i also have a question; why can't i use different fonts in
\def\myCommand#1#2{{\ss\sc #1}{\rm\sc #2}{\ss\sc\bf #1}{\rm\sc\bf #2}}
\setuphead[part][command=\myCommand]
the font commands are simply ignored. I don't want to have to resort to
using numberstyle and textstyle.
Thanks
Am 30.01.2009 um 13:13 schrieb Mohamed Bana:
i also have a question; why can't i use different fonts in
\def\myCommand#1#2{{\ss\sc #1}{\rm\sc #2}{\ss\sc\bf #1}{\rm\sc\bf #2}}
\setuphead[part][command=\myCommand]
the font commands are simply ignored. I don't want to have to
resort to
Hello,
In the example below...
%\def\myCommand#1#2{}
\def\myCommand#1#2{#1 #2}
%\def\myCommand{}
\setuphead[chapter]
[number=yes,
align=middle,
% anyotherparameter=whatever,
command=\myCommand]
%command=]
\starttext
On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Alan Stone
software.list.1e...@gmail.com wrote:
... how do you define myCommand so
\setuphead[chapter]
[(any other parameter settings),
command=\myCommand,
(any other parameter settings)]
is equal to
\setuphead[chapter]
[(any other
How do you obtain the same result as
\setuphead[chapter][header=option(,footer=option)]
( option = none empty high nomarking )
in a document where
[header/footer][left/rightedge]=not empty on chapter pages
i.e. only [header/footer][text]=option for chapter pages and
others ( left/right edge )
Re your question about the section numbering with a dot: This is
nothing I found out, but something Hans (who else?) posted to the list
a while ago, and I believe it does what you want to achieve:
\setuplabeltext[section={{},{.}}]
Best
Thomas
___
At 22:58 10/12/2003, you wrote:
On Wed, 10 Dec 2003, Hans Hagen wrote:
hm, must be some kind of complex thing then, what is \thanks supposed
to do?
No, it's not complex at all, and the answer ended up being trivial. The
\thanks command is essentially a footnote to be used in the title portion
I'm trying to layout a paper for a conference that requires a format
different from the standard latex layout, and for the most part context
has been making this quite easy on me (excluding the four hours I spent
trying to mimic the latex \thanks{} construct), however, I've encoutered a
new
At 18:10 10/12/2003, you wrote:
I'm trying to layout a paper for a conference that requires a format
different from the standard latex layout, and for the most part context
has been making this quite easy on me (excluding the four hours I spent
trying to mimic the latex \thanks{} construct),
On Wed, 10 Dec 2003, Hans Hagen wrote:
hm, must be some kind of complex thing then, what is \thanks supposed to do?
No, it's not complex at all, and the answer ended up being trivial. The
\thanks command is essentially a footnote to be used in the title portion
of an article (or book, etc.) --
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