On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test%it.com} test.} text.
\stoptext
This is more a proof of concept so I did not
Am 31.10.2010 um 07:06 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test%it.com} test.}
On Sun, 31 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 31.10.2010 um 07:06 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test
Am 28.10.2010 um 00:05 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
% Usage example here:
\startuseURL[anotherurl][urldescription]
http://test%it.example.com
\stopuseURL
\starttext
\from[anotherurl]\par
\url[anotherurl]\par
Test.\footnote{\url[anotherurl]}
\stoptext
Hi Philipp,
this doesn't
On 10/27/2010 02:43 PM, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 27.10.2010 um 12:35 schrieb Steffen Wolfrum:
Hi Hans and other catcode wizards,
isn't there a way to make this kind of catcode trickery only be available
*inside* \hyphenatedurl{} environment?
It’s useless in this case because the „%“ is
On Thu, Oct 28 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
\startuseURL[anotherurl][urldescription]
http://test%it.example.com
\stopuseURL
this doesn't work ... the address gets corrupt!
Just run it, open the PDF in Acrobat and test the link:
Acrobat is attempting to connect to
On 2010-10-28 08:46:55, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 28.10.2010 um 00:05 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
% Usage example here:
\startuseURL[anotherurl][urldescription]
http://test%it.example.com
\stopuseURL
\starttext
\from[anotherurl]\par
\url[anotherurl]\par
On 27-10-2010 7:08, Peter Münster wrote:
On Wed, Oct 27 2010, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
He wants perhaps:
\starthyphenatedurl
www.%.com
\stophyphenatedurl
No, he wants
\footnote{...\hyphenatedurl{...%...}...}
Yes. But if I understand TeX right, then there will be only 2 possibilities:
On Thu, Oct 28 2010, Hans Hagen wrote:
If we can agree that asciimode also makes % a characters I can add
that preset.
I agree. It's more consistent.
Peter
--
Contact information: http://pmrb.free.fr/contact/
On Thu, Oct 28, 2010 at 11:53:52AM +0200, Peter Münster wrote:
On Thu, Oct 28 2010, Hans Hagen wrote:
If we can agree that asciimode also makes % a characters I can add
that preset.
I agree. It's more consistent.
Me too :) We just need some other way to put inline comments.
Regards,
On Thu, Oct 28 2010, Khaled Hosny wrote:
Me too :) We just need some other way to put inline comments.
I don't know, if it's possible, but \% could be nice.
Peter
--
Contact information: http://pmrb.free.fr/contact/
Am 28.10.2010 um 08:53 schrieb Taco Hoekwater:
This works:
\startbuffer [comurl] \catcode`\%=12
\hyphenatedurl{...
If I didn't overlook something, then this must be finally the solution:
\startbuffer [comurl] \catcode`\%=12
Am 28.10.2010 um 08:53 schrieb Taco Hoekwater:
On 10/27/2010 02:43 PM, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 27.10.2010 um 12:35 schrieb Steffen Wolfrum:
Hi Hans and other catcode wizards,
isn't there a way to make this kind of catcode trickery only be available
*inside* \hyphenatedurl{}
Am 28.10.2010 um 13:02 schrieb Khaled Hosny:
On Thu, Oct 28, 2010 at 11:53:52AM +0200, Peter Münster wrote:
On Thu, Oct 28 2010, Hans Hagen wrote:
If we can agree that asciimode also makes % a characters I can add
that preset.
I agree. It's more consistent.
Me too :) We just need
Am 26.10.2010 um 00:49 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
On 2010-10-25 17:00:39, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 25.10.2010 um 19:30 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
Am 27.10.2010 um 12:35 schrieb Steffen Wolfrum:
Hi Hans and other catcode wizards,
isn't there a way to make this kind of catcode trickery only be available
*inside* \hyphenatedurl{} environment?
It’s useless in this case because the „%“ is read from the footnote before
\hyphenatedurl
On Wed, 27 Oct 2010, Peter Münster wrote:
On Wed, Oct 27 2010, Peter Münster wrote:
Yes. But if I understand TeX right, then there will be only 2 possibilities:
1.)
