On Mon, Oct 25, 2004 at 10:32:53AM -0500, Bill McClain wrote:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 16:06:10 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Piotr Kopszak) wrote:
Hello,
I know it's a bad habit to use stretched text, but apparently
formerly people thought differently. I am typesetting old quotations
and
Hello,
Piotr Kopszak wrote:
Right, but as far as I understand this solution:
\def\CapStretchAmount{.08em}
\def\CapStretch#1{\def\stretchedspaceamount{\CapStretchAmount}\stretchednormalcase{#1}}
Which is used as so:
\CapStretch{\sc The King in Yellow}
applies only to
Piotr Kopszak wrote:
Right, but as far as I understand this solution:
\def\CapStretchAmount{.08em}
\def\CapStretch#1{\def\stretchedspaceamount{\CapStretchAmount}\stretchednormalcase{#1}}
Which is used as so:
\CapStretch{\sc The King in Yellow}
applies only to small
Hello,
I know it's a bad habit to use stretched text, but apparently
formerly people thought differently. I am typesetting old quotations
and would not want to replace stretched text simply by emphasized. Is
it absolutely discouraged in ConTeXt or is there any way to have
it... (in spite of its
On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 16:06:10 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Piotr Kopszak) wrote:
Hello,
I know it's a bad habit to use stretched text, but apparently
formerly people thought differently. I am typesetting old quotations
and would not want to replace stretched text simply by emphasized. Is
it