Maybe Renaud can tell us a little more about the details of the typesetting?
What font did you use and what program did you use to make the plots (I
particularly like the fact that the font in the plots is the same as in the
text!), it reminds me a little of R plots, but I may be wrong... And
The following message was just posted to the PGF mailing list:
- Forwarded Message
From: Till Tantau [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 27, 2006 9:54:55 AM
Subject: [Pgf-users] Version 1.10 is out
Dear users of pgf/TikZ,
version 1.10 is out. This version is
Perhaps the source could be distributed as well? I particularly like
the MetaFun graphics.
Regards, Johan
2006/10/27, M.J. Kallen [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Maybe Renaud can tell us a little more about the details of the typesetting?
What font did you use and what program did you use to make the
Hi M.J.,
M.J. Kallen a écrit :
Maybe Renaud can tell us a little more about the details of the typesetting?
What font did you use and what program did you use to make the plots (I
particularly like the fact that the font in the plots is the same as in the
text!), it reminds me a little of R
Hi Luigi,
luigi scarso a crit:
Well, I like it.
Is there any examples on wiki of these things (maybe I have lost some
discussions about it)?
Not yet from me on the wiki... In fact, I have began ConTeXt last year
specially to compose my dissertation. As a consequence, if you
googleize
Renaud AUBIN wrote:
Hi all,
Maybe some of yours (from the ConTeXt POV) can be interested by my PhD
dissertation and my presentation (both in french)...
http://www.nibua-r.org/ConTeXt/PhD/
The slides are made to work under linux with sh script to run mplayer
or custom simulations...
Very simple question which has suddenly stumped me:
\starttext
\startitemize[n,broad]
\item Hello world!
\bTABLE\bTR\bTD Little\eTD \bTD table\eTD\eTR\eTABLE
First item continues.
\item Second item.
\stopitemize
\stoptext
How to get the TABLE inside the first item to align with the item
content,
I said:
\starttext
\startitemize[n,broad]
\item Hello world!
\bTABLE\bTR\bTD Little\eTD \bTD table\eTD\eTR\eTABLE
First item continues.
\item Second item.
\stopitemize
\stoptext
What I *meant* (sorry!) was
\starttext
\startitemize[n,broad]
\item Hello world!
\bTABLE[split=yes]\bTR\bTD
Hi Hans,
Hans Hagen a crit:
impresssive (a pitty that my french is not good enough to understand all this stuff; playing with such crawling machinery is still on my agenda)
Gavin Miller was not a roboticist... and when he plays with "such
crawling machines", hum, the result is great !
Renaud AUBIN wrote:
Hi Hans,
Hans Hagen a écrit :
impresssive (a pitty that my french is not good enough to understand all
this stuff; playing with such crawling machinery is still on my agenda)
Gavin Miller was not a roboticist... and when he plays with such
crawling machines, hum,
Hans Hagen a écrit :
When taco and I attended the lua conference (in nl) there was a robit
being demonstrated running on lua ; i do have this lego kit and i'm
waiting for the lua mindstorm lua controller; it's till on my agenda to
use metapost to let such a device draw large pictures
Hi,
When using bitmap figures (.png etc.) using \externalfigure, is it
possible to set that I want the picture to have it's original size in
pixels; or, better, that I don't want it to be scaled? I'm using some
pictures that look terrible when converted to a different size, even if
I'm still playing with Designer, and actually I can't figure how to make
chained lists of objects.
Here 1 0 obj is Catalog with
/Fields [8 0 R];
following all references R , we will end with 22 0 obj (a leaf)
which is a /Type /Annot.
My problem now is how to make all 'internal nodes' like 8 0
Yes, more or less.
I meant drawing the normal horizontal and vertical rules that separate
rows and columns dashed or dotted instead of continuous, but using TeX
itself, i.e. with an option or command from one of the table packages,
redefining some internal macro, etc. But I see that's not
helo:
I have a long paragraph in a cell in the fisrt column of a table. I need the
paragraph uses 2 or 3 lines and the column get narrower, because the table
is too wide.
Can I force the column width and -at the same time- force the paragraph to
use 2 o 3 lines?
I use \crlf but it seems
I meant drawing the normal horizontal and vertical rules that
separate rows and columns dashed or dotted instead of continuous,
but using TeX itself
Check in the TeXbook (I'm far O(10^4) km from my copy right now) about
leaders and \hrulefill, that might do it.
-Sanjoy
`Never underestimate
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