Hi list,
I noticed that the sign for the square root does not adapt to the size
of a fraction as in the attached minimal example.
Thanks,
Xenia
(/home/maja/context/tex/texmf-context/tex/context/base/cont-yes.mkiv
ConTeXt ver: 2013.03.24 15:11 MKIV fmt: 2013.3.24 int: english/english
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On 4/9/2013 9:02 PM, Xenia wrote:
Hi list,
I noticed that the sign for the square root does not adapt to the size
of a fraction as in the attached minimal example.
In what sense? Sqrt's grow in discrete steps.
Hans
-
On 09.04.2013 21:18, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 4/9/2013 9:02 PM, Xenia wrote:
Hi list,
I noticed that the sign for the square root does not adapt to the size
of a fraction as in the attached minimal example.
In what sense? Sqrt's grow in discrete steps.
Oh, I didn't know that. For my feelings,
On 4/9/2013 9:25 PM, Xenia wrote:
On 09.04.2013 21:18, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 4/9/2013 9:02 PM, Xenia wrote:
Hi list,
I noticed that the sign for the square root does not adapt to the size
of a fraction as in the attached minimal example.
In what sense? Sqrt's grow in discrete steps.
Oh, I
On Tue, 9 Apr 2013 21:25:16 +0200
Xenia yor...@googlemail.com wrote:
Oh, I didn't know that. For my feelings, all variables should have the
same size here (a,b and c).
In this case you should probably use:
a = \sqrt{b/c}
Alan
On 09.04.2013 22:39, Alan BRASLAU wrote:
On Tue, 9 Apr 2013 21:25:16 +0200
Xenia yor...@googlemail.com wrote:
Oh, I didn't know that. For my feelings, all variables should have the
same size here (a,b and c).
In this case you should probably use:
a = \sqrt{b/c}
Okay, but this was just
On 4/9/2013 9:25 PM, Xenia wrote:
On 09.04.2013 21:18, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 4/9/2013 9:02 PM, Xenia wrote:
Hi list,
I noticed that the sign for the square root does not adapt to the size
of a fraction as in the attached minimal example.
In what sense? Sqrt's grow in discrete steps.
Oh, I
On 4/9/2013 10:39 PM, Alan BRASLAU wrote:
On Tue, 9 Apr 2013 21:25:16 +0200
Xenia yor...@googlemail.com wrote:
Oh, I didn't know that. For my feelings, all variables should have the
same size here (a,b and c).
In this case you should probably use:
a = \sqrt{b/c}
there was a wrong default
On Tue, Apr 09, 2013 at 10:39:25PM +0200, Alan BRASLAU wrote:
On Tue, 9 Apr 2013 21:25:16 +0200
Xenia yor...@googlemail.com wrote:
Oh, I didn't know that. For my feelings, all variables should have the
same size here (a,b and c).
In this case you should probably use:
a = \sqrt{b/c}