Mikael Persson wrote:
> When I have descriptions that are longer than one paragraph I want
> the next paragraphs indented in the same way as the other parts of
> the document.
If you're looking for an elegant way to do this then stop reading now.
You can, with a bit of brute force and ignorance, reset the \parindent
dimension from within your description environment by reissuing the
imperative \setupindenting[medium]:
-----
\setupindenting[medium]
\indenting[yes]
\definedescription[testdesc][%
width=broad,
location=serried,
headstyle=bold,
way=bychapter,
text={Testdescription: }]
\starttext
\section{Some indenting tests}
...
\starttestdesc{A nonlucky one}
This is just a test paragraph. I want to se if the next paragraph is
indented or not. So, sooner or later we will know.
\setupindenting[medium] % <-- add this
Is this indented? No, but I want it to be.
\stoptestdesc
...
\stoptext
-----
> I also have another question. How can one install Math fonts (lucida)?
> When I run texfont as with other fonts texfont reports that it is math
> fonts and the installation fail. Should I add another switch? (I tried
> with the same switches as I successfully use for other fonts, that is
> --in and --ma (besides the --ve and --co))
Hans Hagen has done all the hard stuff already, so you can install the
lucida Math fonts by doing nothing. (Well that's not quite true, I
had to lowercase the .pfb binaries and .tfm metrics in the lucida math
collection). So for instance, I simply copied the file lbma.pfb over
into my type1 directory, and similarly I copied lbma.tfm into my tfm
directory.
_______________________________________________
ntg-context mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context