>
>
> One final question on this one. As per latest comments this works great,
> but is there a way so the presentation pages in the appendix are made-up
> landscape as they are now, but are rotated 90 degrees so they are created
> in the pdf document as the first two pages.
On 7/31/21 10:23 PM, Jeroen via ntg-context wrote:
> [...]
> \savebuffer[list=slides, file=\jobname_slides.tex, prefix=no]
Sorry, Jeroen, this was my fault.
A simpler approach to the command above reads:
\savebuffer[list=slides, file=slides.tex]
But then you have to invoke the file as
On 8/1/2021 3:02 PM, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Hans Hagen via ntg-context schrieb am 01.08.2021 um 13:56:
On 7/31/2021 10:23 PM, Jeroen via ntg-context wrote:
I worked around it, instead of simpleslides just use larger fonts to
with regular pages
Tne next version will have this (easy cheap
Hans Hagen via ntg-context schrieb am 01.08.2021 um 13:56:
On 7/31/2021 10:23 PM, Jeroen via ntg-context wrote:
I worked around it, instead of simpleslides just use larger fonts to
with regular pages
Tne next version will have this (easy cheap extension):
[...]
after that you have a file
On 7/31/2021 10:23 PM, Jeroen via ntg-context wrote:
I worked around it, instead of simpleslides just use larger fonts to
with regular pages
Tne next version will have this (easy cheap extension):
\definesavebuffer[slide]
\startslide
% styling
\stopslide
\starttext
\startslide
I worked around it, instead of simpleslides just use larger fonts to with
regular pages
\startbuffer[slides]
\setuptolerance[
horizontal,
tolerant,
stretch]
\setuppapersize[
A4,landscape]
\setuplayout[
width=middle,
backspace=35mm,
cutspace=35mm,
height=middle,
topspace=5mm,
On 7/31/21 4:06 PM, Pablo Rodriguez via ntg-context wrote:
BTW, I cannot get simpleslides working with LMTX.
I had to make some slight adjustments but have been to lazy to upload a
new and improved version. One reason being that I can't remember my
username and password for the modules
On 7/31/21 3:27 PM, Jeroen via ntg-context wrote:
Is there an easy way to write a Context document and also code simpleslides
in the same document so that the simpleslides are automatically added to
the document as for example an appendix? Ie one tex document with Context
code, perhaps with
On 7/31/21 3:27 PM, Jeroen via ntg-context wrote:
> Is there an easy way to write a Context document and also code
> simpleslides in the same document so that the simpleslides are
> automatically added to the document as for example an appendix? Ie
> one tex document with Context code, perhaps
> Am 31.07.2021 um 15:27 schrieb Jeroen via ntg-context :
>
> Is there an easy way to write a Context document and also code simpleslides
> in the same document so that the simpleslides are automatically added to the
> document as for example an appendix? Ie one tex document with Context code,
Is there an easy way to write a Context document and also code simpleslides
in the same document so that the simpleslides are automatically added to
the document as for example an appendix? Ie one tex document with Context
code, perhaps with some \input and something like a two-pass job. I was
On 1/29/2021 6:09 PM, Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
On 29. Jan 2021, at 17:55, Otared Kavian wrote:
Out of curiosity I tested your MWE and I get
mtx-context | fatal error: return code: 11
Maybe lmtx uses the random number generator to produce its return codes? :-)
139 is gcc mem
> On 29. Jan 2021, at 17:55, Otared Kavian wrote:
>
> Out of curiosity I tested your MWE and I get
>
> mtx-context | fatal error: return code: 11
Maybe lmtx uses the random number generator to produce its return codes? :-)
Thomas
Hi Thomas,
Out of curiosity I tested your MWE and I get
mtx-context | fatal error: return code: 11
with LMTX (version 2021.01.28 18:22), while with mkiv it typesets correctly.
Best regards: Otared
> On 29 Jan 2021, at 14:42, Thomas A. Schmitz
> wrote:
>
>
> On 1/29/21 12:56 PM,
> On 29. Jan 2021, at 16:27, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> fixed in next upload
Thank you for the fix!
