Reedmace Star <[email protected]>
Said

Well, the point of the column commands like \column or \center-column is 
to arrange text vertically, so each unquoted word, quoted string or 
markup piece in TEXT ends up on a line of its own.

Hence, you have to group everything that is supposed to go on one line 
into one markup object. In this case, writing \line { TEXT } instead of 
TEXT seems like the way to go.

By the way, your combination of \fill-line { "" ... "" }, \column and 
\center-column looks rather redundant.

HTH,

R.S.

Yes exactly what I was after but I had no luck searching manuals, had I tried 
concat instead of concatonate I would have had a hit.
Never came across \line.

I agree with you about the \fill-line syntax but this was taken from one of the 
manuals, there was no explanation of the syntax so I
copied it verbatim.

Thanks for your response I seem to have had short shrift from the experts for 
various unintended infaractions of list etiquette. 

I must not reply to a list message and always cut and past into a new message 
for [email protected].
I have written this out one hundred times but thought best not to copy it to 
the list.....:)

regards
Peter Gentry 



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