Hello all,
Is there any possibility use Lua commands in
\startseparatedlist[NaturalTable] ... \stopseparatedlist environment in
database module?
I would like using database module im my Lua application.
Thanx
Jaroslav
Here is mimimal example:
\usemodule[database]
\defineseparatedlist
On 25-7-2010 11:41, Martin Schröder wrote:
2010/7/25 Matija Šukljemat...@suklje.name:
From a quick search on Wikipedia, I found out that PDF[1] indeed does support
RDF[2] via XMP[3] embedded in the PDF file.
The problem here really does seem to be where ConTeXt comes into play.
There are at
Dne ponedeljek 26. julija 2010 ob 01:47:13 je David Rogers napisal(a):
* Matija Šuklje mat...@suklje.name [2010-07-25 23:33]:
-.-.-
P.S. Is there a nicer wording then (s)he for referencing persona in
unisex gender (other then one)?
The correct unisex pronoun is he. This whole question is an
On 26-7-2010 8:36, Jaroslav Hajtmar wrote:
Hello all,
Is there any possibility use Lua commands in
\startseparatedlist[NaturalTable] ... \stopseparatedlist environment in
database module?
I would like using database module im my Lua application.
Thanx
Jaroslav
Here is mimimal example:
Hello,
Perhaps I don't use localfootnotes the right way?
Example:
\starttext
blub\footnote{blub}
bla
\startlocalfootnotes
blub\footnote{blub}
\placelocalfootnotes
\stoplocalfootnotes
\stoptext
Cheers, Peter
--
Contact information: http://pmrb.free.fr/contact/
Whether it is useless/'no problem exists' is not up to you to decide:
it is up to those who do find it important. As long as some people
find it important, no childish dismissals will remove that importance.
It seems the most successful/widely adopted form is to vary from 'he'
to 'she' (so that
On 26-7-2010 11:48, John Haltiwanger wrote:
It seems the most successful/widely adopted form is to vary from 'he'
to 'she' (so that in one sentence you use one, in the next another).
Some authors even change the gender within a sentence. This method was
adopted because 'one' (the real correct
On Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 12:06 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl wrote:
On 26-7-2010 11:48, John Haltiwanger wrote:
It seems the most successful/widely adopted form is to vary from 'he'
to 'she' (so that in one sentence you use one, in the next another).
Some authors even change the gender within a
Hmmm ... maybe Hans will change his favorite editor? :) :) :)
http://groups.google.com/group/vim_announce/browse_thread/thread/22eac70dd4aa3d87
Announcing: Vim (Vi IMproved) version 7.3b BETA
...
The biggest additions since 7.2:
...
- Lua interface
...
Dne ponedeljek 26. julija 2010 ob 12:20:14 je luigi scarso napisal(a):
I try to use one and we .
I used to use one as well, but after a while it starts looking weird. for
now I settled for (s)he, but I wondered if there's a nice widely adopted
option like the Swiss use *Innen:
e.g.
On 26-7-2010 1:56, Matija Šuklje wrote:
Dne ponedeljek 26. julija 2010 ob 12:20:14 je luigi scarso napisal(a):
I try to use one and we .
I used to use one as well, but after a while it starts looking weird. for
now I settled for (s)he, but I wondered if there's a nice widely adopted
option
On 26-7-2010 1:50, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
Hmmm ... maybe Hans will change his favorite editor? :) :) :)
http://groups.google.com/group/vim_announce/browse_thread/thread/22eac70dd4aa3d87
hey, my favourite editor already has lua for a long time (and actually
has a cousin written in lua); after
On 26-7-2010 11:33, Peter Münster wrote:
Hello,
Perhaps I don't use localfootnotes the right way?
Example:
\starttext
blub\footnote{blub}
bla
\startlocalfootnotes
blub\footnote{blub}
\placelocalfootnotes
\stoplocalfootnotes
\stoptext
fixed in next upload
Hello to everybody!
There are few weeks left till the 4th ConTeXt Meeting on September
13-18, 2010 in Brejlov, Czech Republic.
We have collected interesting talks and tutorials (25+) on ConTeXt,
LuaTeX, Lua, fonts, OpenType math, Metapost and more:
On Fri, Jul 23, 2010 at 14:04, Andreas Schneider wrote:
Since one of the last Betas mtxrun seems to be aware of 64bit windows, but
all the stubs and scripts seem to be missing support for that resulting in
the whole setup to not work at all.
First-setup fails with stuff like that:
MTXrun |
On 26-7-2010 11:48, John Haltiwanger wrote:
It seems the most successful/widely adopted form is to vary from 'he'
to 'she' (so that in one sentence you use one, in the next another).
Some authors even change the gender within a sentence. This method was
adopted because 'one' (the real
2010/7/26 Matija Šuklje mat...@suklje.name:
I used to use one as well, but after a while it starts looking weird. for
now I settled for (s)he, but I wondered if there's a nice widely adopted
option like the Swiss use *Innen:
e.g. StudentInnen means Studenten und Studentinnen
Please not the
On Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 4:23 PM, Richard Stephens
richard.steph...@converteam.com wrote:
On 26-7-2010 11:48, John Haltiwanger wrote:
It seems the most successful/widely adopted form is to vary from 'he'
to 'she' (so that in one sentence you use one, in the next another).
Some authors even
Dne ponedeljek 26. julija 2010 ob 21:33:44 je Martin Schröder napisal(a):
Please not the erigiertes Binnen-I :-)
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binnen-I
I kinda like that :]
Dne ponedeljek 26. julija 2010 ob 18:23:57 je Richard Stephens napisal(a):
The trend that I have noticed (and which trips
On Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 08:20:32PM +, John Haltiwanger wrote:
Personally, I find it a sign of forward-thinking when pronouns are
'neutralized' through this juxtaposition of possibility (ie both are
shown to fit equally the examples provided). Perhaps it is simply the
times I grew up in,
On 26-7-2010 10:20, John Haltiwanger wrote:
Then again, I'm a fringe member of a fringe discipline (new media), so
perhaps what I can do/what is expected linguistically is irrelevant
for the majority.
Well, new trends have to come from your dicipline I guess. (Or maybe
some new shortcut
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