehlm...@gmail.com> a > > > écrit: > > > > > > what is the reason that SciNotes changes the colour from > > > > > > printf(".\n"); > > > > > > to > > > > > > printf("...\n"); > > > > What occurs is that scinotes interprets two dots ".." as the > continuation mark > > and stops coloring the rest of the line as string. > > A workaround would be to use the typographic continuation dots « … », > Unicode U+2026, although it is far less convenient to type > (and as long as everything involved supports Unicode, e.g. UTF-8 encoding). > > And any typography freak LaTeXist would tell you that three dots > do not have the correct spacing :-D > > Regards > > -- > Christophe Dang Ngoc Chan > Mechanical calculation engineer > > General > This e-mail may contain confidential and/or privileged information. If you > are not the intended recipient (or have received this e-mail in error), > please notify the sender immediately and destroy this e-mail. Any > unauthorized copying, disclosure or distribution of the material in this > e-mail is strictly forbidden. > _______________________________________________ > users mailing list > users@lists.scilab.org > http://lists.scilab.org/mailman/listinfo/users >
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