2007/3/28, Johannes Kuester <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
It seems linetable would do just what I need (at least I get rid of the strut / unwanted vertical spacing problem, so I do get a grid-keeping table), but: Is there a way to use linetable in two-column mode? (i.e. the consecutive lines of my table should be set just like normal text would in two-column mode). Currently linetable just streches over the whole textwidth, as it adds white space between columns. Johannes %%%%%%%%%% In my previous example below, using \setuplinetable[n=4] \setuplinetable[c][1] [width=6mm] \setuplinetable[c][2] [width=5mm] \setuplinetable[c][3] [width=51mm] \setuplinetable[c][4] [width=1mm] and then startlinetable / stoplinetable instead of start/stoptabulate works fine for the vertical spacing problem. >> %%%%%%%%%% >> >> \setuplayout[grid=yes] >> >> \showgrid >> \showstruts >> >> \starttext >> >> \input tufte >> >> \starttabulate[|p(.1\textwidth)|p(.1\textwidth)|p(.5\textwidth)|p(.2\textwidth)|]% >> \NC 002B >> \NC $+$ >> \NC plus; Addition >> \NC >> \NR >> \NC 00D7 >> \NC $\times$ >> \NC kartesisches Produkt (von Mengen);\hfill\break >> Kreuzprodukt (Vektorprodukt);\hfill\break >> mal; Produkt (bei Zahlwerten) >> \NC >> \NR >> \NC 2217 >> \NC $*$ >> \NC (Stern, Asterisk); Konvolution; Faltung; Produkt >> \NC >> \NR >> \NC 22C6 >> \NC $\star$ >> \NC (Stern); Zeichen fuer spezielle Produkte >> \NC >> \NR >> \stoptabulate >> >> \blank >> >> \input tufte >> >> \stoptext >> >> %%%%%%%%%% -- Johannes Kuester typoma
Hi Johannes, a short example to play for you. The important things are the stretch and the lines key in \setuplinetable. You should also look at the end of core-ltb, it contains a few interresting examples. \setuplinetable[stretch=yes,lines=fit] \starttext \startcolumns \startlinetable \dorecurse{80}{\NC Text \NC Text \NC\NR} \stoplinetable \stopcolumns \stoptext Wolfgang
_______________________________________________ ntg-context mailing list ntg-context@ntg.nl http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context