\footnote{bla
\starthyphenatedurl
www.%.com
\stophyphenatedurl
bla bla}
Ok, I must be wrong, because this does not work
On Wed, Oct 27 2010, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
That has to do with the definition of typing:
http://tracker.luatex.org/view.php?id=505
Ah, that means, that buffers can solve the problem:
\starttext
\startbuffer
\starttyping
bla%bla
\stoptyping
\stopbuffer
bla\footnote{
bla
\getbuffer
Hi,
I tried an other approach: \useURL
But here the letterpercent trick doesn't work at all ... ie. there is no
clickable link at all anymore!
\setupinteraction
[state=start]
\showframe
\starttext
\useURL[aurl] [http://www.kommers.se/upload/Analysarkiv/In\letterpercent
On Mon, Oct 25 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
http://www.cirp.ru/conferences/new%20neighborhood%20policy/publications/frellesen%20paper.doc
There is no way to typeset this in ConTeXt MkIV???
No problem here:
\setupinteraction[state=start]
\starttext
No hexa-code after percent, so Acroread
On 2010-10-27 22:28:56, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
I tried an other approach: \useURL
But here the letterpercent trick doesn't work at all ... ie.
there is no clickable link at all anymore!
Hi Steffen,
if you consider an environment-style version of ‘\useURL’
appropriate, you could
Hi Aditya, Philipp and all,
thank you very much for your interesting ideas!
As far as I understood, your starting point is to avoid % being treated as
comment ...
This is nice for controlled situations.
But in real life projects there are many, various situations where the % is
used and
On 2010-10-25 10:25:55, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test%it.com} test.} text.
Ugly, but it works:
text\footnote{test
Am 25.10.2010 um 11:16 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
On 2010-10-25 10:25:55, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test%it.com} test.}
On 2010-10-25 11:39:12, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 25.10.2010 um 11:16 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
On 2010-10-25 10:25:55, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
Am 25.10.2010 um 11:50 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
On 2010-10-25 11:39:12, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 25.10.2010 um 11:16 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
On 2010-10-25 10:25:55, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Am 25.10.2010 um 11:16 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test\letterpercent it.com} test.} text.
Regards, Philipp
PS: As I understand, the percent sign appears mostly in
url-encoded strings. Couldn’t you just convert that to unicode
and let the browser do the
On 2010-10-25 12:05:37, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
\let\normalhyphenatedurl\hyphenatedurl
\bgroup
\catcode`\%=11
\gdef\hyphenatedurl
\unexpanded\gdef\hyphenatedurl
Should work in footnotes. Regards, Philipp
{\bgroup
\catcode`\%=11
\expandafter\egroup
\normalhyphenatedurl}
Am 25.10.2010 um 12:26 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
On 2010-10-25 12:05:37, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
\let\normalhyphenatedurl\hyphenatedurl
\bgroup
\catcode`\%=11
\gdef\hyphenatedurl
\unexpanded\gdef\hyphenatedurl
Should work in footnotes. Regards, Philipp
No, it doesn't (see
On 2010-10-25 12:45:17, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 25.10.2010 um 12:26 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
\unexpanded\gdef\hyphenatedurl
Should work in footnotes. Regards, Philipp
No, it doesn't (see below).
Do you have an other idea?
Right; it works in footnotes but doesn’t accomplish what
Am 25.10.2010 um 15:12 schrieb Philipp Gesang:
Concerning the urlencoding I referred to browsers automatically
converting raw urls, like for instance
http://www.google.com/search?q=ähre
, which is encoded as
http://www.google.com/search?q=%C3%A4hre
by my browser. As long as your
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test%it.com} test.} text.
\stoptext
An extreme solution:
\startcatcodetable
Am 25.10.2010 um 19:30 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test \hyphenatedurl{www.test%it.com} test.}
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 25.10.2010 um 19:30 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does someone has a fix?
\starttext
text\footnote{test
Am 25.10.2010 um 23:00 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
In addition to usual asciimode, I changed the definition so that % does not
have its usual meaning. So, % is no longer a comment; it just typesets
percentage sign. You can get a comment using
\starthiding ... \stophiding.
But there is now
On 2010-10-25 17:00:39, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Am 25.10.2010 um 19:30 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,
the % is a frequently used character in URL.
But \hyphenatedurl{} can deal with it ...
Does
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