On Tue, Sep 27, 2016 at 3:14 PM, Henri Menke wrote:
> No problem with TL 2016. Are you on beta?
>
> On 09/27/2016 03:10 PM, Mikael P. Sundqvist wrote:
>> Hi!
>>
>> Look at the following example (pdf attached)
>>
>> \setupformulas[
>> align=flushleft,
>> leftmargin=3em,
>> ]
>>
>> \starttext
>> \i
No problem with TL 2016. Are you on beta?
On 09/27/2016 03:10 PM, Mikael P. Sundqvist wrote:
> Hi!
>
> Look at the following example (pdf attached)
>
> \setupformulas[
> align=flushleft,
> leftmargin=3em,
> ]
>
> \starttext
> \input tufte % Some text to see where the margin is
>
> This looks
Hi!
Look at the following example (pdf attached)
\setupformulas[
align=flushleft,
leftmargin=3em,
]
\starttext
\input tufte % Some text to see where the margin is
This looks OK:
\startformula
1+1=2
\stopformula
This does not look OK:
\startformula
1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1=19
\stopf
(Genesis 3, 21)}
\stopnarrower
\stoptext
I want \RT a macro which does nothing if there is enough space on the
right to set the whole argument and puts the argument in a new line,
rightaligned otherwise.
Can someone remember who has asked this before, or a fresh solution
alternativly.
\wordright
macro which does nothing if there is enough space on the
right to set the whole argument and puts the argument in a new line,
rightaligned otherwise.
Can someone remember who has asked this before, or a fresh solution
alternativly.
thank you
Wolfgang
Am 04.02.10 14:29, schrieb Peter Münster:
On Thu, Feb 04 2010, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
\rightaligned{\em bla\\bla}
Use \startalignment[flushright]...\stopalignment to align
more than one line and \crlf to force a line break.
Right, that's what I do now. I thought, th
On Thu, Feb 04 2010, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
>>\rightaligned{\em bla\\bla}
> Use \startalignment[flushright]...\stopalignment to align
> more than one line and \crlf to force a line break.
Right, that's what I do now. I thought, that my construction was supposed
to work, b
Am 04.02.10 13:52, schrieb Peter Münster:
Hello,
The last "bla" is not emphasised:
\starttext
\start
\em bla\\bla
\stop
\start
\rightaligned{\em bla\\bla}
\stop
\stoptext
Use \startalignment[flushright]...\stopalignment to align
more than one line and \crlf to force a
Hello,
The last "bla" is not emphasised:
\starttext
\start
\em bla\\bla
\stop
\start
\rightaligned{\em bla\\bla}
\stop
\stoptext
Cheers, Peter
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