Thomas
___
If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the
Wiki!
maillist :
On 1/29/2021 2:42 PM, Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
On 1/29/21 12:56 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
Hard to say (probably some mem/stack issue) ... you can add a
\tracingall around the place where the last message to the console
happens ... i need to know where it happens (or you can themn make a
mwe of
On 1/29/21 12:56 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
Hard to say (probably some mem/stack issue) ... you can add a
\tracingall around the place where the last message to the console
happens ... i need to know where it happens (or you can themn make a mwe
of that bit).
OK, here's a minimal example. I
On 1/29/2021 12:15 PM, Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
Hi all,
a complex file with a metafun background does not compile anymore with
lmtx. It compiles fine with mkiv. Compilation breaks off after 10 pages
(maybe that's significant) with this message:
pages > flushing realpage 10,
Hi all,
a complex file with a metafun background does not compile anymore with
lmtx. It compiles fine with mkiv. Compilation breaks off after 10 pages
(maybe that's significant) with this message:
pages > flushing realpage 10, userpage 10, subpage 10
mtx-context | fatal error:
Hello,
I am making progress and I almost get what I want to achieve but I still
have two problems :
how to color cells not containing numbers with the same color as the others
?
how to color in salmon, for example, cells 1 2 ?
3
Dear Hans,
Thank you for new methods!
It would take some time for me to understand them fully.
Learning Lua, metafun, lmtx, wiki is always a challenge for me.
I also wonder where is the boundary of ConTeXt.
I hope that you and all members in this list are well from COVID-19.
Thank you again.
On 7/20/2020 2:40 PM, Jeong Dal wrote:
I also wonder where is the boundary of ConTeXt.
The boundaries are set and shift by users (the mailing list) and
curiosity (personal).
Hans
-
Hans
Hi all,
Thank you for your contributions, it allows me to progress.
@Hans and Deal
The code is impressive but does not correspond to the shape of the triangle
that I have to make (by convention).
Fabrice
Le lun. 20 juil. 2020 à 10:36, Hans Hagen a écrit :
> On 7/20/2020 7:56 AM, Jeong Dal
Dear Fabrice,
You may split Binom(n,k) function into two functions as following:
*
\startluacode
P={}
combi = P
function P.fact (n)
if n <= 0 then
return 1
else
return n * P.fact(n-1)
end
end
function P.ncr(n,r)
return P.fact(n)/(P.fact(r)*P.fact(n-r))
end
combi = {
On 7/20/2020 7:56 AM, Jeong Dal wrote:
Dear Fabrice,
You may split Binom(n,k) function into two functions as following:
> see original mail
>
Dalyoung
Best stay in a protected namespace ...
\startluacode
local function fact (n)
if n <= 0 then
return 1
else
> On 18 Jul 2020, at 23:35, Otared Kavian wrote:
>
>
>
>> On 18 Jul 2020, at 22:25, Fabrice Couvreur
>> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Wolfgang,
>>
>> It works but why did you ask this question since I finally use context ?
>> Are you sure you want to use context(...) here?
>> How not to display the .0
> On 18 Jul 2020, at 22:25, Fabrice Couvreur
> wrote:
>
> Hi Wolfgang,
>
> It works but why did you ask this question since I finally use context ?
> Are you sure you want to use context(...) here?
> How not to display the .0 ?
Besides what Wolfgang suggested, ou can also use
Fabrice Couvreur schrieb am 18.07.2020 um 22:25:
Hi Wolfgang,
It works but why did you ask this question since I finally use context ?
Are you sure you want to use context(...) here?
In your first version you used the context function in the loop to print
the output of the Binom but the
Small correction :
\starttext
\startluacode
function Binom(n,k)
if k > n then
return 0
elseif (n == 0 or k == 0) then
return 1
else
return (n*Binom(n-1,k-1))/k
end
end
context.startxtable({"align={middle,lohi},
Hi Wolfgang,
It works but why did you ask this question since I finally use context ?
> Are you sure you want to use context(...) here?
>
How not to display the .0 ?
