Am 03.03.2011 21:29, schrieb [email protected]:
Tobias Schoel wrote:Thanks for the info. Will something break up, when using \newunicodechar{<U+2009>}{\,\hspace{0pt}} \newunicodechar{<U+202F>}{\,} in the preamble? Or does some important or highly used package use these characters specifically?No package that I know of does anything with these characters. But that's not the correct syntax; either you put the actual characters in the first argument, or write as Ulrike suggested \newunicodechar{^^^^2009}{\,\hspace{0pt}} \newunicodechar{^^^^202f}{\,}
I did understand you, I was just copying your version.
Notice the lowercase f. Then any such character in your document will translate to "breakable thin space" and "non breakable thin space" respectively. Ciao Enrico -- Enrico Gregorio + Dipartimento di Informatica + Tel: +39 045 8027937 [email protected] + Università degli Studi di Verona + ([email protected]) + Strada le Grazie 15 / I-37134 Verona + Fax: +39 045 8027928
Thanks for the Information. It will help make some of my .tex-documents more human readable. And with human I mean non-TeXnicians. (They always wondered, what \, meant or told, there was a wrong comma in my text.)
bye Toscho -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex
