Dnia 2011-08-03, o godz. 18:12:27
Wolfgang Schuster <schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com> napisaƂ(a):

> 
> Am 03.08.2011 um 15:27 schrieb Marcin Borkowski:
> 
> > Hi,
> > 
> > I'm feeling like I'm getting close to the daily limit of posts to
> > the list;), but I'm just learning;).
> > 
> > I discovered that I can use \defineframed so that I can write
> > 
> > \defineframed[myframed][frame=off,background=myoverlay]
> > 
> > \myframed{whatever}
> > 
> > But I'd like to have "my" counterparts of \inframed, \mframed and
> > \inmframed.  Is there any \define-like command for that, too, or do
> > I have to resort to plain old \def?
> 
> \defineframed[mathframe][align=right,top=\startmathmode,bottom=\stopmathmode]
> % location=low
> 
> \starttext
> 
> \framed{x^2}
> 
> \mframed{x^2}
> 
> \mathframe{x^2}
> 
> \stoptext
> 
> Wolfgang

Thanks a lot!

Just three questions:

1. What do (in general) top and bottom parameters do?

2. I assume that \startmathmode and \stopmathmode are necessary because
the contents of the frame are set in an hbox?

3. DO I get it correctly that \inframed{...} is equivalent to
\framed[location=low]{...}?

TIA

-- 
Marcin Borkowski
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