-0x2] % look up the
right
Unicode ranges!
[check=no,force=no]
\definetypeface [myfonts] [rm] [serif] [times] [default]
[fallbacks=SymbolFB]
And then copy the character from a symbol table, no need for a macro.
Hmm, that's a great idea. But I can't seem to get a minimal to work
with https
exactly.
>
> I see. The first few lines of my BibTeX file just contains a copyright
> notice that is commented out with the % character. If that is not a
> valid comment character, is there no way to write a comment in the
> file?
>
1) You appear to be using the long-frozen mki
ht
notice that is commented out with the % character. If that is not a
valid comment character, is there no way to write a comment in the
file?
--
Kip Warner
OpenPGP signed/encrypted mail preferred
https://www.thevertigo.com
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed mes
On Wed, 2024-05-29 at 00:45 +0200, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
> Hard to say without looking at the bib file, but % is not a comment
> character in bibtex. So, if your file starts with
The first few lines of the file is just a copyright notice, with each
line beginning with %. If
ot warning about text outside of an entry that
> should be treated as a comment?
Hard to say without looking at the bib file, but % is not a comment character
in bibtex. So, if your file starts with
% @article{key,
% title = {...},
% }
you will get an error from the bib parser.
If you want
umber 1.
> >
> > I am assuming it needs a font that supports it, but I'm not sure
> > how to
> > switch to a supporting font just to typeset that character and then
> > revert back. Is there some way to define a macro?
>
> You could just define a fallback font, lik
them to work
in ConTeXt. I tried using the \utfchar{0x2460} but it just displays the
number 1.
I am assuming it needs a font that supports it, but I'm not sure how to
switch to a supporting font just to typeset that character and then
revert back. Is there some way to define a macro?
You could just
texmf/tex/context/bib/mkii/bibl-apa.tex'
...
All that's present on the first few lines of the References.bib BibTeX
database are comments that begin with the '%' character.
Is there a different character that should be used for BibTeX databases
when used with ConTeXt?
According to the docu
s present on the first few lines of the References.bib BibTeX
database are comments that begin with the '%' character.
Is there a different character that should be used for BibTeX databases
when used with ConTeXt?
--
Kip Warner
OpenPGP signed/encrypted mail preferred
https://www.thevertigo.com
sign
tried using the \utfchar{0x2460} but it just displays the
number 1.
I am assuming it needs a font that supports it, but I'm not sure how to
switch to a supporting font just to typeset that character and then
revert back. Is there some way to define a macro?
--
Kip Warner
OpenPGP signed/en
confirm the issue?
BTW, this is the first time I indent the sample sent to the list with a
single character (one tab) instead of two or four spaces.
If the sample is wrong displayed in the medium you use with the mailing
list, please tell me and I will go back to spaces instead of tabs.
Many thanks
, as if it was invisible.
What am I missing? here my script:
\definefontfeature[Libertinusfeatures][
mode=node,
ccmp=yes, % character composition
liga=yes, tlig=yes, % ligatures
tnum=yes,
cpsp=yes, % capital spacing
kern=yes,
language=dflt,
protrusion=quality,
expansion=quality
, as I
mispelled the filenmame, and it fully compiled and made a PDF, without
me noticing.
(3) Or maybe in some case, a font couldn't be found for a specific
character, so a single character in the file isn't displaying.
Those are just some examples; I intended for something to be printed
compiled and made a PDF, without
me noticing.
(3) Or maybe in some case, a font couldn't be found for a specific
character, so a single character in the file isn't displaying.
Those are just some examples; I intended for something to be printed on
the PDF, but it isn't showing there.
Since
in some case, a font couldn't be found for a specific character,
so a single character in the file isn't displaying.
Those are just some examples; I intended for something to be printed on the
PDF, but it isn't showing there.
Since a document of this size will have a lot of messages
Henning Hraban Ramm schrieb am 14.04.2024 um 14:53:
Am 14.04.24 um 14:46 schrieb Wolfgang Schuster:
garu...@azules.eu schrieb am 14.04.2024 um 12:41:
Hi all,
Is it on purpose that 128 pages
"https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/ " start with a
space character ?
I d
Am 14.04.24 um 14:46 schrieb Wolfgang Schuster:
garu...@azules.eu schrieb am 14.04.2024 um 12:41:
Hi all,
Is it on purpose that 128 pages
"https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/ " start with a space
character ?
