On Wed, 10 Apr 2013, Tristan Lorino wrote:
\starttext
\setMPtext {1} {C'est le titre}
\startMPcode
pickup pencircle scaled .5mm ;
pair a; a :=(0.2cm,.5cm);
label.rt("\MPtext {1}",a);
In MkIV, this should be label.rt(btex \MPtext{1} etex, a);
In MkII, you'd have to use label.rt(texttext("\MPtex
riginal -
>> De: "Hans Hagen"
>> À: ntg-context@ntg.nl
>> Envoyé: Mercredi 10 Avril 2013 16:15:46
>> Objet: Re: [NTG-context] New user of ConTeXt
>>
>> because in the old fonts there's a visual space in slot 32
>>
>
> --
>
You already have MKIV (probably)
As already mentioned, just type "context" instead of "texexec" as the
command.
$ context name-of-your-tex-file.tex
I to had to learn that "texexec" is the script invoking MKII and that
"context" is
the script that invokes MKIV. But both are usu
your help.
Tristan
- Mail original -
> De: "Hans Hagen"
> À: ntg-context@ntg.nl
> Envoyé: Mercredi 10 Avril 2013 16:15:46
> Objet: Re: [NTG-context] New user of ConTeXt
>
> because in the old fonts there's a visual space in slot 32
>
--
Ifsttar -
On 4/10/2013 3:50 PM, Marco Patzer wrote:
If you use MkIV, those symbols don't show up. I don't know why they
are visible with MkII.
because in the old fonts there's a visual space in slot 32
-
On 2013–04–10 Tristan Lorino wrote:
> I'm beginning with ConTeXt.
You probably compiled your document with texexec. That means you are
using an old, but still supported, version of ConTeXt called MkII.
You can make you life easier if you use the newer version MkIV
instead. Just compile with
co
Am 10.04.2013 15:29, schrieb ntg-context-requ...@ntg.nl:
\setupbodyfont[11pt]
\enableregime[utf-8]
\mainlanguage[fr]
\starttext
\setMPtext {1} {C'est le titre}
\startMPcode
pickup pencircle scaled .5mm ;
pair a; a :=(0.2cm,.5cm);
label.rt("\MPtext {1}",a);
draw (0cm,0cm)--(8cm,0cm);
draw (
Hi,
I'm beginning with ConTeXt.
With the code below, the outpout pdf file shows space symbols between the three
words of the title (cf. attached file):
\setupbodyfont[11pt]
\enableregime[utf-8]
\mainlanguage[fr]
\starttext
\setMPtext {1} {C'est le titre