[NTG-context] about the location of subscript of integral sign

2019-02-01 Thread Jeong Dal
Hi, Four days ago, I updated the standalone ConTeXt and found a strange behavior in the integral sign. The number at the bottom is far from the integral sign while the number at the top is OK. I don’t know when it began since I didn’t use \int for a few month. Here is a small sample. In the

Re: [NTG-context] getting ConTeXt results back to Lua (for typesetting solutions at end of document)

2019-02-01 Thread Otared Kavian
Hi Sanjoy, Two or three years ago Wolfgang helped me to solve an analogous question. Here is an example which works fine, and moreover one can navigate from a question to its hint (if there is one…) and then from the hint to its solution (if present…). Best regards: OK begin

Re: [NTG-context] getting ConTeXt results back to Lua (for typesetting solutions at end of document)

2019-02-01 Thread Hans Hagen
On 2/1/2019 4:10 AM, Sanjoy Mahajan wrote: Thank you, Matthias and Wolfgang, for the examples/solutions. If I understand them right, there must be one solution for each exercise (otherwise the solution numbering gets out of sync). Or do the coupling= options in Matthias's example remove that

Re: [NTG-context] Headings vs. enumerations

2019-02-01 Thread Clyde Johnston
Thanks Wolfgang. The problem I had with using headers was maintaining the numbers for the headings and clauses. I was able to solve this with the [prefix=yes] option for the itemizegroup. Here is a solution (for anyone else) that achieves what I want: \starttext \placecontent[alternative=c]

[NTG-context] test-suite wiki page

2019-02-01 Thread Sanjoy Mahajan
In another thread, Hans had pointed me to the examples of blocks in the test suite. That leads to my following two questions before I revise the associated wiki page: 1. The wiki page about the test suite contains dead links to

Re: [NTG-context] [DKIM Failure] Re: getting ConTeXt results back to Lua (for typesetting solutions at end of document)

2019-02-01 Thread Sanjoy Mahajan
On 2019-02-01 07:58, "Mikael P. Sundqvist" wrote: > this is what I learned from the list to use. I'm sorry, but the names > sound a bit Swedish, but I'm sure you can change that. The Swedish is not a problem. Swedish, like Dutch, seems to be (English + German)/2. Or sqrt(English*German) if,

Re: [NTG-context] getting ConTeXt results back to Lua (for typesetting solutions at end of document)

2019-02-01 Thread Sanjoy Mahajan
On 2019-02-01 09:48, Hans Hagen wrote: > given that context originally was made for typesetting educational > materials including questions, answers, explanations ... how about > looking at the 'blocks' mechanism (there are some examples in the test > suite under blocks) They are very helpful;

Re: [NTG-context] test-suite wiki page

2019-02-01 Thread Taco Hoekwater
Hi, > Op 1 feb. 2019 om 17:09 heeft Sanjoy Mahajan het volgende > geschreven: > > In another thread, Hans had pointed me to the examples of blocks in the > test suite. That leads to my following two questions before I revise > the associated wiki page: > > 1. The wiki page about the test

[NTG-context] Restarting with different engine fails

2019-02-01 Thread Henri Menke
Dear list, ConTeXt allows to select the engine in the preamble with a “magic comment”. The preamble is parsed and the engine restarted with new options. The following MWE fails in the latest beta % engine=luajittex \starttext Fail \stoptext with the error message

Re: [NTG-context] Restarting with different engine fails

2019-02-01 Thread Hans Hagen
On 2/1/2019 10:30 PM, Henri Menke wrote: Dear list, ConTeXt allows to select the engine in the preamble with a “magic comment”. The preamble is parsed and the engine restarted with new options. The following MWE fails in the latest beta % engine=luajittex \starttext Fail \stoptext with the

Re: [NTG-context] [DKIM Failure] Re: getting ConTeXt results back to Lua (for typesetting solutions at end of document)

2019-02-01 Thread r . ermers
What you probably mean is that Swedish, German, Dutch and English are Indo-European Germanic languages which have much in common. This cannot be expressed in terms of blends, products or square roots from one another. What they do have is a common root, like \sqrt(indo-european) $x$ w =