At 13:31 18/08/2003 +0200, Alexander Klink wrote:
On Thu, Aug 14, 2003 at 10:36:51PM +0200, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
> In ConTeXt it's useful if you can think around some edges:
> Such a line is a frame with only one frame line.
> This "frame" forms the background of your header.
> Ergo:
> \setupbackgrounds     [header][text][frame=off, bottomframe=on]
> \setupbackgrounds     [footer][text][frame=off, topframe=on]
I was going to ask exactly the same question. Unluckily, what you
did here does not work very well for me - the line is quite below
the header text, I would really like to have it closer...
\setupheader[after={\hairline}] does not work as the hairline
is not below the text but starts at the left border...
Maybe someone got another idea?

\startuniqueMPgraphic{nice} draw bottomboundary OverlayBox leftenlarged 6pt rightenlarged 6pt shifted (0,.75HeaderHeight) ; setbounds currentpicture to OverlayBox ; % forces dimensions \stopuniqueMPgraphic

\defineoverlay[nice][\uniqueMPgraphic{nice}]

\setupbackgrounds[header][text][background=nice]

\starttext

\input ward

\stoptext

I added a couple of shifts and enlargements to play with

Hans
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