luigi scarso wrote:
>> - optical (vs. metrical) kerning
> hz ?
all those kerning options can lead to rather bad text ... i get the
impression that wrongly applied hz (extreme values) and intercharacter
spacing and such in general lead to bad text ... i read quite some books
and am sometimes pu
I would say that TeX is a way in which a mathematician / theoretical
computer scientist that is well-steeped in music, languages, art,
literature, and other areas might approach the issue. InDesign is the
way in which a large number in the design community might approach the
issue.
I use mainly In
> - much faster (i.e. I don't need to wait for several TeX runs e.g. if
> I need to check if some tweak fixed my page breaking)
On average
true for manual composition, maybe false for automatic workflow
> - optical (vs. metrical) kerning
hz ?
> - a GUI ;-) and thus layout by "let's try how it look
On Sat, May 31, 2008 at 2:57 PM, Yue Wang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 5/31/08, luigi scarso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > Last night I remembered two more things that TeX can't do, but every
>> > layout app can:
>> > - text flow around other elements (images)
>> \parshape ?
>>
>
> I forword a
On 5/31/08, luigi scarso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Last night I remembered two more things that TeX can't do, but every
> > layout app can:
> > - text flow around other elements (images)
> \parshape ?
>
I forword an email to the professor.
it discuss some of the points together with some exam
> Last night I remembered two more things that TeX can't do, but every
> layout app can:
> - text flow around other elements (images)
\parshape ?
> - really working multiple-column layout
in context columnset with two pass strategy
--
luigi
__
Hi Hans,
On Sat, May 31, 2008 at 12:33 PM, Hans Hagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
>
>> \doifsomething{#1}
>>{\tmpblockstartedtrue
>> %\immediate\write\tmpblocks{\string#1}}%
>> \immediate\write\tmpblocks{#1}}%
>
> i have no problem with the \l
Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
> Hi Hans,
>
> I got yesterday a bug report for my letter module if the \startletter
> command takes no arguments.
>
> The following example show the problem without the module.
>
> \def\startletter
> {\dosingleempty\dostartletter}
>
> \def\dostartletter[#1]%
> {\do
Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
> \doifsomething{#1}
>{\tmpblockstartedtrue
> %\immediate\write\tmpblocks{\string#1}}%
> \immediate\write\tmpblocks{#1}}%
i have no problem with the \long but changing the \string ... it's there
for a reason so i need to look into it
>
On Fri, May 30, 2008 at 5:37 PM, Steffen Wolfrum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> hope the answer to my question is not too obvious: How do I split not
> only TABLE but cells?
>
> Please, have a look at this minimal:
>
> \starttext
> \bTABLE[split=yes,option=stretch]
> \bTR
> \bTD
> \input tuft
Am 2008-05-31 um 04:20 schrieb luigi scarso:
>> There are still some areas where you need a programmable system, even
>> trivia like chapter dependant running titles (in ConTeXt:
>> headertexts).
> Isn't indesign programmable too ?
> I know people who use it in an automatic workflow for db publi
Hi Hans,
I got yesterday a bug report for my letter module if the \startletter
command takes no arguments.
The following example show the problem without the module.
\def\startletter
{\dosingleempty\dostartletter}
\def\dostartletter[#1]%
{\dostartbuffer[letter][startletter][stopletter]}
\s
Hi all,
The page on the wiki about emacs-muse and ConTeXt has been updated to show
how you can use Thomas Schmitz's presentation module within muse:
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/ConTeXt_and_emacs-muse
enjoy!
--
Jean
___
Am 30.05.2008 um 09:12 schrieb Yue Wang:
> advanced software, like InDesign
Well, ...
Steffen
___
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