Thank-you all - the textcommand= was the necessary magic incantation.
I will certainly use the linknote suggestion, not least because I'll still need
regular footnotes as well.
And if I can pluck up courage to "move" the \setupnote Wiki page over to the
new style (I don't know how to do an
On 3/20/22 22:18, Rik Kabel via ntg-context wrote:
> On 2022-03-20 17:07, Wolfgang Schuster via ntg-context wrote:
>> [...]
>> \setupnote[footnote][textcommand=]
>> [...]
> You might want to define a separate set of notes, for example,
> linknotes, defined as Wolfgang suggests, so
> [...]
> You
On 2022-03-20 17:07, Wolfgang Schuster via ntg-context wrote:
Bruce Horrocks via ntg-context schrieb am 20.03.2022 um 21:10:
I'm editing a book that will be printed, however the authors have
included URLs which will no doubt suffer from "bit rot" in no time at
all. I think it will make the
Bruce Horrocks via ntg-context schrieb am 20.03.2022 um 21:10:
I'm editing a book that will be printed, however the authors have included URLs which will no doubt suffer from
"bit rot" in no time at all. I think it will make the main text cleaner if I use endnotes rather than
include the URL
Bruce, I suppose one way to achieve your aim, if there is no easy way to
prevent superscript, would be to put your reference in parentheses: (See
my video at link 1), followed by the normal superscript number for
footnote anchors. You can still go with the endnotes.
The other thing, and I
I'm editing a book that will be printed, however the authors have included URLs
which will no doubt suffer from "bit rot" in no time at all. I think it will
make the main text cleaner if I use endnotes rather than include the URL
in-line in the text or as a (distracting) footnote. So when the