Fabrice
Le sam. 18 juil. 2020 à 22:22, Wolfgang Schuster <
wolfgang.schuster.li...@gmail.com> a écrit :
> Fabrice Couvreur
Fabrice Couvreur schrieb am 18.07.2020 um 22:09:
Hi,
I improved the code to be able to display the grid but I cannot display
the coefficients.
Thank you
Fabrice
\starttext
\startluacode
function Binom(n,k)
if k > n then
return 0
elseif (n == 0 or k == 0)
Hi,
I improved the code to be able to display the grid but I cannot display the
coefficients.
Thank you
Fabrice
\starttext
\startluacode
function Binom(n,k)
if k > n then
return 0
elseif (n == 0 or k == 0) then
return 1
else
return
Fabrice Couvreur schrieb am 18.07.2020 um 20:05:
Hello,
I want to display the values of Pascal's triangle in a table.
Unfortunately my knowledge of Lua is not sufficient to run this code.
Thank you.
Fabrice
\starttext
\startluacode
function Binom(n,k)
if k > n then
Hello,
I want to display the values of Pascal's triangle in a table.
Unfortunately my knowledge of Lua is not sufficient to run this code.
Thank you.
Fabrice
\starttext
\startluacode
function Binom(n,k)
if k > n then
return 0
elseif (n == 0 or k == 0) then
What is wrong with this code?
Interestingly it seems to work in mkii, probably because
mkii calls external metafun:
context --pdftex --passon=--shell-escape test.tex
test.pdf is attached.
Best,
Akira
test.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document
On 2/1/2015 12:29 PM, DesdeChaves wrote:
I'm trying to draw some random arrows using Metapost. For that I use a
piece of code from fpast that in found at stackexchange
http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/179745/generating-random-arrows-in-tikz/180111#180111
Unfortunately this code does not
Interestingly it seems to work in mkii, probably because
mkii calls external metafun:
Sorry, I didn't notice explanation by Hans.
Best,
Akira
___
If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an
I'm trying to draw some random arrows using Metapost. For that I use a
piece of code from fpast that in found at stackexchange
http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/179745/generating-random-arrows-in-tikz/180111#180111
Unfortunately this code does not work in context (request for a solution
On 2/1/2015 3:31 PM, Akira Kakuto wrote:
Interestingly it seems to work in mkii, probably because
mkii calls external metafun:
Sorry, I didn't notice explanation by Hans.
The problem with variables in metapost is that they are global by
default (unless 'save'd in a group or vardef). This
Hi,
I noticed something unexpected with the following code:
\enabletrackers[metapost.showlog]
\startuseMPgraphic{heading:ThemeTitleStyle}
show HEADING:THEMETITLESTYLE;
show \MPstring{heading:title};
draw textext( \MPstring{heading:title} ) rotated 5
withcolor blue;
\stopuseMPgraphic
···date: 2013-10-10, Thursday···from: Thangalin···
I noticed something unexpected with the following code:
\enabletrackers[metapost.showlog]
\startuseMPgraphic{heading:ThemeTitleStyle}
show HEADING:THEMETITLESTYLE;
show \MPstring{heading:title};
draw textext(
On 2013–10–10 Thangalin wrote:
I noticed something unexpected with the following code:
\enabletrackers[metapost.showlog]
\startuseMPgraphic{heading:ThemeTitleStyle}
show HEADING:THEMETITLESTYLE;
show \MPstring{heading:title};
draw textext( \MPstring{heading:title} ) rotated 5
Hi,
typeset using TeX. After it's typeset MP picks it up in a second
run.
That also explains why the spacing between words is correct (I didn't
think MP could typeset text).
Maintain a vector with the last two elements to check against.