I didn't find an explanation in https://wiki.contextgarden.n
garu...@azules.eu schrieb am 14.04.2024 um 12:41:
Hi all,
Is it on purpose that 128 pages "https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/
" start with a space character ?
I didn't find an explanation in https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command
For example, these two pages exist
Hi all,
Is it on purpose that 128 pages "https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/
" start with a space character ?
I didn't find an explanation in https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command
For example, these two pages exist :
- https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Command/startbuff
ould make no sense to get an en-dash there (but I guess you don’t
mean that).
But all OSes provide character maps to get single characters. And also
Unicodia works fine in Windows (https://mercury13.github.io/unicodia/,
just in case it might suit your needs).
Having a single character (emoj
e faulty files (with missing stuff) so i guess we have a complex
situation in general. That said, as long as one sticks to reliable and
clean code (plain svg) it should mostly work out.
Text is another matter because svg dropped glyph support so now
everything has to go through font fea
n in general. That said, as long as one sticks to reliable and
> clean code (plain svg) it should mostly work out.
>
> Text is another matter because svg dropped glyph support so now
> everything has to go through font features which in turn means that if
> one uses svg as output fo
clean code (plain svg) it should mostly work out.
Text is another matter because svg dropped glyph support so now
everything has to go through font features which in turn means that if
one uses svg as output format one has to specify every character with
possible abuse of a substitution feature tha
>
> >
> > In my previous mail, I wrote wrong amounts of lines. They should be 46
> > lines on one page, while the actual example doesn't show the 46th line.
> >
> > It would be important to identify the reason why only 24 characters are
> > used to c
. They should be 46
> > lines on one page, while the actual example doesn't show the 46th line.
> >
> > It would be important to identify the reason why only 24 characters are
> > used to create a line when 25 could be used. Then we can develop a method
> > to turn
are used
> to create a line when 25 could be used. Then we can develop a method to turn
> that mechanism off or circumvent it.
> Quotation from https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq:
> In principle, when composing a line with ideographic (cl-19), hiragana
> (cl-15) and katakana (cl-16) characters, no
On 3/11/24 09:31, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
>> On 9 Mar 2024, at 09:35, Pablo Rodriguez via ntg-context
>> wrote:
>>
>> Sure, they may be a workaround to type codepoints instead of characters
>> (such as with \utfchar{0x1fbb}, but wouln’t it be possible to disable
&
Hi,
> On 9 Mar 2024, at 09:35, Pablo Rodriguez via ntg-context
> wrote:
>
> Sure, they may be a workaround to type codepoints instead of characters
> (such as with \utfchar{0x1fbb}, but wouln’t it be possible to disable
> that character normalization in the wiki?
AFAIK, W
d //katakana
(cl-16) <https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-16>// characters, no
extra spacing appears between their //character frame
<https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#term.character-frame>//. This is
called solid setting (see //Figure 5
<https://
gt; > In principle, when composing a line with ideographic (cl-19)
> > (https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-19), hiragana (cl-15)
> > (https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-15) and katakana (cl-16)
> > (https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-16) characters, no extra spacing appears
> >
, these are two different characters. In
some fonts each pair of different characters for each accented letter
lead to the same glyph, in other fonts those glyphs are different.
This sample shows the difference (there should display two slightly
different accents [unless there is some character
w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-15>// and //katakana (cl-16)
<https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-16>// characters, no extra spacing
appears between their //character frame
<https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#term.character-frame>//. This is called
solid setting (see //Figure 5 <https://www.w3.org
)
(https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-19), hiragana (cl-15)
(https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-15) and katakana (cl-16)
(https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#cl-16) characters, no extra spacing appears
between their character frame
(https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#term.character-frame). This is called solid
, the opening Brackets (I marked them with
\color[red]{【} and \color[red]{{}) are taking the previous character
with them to the next line. Please remove these to see that the
previous character would stay on the previous line. Thanks Wolfgang
for checking wether this is a bug.
Can you stick to fonts
]{{}) are taking the previous character with them to the next
line. Please remove these to see that the previous character would stay on the
previous line. Thanks Wolfgang for checking wether this is a bug.
