but then found out that the | has
round tops (ok, i could use pdf literals to draw lines but not today)
2) The horizontal spacing in the \big version seems to be bigger than
for the \bigl/\bigr version (and similar for \Big vs \Bigl/\Bigr). I'd
expect the same spacing (the l and r are just
to be bigger than
for the \bigl/\bigr version (and similar for \Big vs \Bigl/\Bigr). I'd
expect the same spacing (the l and r are just there for the writer to
easily see what is left and what is right).
repaired .. (i also added \plainbigmathmode
3) I'd expect that \| gives double bars, like
On 8-4-2010 10:37, Mikael Persson wrote:
Thanks for you answer and explanation. Is there a reason why you do
not add \| to get double bars? This is the way it is done in LaTeX
(OK, not really an argument). I'm just curious.
we never had \| in mkii and in mkiv it's equivalent to | (just like
On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 5:41 PM, Mikael Persson mic...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 4:43 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl wrote:
On 6-4-2010 10:30, Mikael Persson wrote:
Dear list,
I have problems with \big, \bigl, \Bigl, ...
%% Example
\def\foo#1{\type{#1}: #1}
\starttext
\foo
Dear list,
I have problems with \big, \bigl, \Bigl, ...
%% Example
\def\foo#1{\type{#1}: #1}
\starttext
\foo{$|x|^n$} % as expected.
\foo{$\bigl|x^n\bigr|$} % expect bigger bars
\foo{$\big|x^n\big|$} % expect bigger bars
\foo{$\Bigl|x^n\Bigr|$} % too small again (but bigger than \big)
\foo
On 6-4-2010 10:30, Mikael Persson wrote:
Dear list,
I have problems with \big, \bigl, \Bigl, ...
%% Example
\def\foo#1{\type{#1}: #1}
\starttext
\foo{$|x|^n$} % as expected.
\foo{$\bigl|x^n\bigr|$} % expect bigger bars
\foo{$\big|x^n\big|$} % expect bigger bars
\foo{$\Bigl|x^n\Bigr
On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 4:43 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl wrote:
On 6-4-2010 10:30, Mikael Persson wrote:
Dear list,
I have problems with \big, \bigl, \Bigl, ...
%% Example
\def\foo#1{\type{#1}: #1}
\starttext
\foo{$|x|^n$} % as expected.
\foo{$\bigl|x^n\bigr|$} % expect bigger bars
Hi everyone,
a quick question:
how can I deal with matrices in ConTeXt ?
I tried to use what is described in the wiki as a form of dealing with the
latex environment convention and importing the amsl package...
\def\begin#1{%
\csname start#1\endcsname}
\def\end#1{%
\csname