On 6-8-2010 7:51, Martin Althoff wrote:
I know (almost) nothing about Latex. It just seemed to conform to general
context syntax and worked. Ah, well.
\input was always an exception to the rule but in luatex indeed \input
handles {}
\readfile{somename}{}{}
is more context (the second and
After \blank I always need an \indenting[no].
How do I set up this general behaviour?
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Marcus,
After \blank I always need an
\indenting[no].
How do I set up this general behaviour?
Not sure if I read your question correctly.
a. to disable indenting completely (which is default)
\setupindenting[no]
b. disabling in front of particular paragraphs seems to be a bit
Am 06.08.10 10:06, schrieb Markus Finke:
After \blank I always need an \indenting[no].
How do I set up this general behaviour?
http://www.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2010/051222.html
Wolfgang
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If your
After \blank I always need an \indenting[no].
How do I set up this general behaviour?
http://www.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2010/051222.html
Wolfgang
This was a very usefull (and overlooked by me) hint. The module becomes
a standard in my preambles.
Thank you Wolfgang (and Martin too)!
Just curious about the intented behaviour of \noindent.
If I place it as shown in the example, the next paragraph will still be
indented. However, if the blank line between \noindent and the following text
is deleted or contains a comment, the following text will not be indented. Is
this
Am 05.08.10 14:14, schrieb Martin Althoff:
Just curious about the intented behaviour of \noindent.
If I place it as shown in the example, the next paragraph will still be indented.
However, if the blank line between \noindent and the following text is deleted or
contains a comment, the
Wolfgang, thanks for the input. Got me a bit further.
You should also use ConTeXt’s own commands \indentation
and \noindentation.
OK, had taken them to be equivalent reading the manual. But I see the context
commands do what I want...
\input{...} is LaTeX style, to read files with spaces