I was not successful in figuring out how the protrusion mechanism can be set in
order
re:
> https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/#possibilities_for_linebreaking_between_characters
> , and all affected characters are listed here:
> https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/tables/table_en3.pdf
>
> We have different rules, depending what kind of character is surpassing
> the text width (or is in its last
s are listed here:
> https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/tables/table_en3.pdf
>
> We have different rules, depending what kind of character is surpassing the
> text width (or is in its last position).
>
> Rule 1:
>
> Before closing brackets, closing quotation marks, iterati
, and all affected characters are listed here:
https://www.w3.org/TR/jlreq/tables/table_en3.pdf
We have different rules, depending what kind of character is
surpassing the text width (or is in its last position).
Rule 1:
Before closing brackets, closing quotation marks, iteration marks
/jlreq/tables/table_en3.pdf
We have different rules, depending what kind of character is surpassing the
text width (or is in its last position).
Rule 1:
Before closing brackets, closing quotation marks, iteration marks, the
Prolonged sound mark and small Kana, line breaking is prohibited.
’”)〕]}〉》」』】ヽヾ
> On 21 Feb 2024, at 08:17, madiazm.eo...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> Thanks a lot Bruce, that did the trick! definitely I will have to learn a bit
> lua in summer.
> I just got an error on \qquad and found searching in internet that it was
> because escape character conflicts b
Thanks a lot Bruce, that did the trick! definitely I will have to learn a bit
lua in summer.
I just got an error on \qquad and found searching in internet that it was
because escape character conflicts between tex and lua. For the time i removed
it and since I will create itemizes I hope I dont
(comments are mine)
In den Büchereien gibt es auch … %the question
… Kuchen. %option a
… Theater. %option b
… Workshops. %option c
I need to detect \par or whatever sign marks the newline character as an
argument delimiter so that I dont have to paste hundreds of times braces
for each argument
… %the question
… Kuchen. %option a
… Theater. %option b
… Workshops. %option c
I need to detect \par or whatever sign marks the newline character as an
argument delimiter so that I dont have to paste hundreds of times braces
for each argument.
For the example, I use this macro definition (which
pm and to
---
doc/context/sources/general/manuals/units/units-mkiv.tex | 8 +++-
1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-)
diff --git a/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/units/units-mkiv.tex b/doc/context/sources/general/manuals/units/units-mkiv.tex
index d70c7221f..a1631aadb 100644
--- a
lders in environment variables,
it is best to use UNIX-style (TeX usually expects and prefers directories to be
separated by "/" rather "\" because the backslash is its control character).
Furthermore, "//" at the end cannot be substituted with "\\".
The i
we have dealt with all of that (some not in the current release),
think of additional control in the engine, compensation for insufficient
opentype math features, companion fonts with more sizes
there will always be suboptimal cases but the average is ok (we put
radical - character kerning
sulting PDF document?
>
> one has to render a document (page stream) in order to wee what end up
> where .. a viewer has that info so it can decide to act upon it (apart
> from some gambling with words clipped in the middle of a character)
>
> this is not something for context to
ped section is added to the
resulting PDF document?
one has to render a document (page stream) in order to wee what end up
where .. a viewer has that info so it can decide to act upon it (apart
from some gambling with words clipped in the middle of a character)
this is not something for context
order 3, name './mathtry.tex'
fonts > beware: no fonts are loaded yet, using 'lm mono' in box
tex error > tex error on line 4 in file ./mathtry.tex: \textfont0 is
undefined in ordinal, font id 0, character 63)
\endgroup \Ustopmathmode
\stopfo
/32768)\relax }} \par
\setbox \scratchbox \hbox {\dorecurse {26}{\character \recurselevel }}
\Width =\dimexpr \TA@alphabet
\setupTypeArea[bcor=0pt,oneside=no,alphabets=2.6]
79 height=\the\Height,
80 width=\the\Width,
81 header=2\lineheight,
82 headerdi
area/t-typearea.tex:
Missing number, treated as zero
{
\TA@alphabets
\par \PageWidth =\dimexpr \paperwidth -\TA@bcor \relax \par \edef
\Ratio {\withoutpt {
\the \dimexpr 2\paperheight /(\PageWidth /32768)\relax }} \par
\setbox \scratchbox \hbox {\dorecurse {26}{\character \recurs
ssed. Of course it
doesn't matter what fallback font one uses, as long as it has no
control-character symbols.
