On Wednesday 29 December 2004 09:10, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
> Hi John,
>
> Your format is probably missing the hyphenation patterns for english
> (I ran into the same problem last week):
>
>
> # texexec --make en
>
> language : no patterns en for en (n=1) (lang-en.pat,ukhyph.tex
>
Am So, den 26.12.2004 schrieb h h extern um 21:33:
> John Culleton wrote:
>
> > But this is not the only type of versal. Sometimes a large capital letter
> > (perhaps in italics) is centered on the top of the textblock thus:
>
> Did you look into supp-fun.tex?
I was trying to use the macros pro
Am 29.12.2004 um 16:05 schrieb Hans Hagen:
you need to force vmode in order to make blank work
\def\MyChapterCommand#1#2{\vbox{\ruledhbox{#1}\blank[2cm]\ruledhbox{#2}
}}
Thanks, it's now in the wiki:
http://contextgarden.net/Titles
Grüßlis vom Hraban!
---
http://www.fiee.net/texnique/
http://c
Am 29.12.2004 um 15:37 schrieb sjoerd siebinga:
I would imagine that ConTeXt must be able to sort a norwegian words in
a separate register say "\indexnw{kr{\o}ypa}}" differently from the
english index entries in general \index{} register.
Sorry, I can't help with \definesortkey, only wanted to po
VnPenguin wrote:
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 10:18:07 +0100, Hans Hagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
you need to force vmode in order to make blank work
\def\MyChapterCommand#1#2{\vbox{\ruledhbox{#1}\blank[2cm]\ruledhbox{#2}}}
Hans
VnPenguin wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to define chapter style like the foll
On 29 Dec 2004, at 14:41, John Culleton wrote:
Could someone tell me how I can use the \definesortkey command or for
that matter any other ConTeXt mechanism to define sortrules for
individual indices?
You might want to look into a separate program called Xindy. It more
or less
replaces Makindex in
Hi John,
Your format is probably missing the hyphenation patterns for english
(I ran into the same problem last week):
# texexec --make en
language : no patterns en for en (n=1) (lang-en.pat,ukhyph.tex
language : no hyphenations en for en (n=1)
language : no patterns uk
I noted that context seems to be most reluctant to hyphenate. So I ran a test
file through plain tex, pdftex and Context and checked the results. Context
hyphenated less than the other two.
The manual does not say much about hyphenation. I am using a fresh TeXLive
install.
Here is the top pa
On Wednesday 29 December 2004 04:11, sjoerd siebinga wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am currently working on a dictionary with multiple indices of older
> language stages like, Old English, Old Norse, Greec, Sanskrit, Hittite,
> etc. Most of these languages have different characters, accents and
> sorting r
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 10:18:07 +0100, Hans Hagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> VnPenguin wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > I'm trying to define chapter style like the following:
> > --
> >
> > Chapter 1
> >
> > This is the name of chapter
> >
>
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 10:18:07 +0100, Hans Hagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> VnPenguin wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > I'm trying to define chapter style like the following:
> > --
> >
> > Chapter 1
> >
> > This is the name of chapter
> >
>
VnPenguin wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to define chapter style like the following:
--
Chapter 1
This is the name of chapter
--
But I can't found the option of \setuphead
Hi all,
I am currently working on a dictionary with multiple indices of older
language stages like, Old English, Old Norse, Greec, Sanskrit, Hittite,
etc. Most of these languages have different characters, accents and
sorting rules than English. In enco-ini.tex I found the \definesortkey
comman
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