On Wed, 7 Mar 2007, Xan wrote:

> En/na Wolfgang Schuster ha escrit:
>> 2007/3/7, Aditya Mahajan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>>>
>>> On Wed, 7 Mar 2007, Xan wrote:
>>>
>>>> En/na Aditya Mahajan ha escrit:
>>>>> On Wed, 7 Mar 2007, Xan wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Is it possible to have the equivalent in \sf in context?. I tried \sf
>>>>>> and I get an error. Strange because \sl, \bf, etc exist
>>>>>
>>>>> \ss? (I am not sure what \sf is supposed to be, so just guessing)
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> \sf is Sans Serif (latex)
>>>> [\rm roman, \tt typewriter, \sl slanted, \emph empasized, \it italic
>>> \bf
>>>> boldface; see "a not so short intro to latex" for example]
>>>
>>> \ss is plain tex's font command for sans serif, and works with
>>> context. I do not know why latex chose \sf (sffamily, textsf) instead
>>> of ss.
>>
>>
>> You are wrong, \ss is in plain TeX the command to produce the german ß.
>> There has never been a predefined command to swith to a sans serif font
>> like
>> the corresponding switches for bold and italic.
>>
>>
>
> So, is there any command for that?. How can I get \sf in latex in context?

In ConTeXt, \ss switches to sans serif. What Wolfgang meant (IIUC) was 
that there is no command in plain tex to switch to sans serif.

More details are at 
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Basic_Text_Formatting

Aditya
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