1. Can this approach be generalized to get what we want, viz., a way to toggle
the symbols?
given the inconsistency in what is or is not in a font the only way out
is to have our own
ack font one uses, as long as it has no
control-character symbols.
1. Can this approach be generalized to get what we want, viz., a way to toggle
the symbols?
2. \enabletrackers[typesetters.nbsp] gives a colored box, which is at least
something.. But how can we get the NBSP symbol that's alerady
ng the symbols are
usually suppressed, while the effect of each character is maintained.
In some text editors, such as Windows Notepad (Uniscribe), there is the option
"Show Unicode control characters"
which toggles the symbols and keeps the effects.
I seem to recall that ConTeXt has/h
nd
related Unicode control characters
** Caution: EXTERNAL Sender **
On 9/21/2023 3:31 PM, Hamid,Idris wrote:
Dear gang,
Within a font, relevant Unicode control characters such as the zero-width
joiner usually have symbolic representation, but in printing the symbols are
usually suppress
On 9/21/2023 3:31 PM, Hamid,Idris wrote:
Dear gang,
Within a font, relevant Unicode control characters such as the zero-width
joiner usually have symbolic representation, but in printing the symbols are
usually suppressed, while the effect of each character is maintained.
In some text
Dear gang,
Within a font, relevant Unicode control characters such as the zero-width
joiner usually have symbolic representation, but in printing the symbols are
usually suppressed, while the effect of each character is maintained.
In some text editors, such as Windows Notepad (Uniscribe
culpa.
My mail program did not show me that your first answer had non-breakable
spaces after '[title]' and '[subject]' (but not after '[subsubject]'). And
I quickly copied and pasted those into a file without checking the
character set. Replacing those with ASCII spaces makes everything work
nface][rm][DejaVu Sans]
>>[sl≃style:bf]
>
> You're using the wrong symbol (you have a math operator in your example)
> to assign a value to a key.
Many thanks for your reply, Wolfgang.
As always, many thanks for your valuable help.
Somehow I copied the assymptopically equal to char
a #, which, as a
special character seems to cause an error. Adding a double hash seems to work,
but those ## will end up in the link URL. How can I properly escape a single #?
I've already tried using \Ux{23}, but that won't work either.
The duplication of hashes is kind of special. Consider
in this particular case). The prefix contains a #, which, as a
special character seems to cause an error. Adding a double hash seems to work,
but those ## will end up in the link URL. How can I properly escape a single #?
I've already tried using \Ux{23}, but that won't work either
, as a
special character seems to cause an error. Adding a double hash seems to work,
but those ## will end up in the link URL. How can I properly escape a single #?
I've already tried using \Ux{23}, but that won't work either.
Best,
Denis
\setupinteraction[state=start]
\startxmlsetups xml:test
ts occur, then it follows that any control sequence
>>> kerning
>>> also gets thrown off as a result.
>>
>> Of course the width influences the spacing. That is how the paragraph
>> builder works (and really, why it often looks good).
>>
>>>
file, document, minimal
> > > working example that does not load cmr at the outset does not produce
> > > an acceptable outcome either. By saying acceptable I meant to say it
> > > namely from a typographical point of view. Nothing else.
> >
> > I have no clue of what yo
ceptable outcome either. By saying acceptable I meant to say it
> > namely from a typographical point of view. Nothing else.
>
> I have no clue of what you talk about here.
>
> >
> > from the TeXbook 380-381
> >
> > «\obeylines doesn’t say ‘\def^^M{\par}’, so we must make any
ny standalone file, document, minimal
> > working example that does not load cmr at the outset does not produce
> > an acceptable outcome either. By saying acceptable I meant to say it
> > namely from a typographical point of view. Nothing else.
>
> I have no clue of what you talk about h
what you talk about here.