An interesting approach; I used a Boolean flag as per
On 10/11/2013 1:00 PM, Philipp Gesang wrote:
···date: 2013-10-10, Thursday···from: Thangalin···
I noticed something unexpected with the following code:
\enabletrackers[metapost.showlog]
\startuseMPgraphic{heading:ThemeTitleStyle}
show HEADING:THEMETITLESTYLE;
show
···date: 2013-10-11, Friday···from: Hans Hagen···
On 10/11/2013 1:00 PM, Philipp Gesang wrote:
···date: 2013-10-10, Thursday···from: Thangalin···
I noticed something unexpected with the following code:
\enabletrackers[metapost.showlog]
\startuseMPgraphic{heading:ThemeTitleStyle}
On 10/12/2013 2:09 AM, Philipp Gesang wrote:
Btw. the behavior of mfun_trial_run is not very intuitive. I’d
expect it to work like \iftrialtypesetting, but in a single-pass
context it evaluates to true:
keep in mind that one really needs to process the text in order to get
the dimensions
Thanks, got the following now working:
\def\startxmlbuffer{\grabbufferdata[xmlbuffer][startxmlbuffer][stopxmlbuffer]}
\def\stopxmlbuffer{\endinput}
..
\xmlprocessbuffer{dvd}{xmlbuffer}{}
Hans van der Meer
On 13 feb. 2013, at 22:34, Wolfgang Schuster wolfgang.schus...@gmail.com
wrote:
Am
Is it possible to have a command automatically executed each time \stopbuffer
has been read? Preferably coupled to a specific named \startbuffer[this_one],
iff possible at all of course.
Thus:
\startbuffer[this_one]
..contents..
\stopbuffer % in execution followed by \command
Hans van der Meer
Am 13.02.2013 um 17:49 schrieb H. van der Meer h.vanderm...@uva.nl:
Is it possible to have a command automatically executed each time \stopbuffer
has been read? Preferably coupled to a specific named \startbuffer[this_one],
iff possible at all of course.
Thus:
\startbuffer[this_one]
In the file contextref-env.tex I find code like the following:
\setupsectionblock[\v!frontpart] [\c!page=\v!yes]
\setupsectionblock[\v!bodypart] [\c!page=\v!yes]
\setupsectionblock[\v!appendix] [\c!page=\v!yes]
\setupsectionblock[\v!frontpart] [\c!before=,\c!after=]
I have no idea what the
On Wed, 22 Aug 2012, john Culleton wrote:
In the file contextref-env.tex I find code like the following:
\setupsectionblock[\v!frontpart] [\c!page=\v!yes]
\setupsectionblock[\v!bodypart] [\c!page=\v!yes]
\setupsectionblock[\v!appendix] [\c!page=\v!yes]
\setupsectionblock[\v!frontpart]
I have no idea what the sequences like \v!and \c! etc. mean.
Are they references to modes?
I asked much the same question on tex.stackexchange.com two months
ago, except mine was not so nice and focused.
Aditya gave a very nice explanation of what the letters do; clearer
than the one on the
On 22-8-2012 23:02, Sietse Brouwer wrote:
I have no idea what the sequences like \v!and \c! etc. mean.
Are they references to modes?
I asked much the same question on tex.stackexchange.com two months
ago, except mine was not so nice and focused.
Aditya gave a very nice explanation of what the
On Sat, 17 Apr 2010 06:37:02 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com scribit:
[...]
the sign | (vertical bar) seems to be a special char (context/mkiv)
it is only compiled if present in pairs |text |
the message: File ended while use of \next
\type{|} works
To
Am 17.04.10 10:51, schrieb R. Bastian:
what is the sense of |text | ?
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Composed_words
Wolfgang
___
If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the
On Fri, 09 Apr 2010 12:00:05 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com scribit:
Am 09.04.10 11:20, schrieb R. Bastian:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
\font\fgras = cmbtt10
{\tt
{\obeylines
{\fgras def} ra():
\ \ \ \ a = 3
\ \ \ \ b
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:31 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
1. I use 'context -result=y source.tex'; is this mkii or mkiv ?
It's mkiv
For mkii use
$ texexec source.tex
--
luigi
___
If your question is
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 11:31:00 +0200
R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr scribit:
On Fri, 09 Apr 2010 12:00:05 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com scribit:
Am 09.04.10 11:20, schrieb R. Bastian:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
Am 16.04.10 11:31, schrieb R. Bastian:
2. what is the Context font for cmitt10 ?
