Interested in computer typesetting a Bible.
Sent from my iPad
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to ConTeX and its built-in Imposition
features.
-Gary Tucker
Dr. Gary A. Tucker
Associate Professor, Computer Science Mathematics
Averett University
420 West Main St., Danville, VA 24541
434/791-5709
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Patrick Gundlach wrote:
I am currently working in a Windows (XP) environment but if it makes
a difference and Linux is more suitable for a Tex environment I move
to a Unix based one then. Thanks for the reply.
No problem, there are several windows users on this list. But I don't
know which
Ciro A. Soto wrote:
Okay, this business of fonts/files/names/encoding/etc
is really difficult to understand for me.
You and 95% of all users, so don't feel bad. I've given up. I use
whatever comes out, which I guess is computer modern.
(I can use Postscript Times Roman, but no other
Hans Hagen wrote:
Gary wrote:
Hans Hagen wrote:
Gary wrote:
[...]
3.) Is there some other way besides my traditional method of
unzipping cont-tmf.zip file into /localtexmf ? Do I need to
rebuild the file system?
no, you can unzip, run textools --fixtexmf --force, regenerate the
database
the file system?
4.) Have I misinterpreted, and nothing much has changed?
Sorry about this. I really want to avoid getting my system into some
strange state, and spending hours unraveling the mystery. Done that too
many times in my life.
-gary
Hans Hagen wrote:
Gary wrote:
[...]
Sorry about this. I really want to avoid getting my system into some
strange state, and spending hours unraveling the mystery. Done that
too many times in my life.
i do my best to avoid problem sfo rusers, but some things are out of
my control
Hans
Hans Hagen wrote:
Gary wrote:
[...]
3.) Is there some other way besides my traditional method of
unzipping cont-tmf.zip file into /localtexmf ? Do I need to rebuild
the file system?
no, you can unzip, run textools --fixtexmf --force, regenerate the
database, and cross your fingers
ok, here's
) and the Wiki and Texshow-web have great potential to help ... if
they really catch fire.
-gary
- Original Message -
From: Brooks Moses [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: ConTeXt users list [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, August 01, 2004 6:23 PM
Subject: [NTG-context] Best source of ConTeXt documentation
in this example be made to be
the same length? What's causing the indentation of the first hairline?
Regards,
Gary
-
\setupitemize[2][a,packed,columns][before={\hairline},after={\hairline}]
\setupitemize[1][n]
\starttext
downloaded today, and works properly, is dated 2003.12.08.
Typo?
-gary
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that. At the moment I'm having all kinds of issues with
Let me point out, mainly for the record, that ConTeXt / nath does not seem
to work properly under MikTeX.
The following script works fine with Linux / teTeX, but with MikTeX, the
in-line versions of the math is wrong.
-gary
Aha. Now I get it. I withdraw my comment, and wait for more expert
opinion.
-Gary
- Original Message -
From: Matija Pretnar [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Maybe I gave a bad example.
Try this one.
http://www.pretnar.info/compare.pdf
On 15. apr 2004, at 16:38, Gary Pajer wrote
?
Regards,
Gary
\setupitemize[2][a,packed,columns][before={\hairline},after={\hairline}]
\setupitemize[1][n]
\starttext
\startitemize
%
\item Level One
%
\startitemize
\item first
\item second
\item third
\stopitemize
Furthermore: in
\usemodule[nath]
\starttext
$ y = (1 + \frac{}{a}{b}) $
$ y = (1 + \frac{a}{b}) $
$ y = (1 + a\frac{b}{c}{d})$
$$ y = (1 + \frac{}{a}{b}) $$
$$ y = (1 + \frac{a}{b}) $$
$$ y = (1 + a\frac{b}{c}{d})$$
\stoptext
The displayed equation is correct, but the inline isn't.
- Original Message -
From: William D. Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 16 Feb 2004, Gary Pajer wrote:
In the following code, the first formula typesets as I want, and the
second doesn't. But the syntax in the second looks correct.
Bug or feature? or setup problem
. I'd be willing to do some debugging as well... maybe some of us
could informally try to smooth it out.
-gary
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I'm taking a look at nath (via t-nath). Here's the very first thing I
tried:
In the following code, the first formula typesets as I want, and the
second doesn't. But the syntax in the second looks correct.
Bug or feature? or setup problem?
\usemodule[nath]
\starttext
$ y = (1 +
Gary Pajer wrote:
I'm taking a look at nath (via t-nath). Here's the very first thing I
tried:
In the following code, the first formula typesets as I want, and the
second doesn't. But the syntax in the second looks correct.
Bug or feature? or setup problem?
\usemodule[nath]
\starttext
$ y
From: Patrick Gundlach [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gary Pajer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I don't know how to figure out how up to date my auctex is.
C-h v AUCTeX-version RET
I checked it out of CVS a while ago, and I haven't been able to update
it
... the connection times out.
Did you follow
to date my auctex is.
I checked it out of CVS a while ago, and I haven't been able to update it
... the connection times out.
Is the ConTeXt support still limited to the CVS version of auctex?
-gary
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this?
There are two ConTeXt modes available. How do they compare?
Thanks,
Gary
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-in appears to compare with Latex editors. However, context.el
conflicts with my installation of Emacs (which includes the Auctex
package) and will not load. Are there any other editors that are
recommended? Any other suggestions?
Thank you.
Gary Hoffman
--
Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e
beyond
(or is more up to date) than the manual?
-gary
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Thursday, December 11, 2003 Gary Pajer wrote:
MiKTeX.
I've done this half a dozen times. This time it doesn't work. I feel
stupid. What have I forgotten?
Things were working perfectly. I decide to update, so I download
cont-tmf.zip to \localtexmf. Then I unzip, overwritting all
mktexlsr or the MiKTeX options
wizard.
But now texexec can't find texexec.ini. But it's there, in
\localtexmf\context\config (as well as \texmf\context\config)
BTW, if I execute kpsewhich texexec.ini it returns without an error, but
also with no information. Is that right?
-gary
thread...
I'm reaching the conclusion that the behaviour I reported at the top of the
thread is a bug.
Is it?
If so, is a workaround or fix possible?
-gary
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Uh du...
on Windows its ps2pdf, and it is in ..\gs\lib
-gary
- Original Message -
From: Giuseppe Bilotta [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, October 25, 2003 6:29 AM
Subject: Re[2]: [NTG-context] resolution
Saturday, October 25, 2003 Severin Obertuefer wrote
in this example be made to be
the same length? What's causing the indentation of the first hairline?
Regards,
Gary
-
\setupitemize[2][a,packed,columns][before={\hairline},after={\hairline}]
\setupitemize[1][n
. And when I use LaTeX, my math fonts are not cm.
So how can I get a better looking (IMHO) math font when using postscript?
What's the difference between the two ways of setting postscipt fonts?
tia,
Gary
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