>
> from the TeXbook 380-381
>
> «\obeylines doesn’t say ‘\def^^M{\par}’, so we must make any desired changes
> to
> \par before invoking \obeylines. (2) The \uncatcodespecials operation changes
> a
> space to category 12; but the \tt font
the character ‘␣’ in the ⟨space⟩
position, so we
don’t really want ␣12 . (3) The \obeyspaces macro in Appendix B merely changes
the
⟨space⟩ character to category 13; active character ␣13 has been defined to be
the same
as \space, a macro that expands to ␣10 . This is usually what is desired; for
example
is not found
structure > sectioning > section @ level 3 : 0.0.1 -> Problemes de
fraccions
structure > sectioning > subject @ level 3 : 0.0.1 -> Preguntes
tex error > tex error on line 25 in file ./dev.tex: \textfont0 is
undefined in ordinal, font id 0, character
. It is not clear to me whether the
scaling/rotation commands should fall under the character function, e.g.,
the demo shows both: x/.y scaling and 90/180/270 rotation
===
-- ʿ ringhalfleft
local function ringhalfleft (characters,target,base,accent)
===
the initialize function
===
local function
needed
to care of everything except for two characters: 02BE and 02BF.
For one of those two remaining characters we also need scaling, for the other
we also need scaling + rotation. It is not clear to me whether the
scaling/rotation commands should fall under the character function, e.g.,
=
whether the
scaling/rotation commands should fall under the character function, e.g.,
===
-- ʿ ringhalfleft
local function ringhalfleft (characters,target,base,accent)
===
the initialize function
===
local function initialize(tfmdata,value)
===
or whether we just make a new
Dear gang,
I. In Context, as is well known, scaling a character is not independent of
switching the font:
===
\startTEXpage[offset=1em]
\definefont[Times][times @ 14pt]
\Times Test \tfx Test
\setupinterlinespace
\Times Test \switchtobodyfont[x]Test
\Times Test \high{Test}
\stopTEXpage
I'm trying to use ConTeXt for playwriting, and I think it would be best to use
sections for dialog. However, if a dialog's text is interrupted by a page
break, it is customary to restate the character name followed by (continued) on
the following page:
--- open ---
John
My name
17, name 'file-res.mklx'
open source > level 1, order 18, name 'file-lib.mkxl'
loading : ConTeXt File Macros / Libraries
resolvers > lua > loading file
'/usr/local/share/texmf-dist/tex/context/base/mkiv/file-lib.lua' succeeded
close source> level 1, order 18,
On 7/7/2023 1:09 PM, Carlos wrote:
\showmakeup displays it astonishingly correctly indeed
probably a side effect of the fact that injected stuff resynchronizes
the character progression in the pdf file (every char start with
explicit coordinates) while without showing it depends on the width
yword but it seems to be an invalid one. The first character(s)
might give you a clue. You might want to quit unwanted lookahead with \relax.
mtx-context | fatal error: return code: 1
___
If your question is of interest
is not a pre-defined named character in XML (but it is in HTML which
lulls you into a false sense of security).
See the link below for some more detail and a fix.
<https://coderanch.com/t/322290/java/html-nbsp-braking-space-character>
> On 13 Jun 2023, at 11:01, Hans van der Mee
character math as in "text $x$ text" will from now on behave
kind of like "text~x$ text" but that ~ always felt kind of weird anyway.
Tests on large documents with plenty math and single char cases shows
that it works quite ok and in most cases the paragraph will have the
adapt the
following setup (cyrillic and greek shown as the other languages with
different character sets I use)
\startmode[JA]
\setuplanguage[ja][patterns={ja}]\mainlanguage[ja]
\stopmode
When your document prints only text in a single language change the
setup above to
\startmo
(cyrillic and greek shown as the other languages with different character sets
I use)
\startmode[JA]
\setuplanguage[ja][patterns={ja}]\mainlanguage[ja]
\stopmode
\definefallbackfamily
[archimate]
[ss]
[Helvetica]
[preset=range:cyrillic,
tf=style:light,
it=style:lightoblique,
bf=style
Thomas
>
> On 4/22/23 20:33, Pablo Rodriguez via ntg-context wrote:
> > Hi Thomas,
> >
> > I don’t know what check does (maybe just check?), but the standard
> > behaviour with \definefallbackfamily is only to fall back when the
> > character is missing fr
with \definefallbackfamily is only to fall back when the
character is missing from the main font.
To force all characters from the range in the fallback font, "force=yes"
is required.
Here you have a minimal sample (which doesn‘t use "preset=range:greek"),
adding "force=yes&qu
heck does (maybe just check?), but the standard
behaviour with \definefallbackfamily is only to fall back when the
character is missing from the main font.
