Hi.
Am I right that footnote don't work inside TABLE?
Example:
example file=footnote_in_TABLE.ctx
\starttext
Interaction between footnote and TABLE.
\bTABLE
\bTR \bTD This is first column \eTD \bTD This is second column\footnote{More
convenient way to index as $a_{12}$ --- row and column}\eTD
You may want to try localfootnotes. Have a look at the first example
of http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Footnotes
Regards,
Vianney
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Am 19.05.10 10:11, schrieb Vladimir Lomov:
Hi.
Am I right that footnote don't work inside TABLE?
Example:
example file=footnote_in_TABLE.ctx
\starttext
Interaction between footnote and TABLE.
\bTABLE
\bTR \bTD This is first column \eTD \bTD This is second column\footnote{More
convenient way
Thanks both Wolfgang and Vianney.
** Wolfgang Schuster [2010-05-19 10:42:19 +0200]:
Am 19.05.10 10:11, schrieb Vladimir Lomov:
Hi.
Am I right that footnote don't work inside TABLE?
Example:
example file=footnote_in_TABLE.ctx
\starttext
Interaction between footnote and TABLE.
\bTABLE
\bTR
Am 19.05.10 11:21, schrieb Vladimir Lomov:
Both methods work fine (preamble is part of document before \starttext I
guess).
Yes, before \starttext or in a environment file.
Do I understand it correctly that TABLE is NOT a float?
It's a float when you write it in \placetable or any
Is \startformula\startalign\stopalign\stopformula broken in context mkiv?
After just updating the minimals, I now get (using the example below):
! Missing $$ inserted.
to be read again
\Ustopdisplaymath
\stopdisplaymath ...opinnermath \Ustopdisplaymath
Alan BRASLAU wrote:
Is \startformula\startalign\stopalign\stopformula broken in context mkiv?
After just updating the minimals, I now get (using the example below):
See this thread:
http://archive.contextgarden.net/message/20100513.211849.e7079712.en.html
There will be a new current soon,
Hello,
I discovered that with one font the \ldots command typesets three colons
(:::).
I found these lines in plain.tex
\mathchardef\ldotp=613A % ldot as a punctuation mark
\def\ldots{\mathinner{\ldotp\ldotp\ldotp}}
saying the \ldots uses character on position 3A. In the font (type 1),
2010/5/19 Jan Pohanka xhpoha...@gmail.com:
Hello,
I discovered that with one font the \ldots command typesets three colons
(:::).
I found these lines in plain.tex
\mathchardef\ldotp=613A % ldot as a punctuation mark
\def\ldots{\mathinner{\ldotp\ldotp\ldotp}}
Are you sure that we are using
Hello,
\setupfloats[indentnext=yes] has no effect in the example below? I
expect the line 6 above figure to be indented.
==
\setupindenting[yes,7mm]
\setupfloats[indentnext=yes]
\starttext
\input tufte
\input knuth
\placefigure
[bottom,top][]
{Title}
Dear all,
I need to have a special layout, in which a number (which is not a page number
nor a section number or such) is printed in big size on the right when the
pagenumber is even (that is on a leftpage) and printed on the left when the
pagenumber is odd (that is a rightpage). With the help
On Wed, 19 May 2010, Jan Pohanka wrote:
Hello,
I discovered that with one font the \ldots command typesets three colons
(:::).
I found these lines in plain.tex
No, for mkii you should look at math-*.mkii files. The relevant file in
this case is math-tex.mkii, which defines
Hi,
I am citing several references at one position in my document and I was
wondering if there is a way to get something like [1, 3, 9 - 11] instead of
[1] [3] [9] [10] [11] (what I would get by using \cite[ref1] \cite[ref3]
\cite[ref9] ...). Unfortunately I can't find some deeper information
On 19-5-2010 10:01, Stefan Müller wrote:
Hi,
I am citing several references at one position in my document and I was
wondering if there is a way to get something like [1, 3, 9 - 11] instead of
[1] [3] [9] [10] [11] (what I would get by using \cite[ref1] \cite[ref3]
\cite[ref9] ...).
On Wed, 19 May 2010, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 19-5-2010 10:01, Stefan Müller wrote:
Hi,
I am citing several references at one position in my document and I was
wondering if there is a way to get something like [1, 3, 9 - 11] instead
of
[1] [3] [9] [10] [11] (what I would get by using
Le 19 mai à 22:01:25 Stefan Müller warrence@gmx.de écrit notamment:
| Hi,
| I am citing several references at one position in my document and I was
| wondering if there is a way to get something like [1, 3, 9 - 11] instead of
| [1] [3] [9] [10] [11] (what I would get by using \cite[ref1]
On 19-5-2010 11:14, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
If the internal mechanism is using XML, then CSL can be used for styles.
http://citationstyles.org/
(I don't know much about it other than the fact that it exists and is
used by Zotero)
i took a quick look at the ieee one and it looks quite dooable
Dne 19.5.2010 23:35, Jean Magnan de Bornier napsal(a):
Le 19 mai à 22:01:25 Stefan Müllerwarrence@gmx.de écrit notamment:
| Hi,
| I am citing several references at one position in my document and I was
| wondering if there is a way to get something like [1, 3, 9 - 11] instead of
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