Re: [NTG-context] referencing the equation

2018-08-09 Thread Henri Menke
I usually define my own reference formats, “ineq” for equations, “infig” for figures: \definereferenceformat[ineq][left=(,right=)] \definereferenceformat[infig][left=\labeltext{figure}] \starttext \starttext \placeformula \startformula \startalign \NC a_1 x + b_1 y \NC = c_1 \NR[eq:1] \NC

Re: [NTG-context] referencing the equation

2018-08-09 Thread Jeong Dal
Dear Wolfgang, Although there is an answer in the manual, I didn’t read it carefully. Sometimes, I used “\in{word}[reference]” like “\in{equation}[eq:1]". But I have to change it to “equation (\in[eq:1])”. Thank you so much. Best regards, Dalyoung > 2018. 8. 10. 오전 12:21, Wolfgang Schuster

Re: [NTG-context] referencing the equation

2018-08-09 Thread Wolfgang Schuster
When you look at the first example in section 4.1 you can see that the parentheses are inserted by hand. %% \starttext \placeformula \startformula \startalign \NC a_1 x + b_1 y \NC = c_1 \NR[eq:1] \NC a_2 x + b_2 y \NC = c_2 \NR[eq:2] \stopalign \stopformula As seen from (\in[eq:1])

[NTG-context] referencing the equation

2018-08-09 Thread Jeong Dal
Dear, The examples in mathalign.pdf(p4 - ) tells us the method of referencing the equation. The numbers for the equation is written as (1.1), and in the text, it is written as (1.1). That is the numbers are always surrounded by ( , ). In the output of the following code, the equations are