To force all characters from the range in the fallback font, "force=yes"
is required.
Here you have a minimal sample (which doesn‘t use "preset=r
][
mode=node,
ccmp=yes, % character composition
liga=yes, tlig=yes, % ligatures
pnum=yes,
cpsp=yes, % capital spacing
kern=yes,
language=dflt,
protrusion=quality,
expansion=quality,
]
\definefontfeature[smallcaps][ % use with \addff
smcp=yes, % smallcaps
% c2sc=yes, % caps
gt;>
> >>>> Keith McKay
> >>>>
> >>>> %%%
> >>>>
> >>>> Here is a snippet of the HTML document with footnotes
> >>>>
> >>>> >>>> "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN&q
This was the early sixties. Like many
thousands, we were rehoused from Maryhill in the heart of urban
Glasgow to this peripheral housing scheme which completely changed
the character of what had been a village. Within a decade those
glasshouses were abandoned, glass broken in the frames, and a ro
footnote"> >> data-fnref="53-1">. Those delicate crucifers with their
> >> manifold faces of four pink or lilac petals striated with veins of
> >> deeper lavender are the perfect introduction to flowers for children.
> >> So delicate and yet ha
"53-2"> as an elderly lady exclaimed to me) to
> northern France, and when I come home, it’s to a landscape responding to
> substantially increased light levels and temperatures.
> This was the early sixties. Like many thousands,
> we were rehoused from Maryhill in the hear
we were rehoused from Maryhill in the heart of urban Glasgow to this
peripheral housing scheme which completely changed the character of what
had been a village. Within a decade those glasshouses were abandoned,
glass broken in the frames, and a row of shops that included a chippy and a
betting sh
> Wiki!
>
> maillist : ntg-context@ntg.nl /
> https://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
> webpage : https://www.pragma-ade.nl / http://context.aanhet.net
> archive : https://bitbucket.org/phg/context-mirror/commits/
> wiki : https://contextgarden.net
>
s to a landscape responding to
substantially increased light levels and temperatures.
This was the early sixties. Like many
thousands, we were rehoused from Maryhill in the heart of urban Glasgow
to this peripheral housing scheme which completely changed the character
of what had been a village. W
as_place_number
> > \strc_formulas_flush_number \dostarttagged \t!formulacontent \empty
> > \dotagregisterformula \c_strc_formulas_n \csname \e!stop \formulaparameter
> > \c!alternative \v!formula \endcsname
>
> dunno, that's numbering, not math
>
> > Okay. So I tr
!formula \endcsname
dunno, that's numbering, not math
Okay. So I tried another file. This time around with only
\setupbodyfont[lucida]
\starttext
$ test $
\stoptext
and then the output message was «Somewhere in the math formula just ended, you
used the stated character from an
undefined font
have been set. This
is
normally done by loading special math fonts into the math family slots. Your
font
set is lacking at least the parameter mentioned earlier.»
Sorry, but sorry doesn't cut it here.
I guess it must have been referring to \strc_formulas_place_number
\strc_formulas_flush_number
are "converted" into
type3 snippets (so that one can copy a big parentheses that has pieces
and get the correct unicode character, for example). This can be
disabled with
\disabledirectives[math.extensibles]
and I can use that when printing from this computer. I should probably
report som
as to
> correct this manually (for instance in French « connaître » was typed
> as « conn\^{\i}tre »).
Hi Otared
I think what doesn’t work is the dotless i as combining character for i
+ diacritical mark.
It seems that standard i may combine fine:
\setupinteractionscreen[option=max]
\starttext
On 2/4/23 07:49, Hugo Landau via ntg-context wrote:
> On this page of the wiki there is an example for wrapping long words,
> like long hexadecimal strings:
>
> https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Wrapping
>
> This example is buggy because it deletes one character at the point th
://wiki.contextgarden.net/Wrapping
This example is buggy because it deletes one character at the point that
it is wrapped.
Anyone have a solution?
Many thanks for your report, Hugo.
I use this code from time to time and I totally overlooked this.
Have you checked all options that the sample contains?
Hans,
I
>> This example is buggy because it deletes one character at the point that
>> it is wrapped.
>>
>> Anyone have a solution?
>
> Many thanks for your report, Hugo.
>
> I use this code from time to time and I totally overlooked this.
>
> Have yo
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