taco wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Yury G. Kudryashov wrote:
>> Another problem fixed by my patch:
>>
>> \definereferenceformat[ineq][text=equation]
>> \starttext
>> \placeformula[first]
>> \startformula 1=1\stopformula
>> \ineq[first]
>> \stoptext
>> printed "1", not "equation 1".
>
> This problem is st
taco wrote:
>
> Hi,
> Yury G. Kudryashov wrote:
>>> It seems that \ineq doesn't clear some variables, and the next \in uses
>>> the previous format.
>> Please, apply the attached patch upstream. It fixed the problem for me.
> This problem was already fixed in the latest (internal?) beta.
I shall
Hi,
Yury G. Kudryashov wrote:
It seems that \ineq doesn't clear some variables, and the next \in uses
the previous format.
Please, apply the attached patch upstream. It fixed the problem for me.
This problem was already fixed in the latest (internal?) beta.
Another problem fixed by my pa
Yury G. Kudryashov wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I try the following:
>
> \definereferenceformat[ineq][left=(,right=),text=Equation]
> \starttext
> \placeformula[first]
> \startformula
> 2=2
> \stopformula
> In \in[first] ineq \ineq[first] in \in[first].
> \stoptext
>
> The result is:
> 2 = 2 (1)
> In 1 ine
Hi!
I try the following:
\definereferenceformat[ineq][left=(,right=),text=Equation]
\starttext
\placeformula[first]
\startformula
2=2
\stopformula
In \in[first] ineq \ineq[first] in \in[first].
\stoptext
The result is:
2 = 2 (1)
In 1 ineq (1) in (1).
It seems that \ineq doesn't clear some varia