Hi Hans,
There's an uncommented linebreak in the definition of
\pack_framed_text_start that's introducing an unwanted space just before
\startframedtext.
Minimal example:
\showmakeup[space]
\starttext
\hbox{.\startframedtext.\stopframedtext}
\stoptext
Patch:
--- texmf
Il 10/06/20 17:30, Hans Hagen ha scritto:
On 6/9/2020 11:04 AM, Otared Kavian wrote:
Hi all,
I just noticed that in lmtx, the commands \startplacefigure and
\startframedtext, when used together, do not behave in the same way as
they do in mkiv.
I wonder whether this is a permanent change
Hans Hagen schrieb am 10.06.2020 um 17:30:
On 6/9/2020 11:04 AM, Otared Kavian wrote:
Hi all,
I just noticed that in lmtx, the commands \startplacefigure and
\startframedtext, when used together, do not behave in the same way as
they do in mkiv.
I wonder whether this is a permanent change
On 6/9/2020 11:04 AM, Otared Kavian wrote:
Hi all,
I just noticed that in lmtx, the commands \startplacefigure and
\startframedtext, when used together, do not behave in the same way as they do
in mkiv.
I wonder whether this is a permanent change or rather a buglet.
I found a fix around
ote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I just noticed that in lmtx, the commands \startplacefigure and
> \startframedtext, when used together, do not behave in the same way as they
> do in mkiv.
> I wonder whether this is a permanent change or rather a buglet.
>
> I found a fix aro
Hi all,
I just noticed that in lmtx, the commands \startplacefigure and
\startframedtext, when used together, do not behave in the same way as they do
in mkiv.
I wonder whether this is a permanent change or rather a buglet.
I found a fix around the issue, but since in my document I have
Hi Wolfgang,
Your explanations are once again very clear, I fully understand the
mechanism.
Thank you very much,
Fabrice
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,framecolor=red,frameoffset=-1ex]
\starttext
\ruledhbox\bgroup
\startframedtext[left]
\input ward
\stopframedtext
\egroup
\blank
\ruledhbox\bgroup
\startframedtext[middle]
\input ward
\stopframedtext
\egroup
\blank
\ruledhbox\bgroup
Hello Wolfgang,
Thank you for the answer, but I did not understand everything.
Fabrice
Envoyé de mon iPad
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maillist :
Hi,
Why the second frame is not displayed ?
Best regards,
Fabrice
\definecolor[H1prime][c=0.50, m=0.00, y=1.00, k=0.00]
\starttext
\startcombination[2*1]
{%
\startframedtext[
width=0.45\textwidth,
frame=on,
framecolor=H1prime,
location=left,
background=color
Am 29.09.2014 um 18:52 schrieb Fabrice Couvreur fabrice1.couvr...@gmail.com:
Hi,
Why the second frame is not displayed ?
You need “location=none” on your framedtexts. With the values left and right
you’re using now
context reserves a horizontal space which covers the whole text width for
I am still dabbling with ConTeXt. There is a lot to learn, but it is worth
it. ;-}
At the moment I have (when finished I make a macro of it):
\startframedtext[middle]
\startalignment[middle]
{\bf A goal properly set is halfway reached.}
\stopalignment
\blank[small]
\startalignment
On Fri, 18 Mar 2011, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
I am still dabbling with ConTeXt. There is a lot to learn, but it is worth
it. ;-}
At the moment I have (when finished I make a macro of it):
\startframedtext[middle]
\startalignment[middle]
{\bf A goal properly set is halfway reached
On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 11:52 PM, Aditya Mahajan adit...@umich.edu wrote:
On Fri, 18 Mar 2011, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
I am still dabbling with ConTeXt. There is a lot to learn, but it is worth
it. ;-}
At the moment I have (when finished I make a macro of it):
\startframedtext[middle
the box
\defineframedtext[][rulethickness=2bp]
Perfect. That looks much more slick.
I know have defined:
\define[2]\Citation{
\blank
\startframedtext[middle][align=middle,corner=round,rulethickness=2bp]
{\bf #2}
\blank[small]
\rightaligned{\it #1}
\stopframedtext
\blank
2011/3/18 luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com
also
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Framed
A very interesting read. I changed my macro to:
\define[2]\Citation{
\blank
\startframedtext[middle][
align=middle,
background=color,
backgroundcolor=lightgray,
corner=round
On Sat, Mar 19, 2011 at 12:24 AM, Cecil Westerhof
cldwester...@gmail.com wrote:
2011/3/18 luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com
also
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Framed
A very interesting read. I changed my macro to:
\define[2]\Citation{
\blank
\startframedtext[middle][
align
Earlier this could be used to put some text centered on the line:
\startframedtext[middle][frame=off,background=]
\type{ABCDE}\crlf
\type{ABCDE}
\stopframedtext
Now, the middle doesn't seem to have any effect, the contents is
put to the left side of the printing area.
Has there been a change
On Jan 26, 2007, at 14:57, Hans van der Meer wrote:
Earlier this could be used to put some text centered on the line:
\startframedtext[middle][frame=off,background=]
\type{ABCDE}\crlf
\type{ABCDE}
\stopframedtext
Now, the middle doesn't seem to have any effect, the contents is
put
On Jan 26, 2007, at 15:32, Hans van der Meer wrote:
On Jan 26, 2007, at 14:57, Hans van der Meer wrote:
Earlier this could be used to put some text centered on the line:
\startframedtext[middle][frame=off,background=]
\type{ABCDE}\crlf
\type{ABCDE}
\stopframedtext
Now, the middle doesn't
I want even margins within a textframe. How to do it?
--
John Culleton
Able Indexing and Typesetting
Precision typesetting (tm) at reasonable cost.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
http://wexfordpress.com
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On Fri, 15 Dec 2006, John R. Culleton wrote:
I want even margins within a textframe. How to do it?
What do you mean by even margins?
maybe
\setupframedtexts[width=\textwidth]
or
\setupframedtexts[align=hanging]
Aditya
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On Friday 15 December 2006 10:55, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
On Fri, 15 Dec 2006, John R. Culleton wrote:
I want even margins within a textframe. How to do it?
What do you mean by even margins?
maybe
TeX normally sets a paragraph with full justification, which means that each
line of text is
On Fri, 15 Dec 2006, John R. Culleton wrote:
On Friday 15 December 2006 10:55, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
On Fri, 15 Dec 2006, John R. Culleton wrote:
I want even margins within a textframe. How to do it?
What do you mean by even margins?
maybe
TeX normally sets a paragraph with full
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