Am 01.07.2011 um 00:33 schrieb yoraxe:
Ok, thanks, for this minimal example it works. But what do I have to
type instead of
\unit{10^{-3} kilogram cubic meter}
(or
\unit{10^{-3} kgm²}
)
? This does not work for me.
It’s “10e-3”, you can find a list a valid input in the manual [1]
On 30-6-2011 10:43, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 30.06.2011 um 14:52 schrieb yoraxe:
Hey,
I was happy to have a new (and easier) unit-command, but now I miss the
space that was between the digits and the unit in the unit-module.
Put the number in the argument of the command.
\starttext
Am 01.07.2011 08:15, schrieb Wolfgang Schuster:
Am 01.07.2011 um 00:33 schrieb yoraxe:
Ok, thanks, for this minimal example it works. But what do I have to
type instead of
\unit{10^{-3} kilogram cubic meter}
(or
\unit{10^{-3} kgm²}
)
? This does not work for me.
It’s “10e-3”, you
Am 30.06.2011 um 14:52 schrieb yoraxe:
Hey,
I was happy to have a new (and easier) unit-command, but now I miss the
space that was between the digits and the unit in the unit-module.
Put the number in the argument of the command.
\starttext
\unit{35 kilogram cubic meter}
\stoptext
@Hans:
Am 30.06.2011 22:43, schrieb Wolfgang Schuster:
Am 30.06.2011 um 14:52 schrieb yoraxe:
Hey,
I was happy to have a new (and easier) unit-command, but now I miss the
space that was between the digits and the unit in the unit-module.
Put the number in the argument of the command.