[NTG-context] Re: How to track down source of [entry not flushed] displaying in indexes?

2024-03-13 Thread Joel via ntg-context
I'm not understanding in a much much larger document how I sold this, as I've tired placing \dontleavehmode in different places, but no success. On Wednesday, March 13, 2024 at 04:46:54 PM MDT, Wolfgang Schuster wrote: Joel via ntg-context schrieb am 13.03.2024 um 23:27: > After

[NTG-context] Re: How to track down source of [entry not flushed] displaying in indexes?

2024-03-13 Thread Joel via ntg-context
What is an anchor? Does that mean the index needs to me next to some items, like placed next to some text? On Wednesday, March 13, 2024 at 04:46:54 PM MDT, Wolfgang Schuster wrote: Joel via ntg-context schrieb am 13.03.2024 um 23:27: > After many hours of trial-and-error, I was able

[NTG-context] Re: How to track down source of [entry not flushed] displaying in indexes?

2024-03-13 Thread Wolfgang Schuster
Joel via ntg-context schrieb am 13.03.2024 um 23:27: After many hours of trial-and-error, I was able to recreate the problem in a minimum working example: file main.tex only contains: \starttext     \index{birds}     \index{insects}     \input secondary     \placeindex \stoptext file

[NTG-context] Re: How to track down source of [entry not flushed] displaying in indexes?

2024-03-13 Thread Joel via ntg-context
After many hours of trial-and-error, I was able to recreate the problem in a minimum working example: file main.tex only contains: \starttext     \index{birds}     \index{insects}          \input secondary          \placeindex      \stoptext file secondary.tex only contains:   

[NTG-context] Re: How to track down source of [entry not flushed] displaying in indexes?

2024-03-13 Thread Joel via ntg-context
Okay, I maybe made some progress. I traced the code back and back through the various documents and found I have some items inside: \startnointerference\startnointerference My intent is to have items that are "there" but invisible to viewers, taking up no space on screen, but treated as being