ConTeXt use Latin Modern by default, to get italic typewriter you can write
\tt\it ...
or
\ttit ...
or
\definefont[italictypewriter][MonoItalic]
and use the font with
\italictypewriter ...
or
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 11:36:47 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:31 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
1. I use 'context -result=y source.tex'; is this mkii or mkiv ?
It's mkiv
For mkii use
$ texexec source.tex
ok, but there is a bug in mkii:
Am 16.04.10 11:46, schrieb R. Bastian:
2. what is the Context font for cmitt10 ?
{\it{} ...} works - but i would the same as \bold{}
\italic{...}
Wolfgang
___
If your question is of interest to others as
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:49 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 11:36:47 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:31 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
1. I use 'context -result=y source.tex'; is this mkii or mkiv ?
It's mkiv
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 11:54:57 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:49 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 11:36:47 +0200
[...]
so i use context
sorry, I don't understand --- can you post a minimal example ?
no, _i_ was the
On Fri, 09 Apr 2010 12:00:05 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com scribit:
\setuplines[space=on]
\starttext
\startlines\tt
%\startlines[style=mono] % works only in MkIV
compiled by context (== mak iv ?)
\startlines[style=mono] prints [style=mono]
{\bf def} ra():
Am 16.04.10 23:41, schrieb R. Bastian:
%\startlines[style=mono] % works only in MkIV
compiled by context (== mak iv ?)
\startlines[style=mono] prints [style=mono]
Direct setups are now gone because they produced unwanted side effects.
What you can in Mark 4 (MkIV) is to define you own
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
\font\fgras = cmbtt10
{\tt
{\obeylines
{\fgras def} ra():
\ \ \ \ a = 3
\ \ \ \ b = 4
}
}
--
René Bastian
www.pythoneon.org
www.musiques-rb.org
http://www.soundsurvey.org.uk/
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 11:20 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
\font\fgras = cmbtt10
{\tt
{\obeylines
{\fgras def} ra():
\ \ \ \ a = 3
\ \ \ \ b = 4
}
}
not a solution, but this works
\starttext
\font\fgras =
Am 09.04.10 11:20, schrieb R. Bastian:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
\font\fgras = cmbtt10
{\tt
{\obeylines
{\fgras def} ra():
\ \ \ \ a = 3
\ \ \ \ b = 4
}
}
MkII:
\setuplines[space=on]
\starttext
\startlines\tt
%\startlines[style=mono] % works only in
On Fri, 9 Apr 2010 11:27:38 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 11:20 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
\font\fgras = cmbtt10
{\tt
{\obeylines
{\fgras def} ra():
\ \ \ \ a = 3
On Fri, 09 Apr 2010 12:00:05 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com scribit:
Am 09.04.10 11:20, schrieb R. Bastian:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
\font\fgras = cmbtt10
{\tt
{\obeylines
{\fgras def} ra():
\ \ \ \ a = 3
\ \ \ \ b
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 1:35 PM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
On Fri, 9 Apr 2010 11:27:38 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 11:20 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
Hello,
how to translate in context the following plain tex:
On Fri, 9 Apr 2010 14:32:08 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 1:35 PM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
On Fri, 9 Apr 2010 11:27:38 +0200
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 11:20 AM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr
On Fri, Apr 09 2010, R. Bastian wrote:
but remains that every {\bf } introduces a white space;
how to force context to make a backspace ?
\setuplines[space=on]
\starttext
\startlines[style=mono]
{\bf{}def} ra():
a = 3
b = 4
\stoplines
\stoptext
Cheers, Peter
--
Contact
On Fri, Apr 9, 2010 at 5:24 PM, Peter Münster pmli...@free.fr wrote:
On Fri, Apr 09 2010, R. Bastian wrote:
but remains that every {\bf } introduces a white space;
how to force context to make a backspace ?
\setuplines[space=on]
\starttext
\startlines[style=mono]
{\bf{}def} ra():
On Fri, Apr 09 2010, luigi scarso wrote:
On Fri, Apr 09 2010, R. Bastian wrote:
but remains that every {\bf } introduces a white space;
I'm not able to see any white space in mkiv
Bastian refers to Wolfgang's solution with \setuplines[space=on].
Cheers, Peter
--
Contact
Am 09.04.10 13:35, schrieb R. Bastian
Thanks Wolfhang. It goes better, but there is still a little bug:
{\bf def} inserts a white space in front of the line
Compare:
{\bf def} ra():
def ra():
a = 3
b = 4
\startlines
\bold{def} ra():
...
\stoplines
Wolfgang
Hello,
is there a way to get Python code with reserved words highlighted ?
Not colored as in
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Verbatim_with_LuaTeX
but {\bf ...}
I use context 2010.01.26 Mk IV or texexec
Thanks
--
René Bastian
www.pythoneon.org
www.musiques-rb.org
http://www.soundsurvey.org.uk/
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 1:17 PM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
Hello,
is there a way to get Python code with reserved words highlighted ?
Not colored as in
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Verbatim_with_LuaTeX
but {\bf ...}
I use context 2010.01.26 Mk IV or texexec
well, I'm working to a
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 13:24:09 +0100
luigi scarso luigi.sca...@gmail.com scribit:
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 1:17 PM, R. Bastian rbast...@free.fr wrote:
Hello,
is there a way to get Python code with reserved words highlighted ?
Not colored as in
Based on the pretty printer in the wiki, I wrote my own.
If I understood you well, you want a b/w pretty printer
with reserved words bold. The pretty printer is capable
of doing both. An example is attached. Probably missing
is the functionality to control the typesetting of reserved
words in TeX.
Surprise, surprise:
\def\setnotebodyfont
{\let\setnotebodyfont\relax
\restoreglobalbodyfont
\switchtobodyfont[rm,9pt]\setupinterlinespace[line=9.8pt,height=.79,depth=.21]\setupalign[block,hanging,hz]\parskip2pt}%
... sometimes I wish I had administrative access to the mailing
Hi,
my footnotes are nicely defined a such:
\def\setnotebodyfont
{\let\setnotebodyfont\relax
\restoreglobalbodyfont
\switchtobodyfont[rm,9pt]\setupinterlinespace[line=9.8pt,height=.79,depth=.21]\parskip2pt}%
Now I have to set the entire text with hanging/hz – same for the
Hi,
I'm preparing a document and I would like to product several versions
PDF with different fonts.
I dont know how to organize it : is there simple structure
if-then-else ? could I use ConTeXt's mode or environment for
this goal ?
Any idea or example is very appreciated.
Thank you in advance,
VnPenguin said this at Sun, 20 Feb 2005 18:58:41 +0100:
I dont know how to organize it : is there simple structure
if-then-else ? could I use ConTeXt's mode or environment for
this goal ?
These are all possibilities.
It depends on how you want to change them. Modes sound promising if you
want to
On Sun, 20 Feb 2005 18:09:47 +, Adam Lindsay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
VnPenguin said this at Sun, 20 Feb 2005 18:58:41 +0100:
I dont know how to organize it : is there simple structure
if-then-else ? could I use ConTeXt's mode or environment for
this goal ?
These are all
VnPenguin said this at Sun, 20 Feb 2005 19:17:41 +0100:
I'm preparing a document and I would like to product several versions
PDF with different fonts.
I would like to use command line. Could you give me a simple example please.
% I've adapted this for gwTeX default encodings.
% Convert back to
On Sun, 20 Feb 2005 18:34:20 +, Adam Lindsay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
VnPenguin said this at Sun, 20 Feb 2005 19:17:41 +0100:
I'm preparing a document and I would like to product several versions
PDF with different fonts.
I would like to use command line. Could you give me a simple
If you have the modes defined in a layout.tex you can say in the main file:
\enablemode[times]
%\enablemode[palatino]
%\enablemode[..]
\environment layout.
So by adding the appropriate \enablemode you even do not need to run the
commandline ...
Willi
Adam Lindsay wrote:
VnPenguin said this at
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