On Sun, 28 Jun 2009, t...@mac.com wrote:
If you can do without MkII compatibility the most elegant solution may be to
simply replace all instances of \~n with ñ,
e.g. co\~nazo -- coñazo.
Works even with MKII, you only need to declare you character set, for
example:
\enableregime[utf]
Cheers,
On Jun 28, 2009, at 7:30 AM, t...@mac.com wrote:
On Jun 28, 2009, at 1:16 AM, Ciro Soto wrote:
Hi all,
I finally got around the intallation of context minimals. Thank you
for those who helped. I ran my old tex files (in spanish) and found
that \~n is not working now.
It should create an
Hi all,
I have a vague memory that there was a message (by Wolfgang Schuster?)
about this a couple of months ago, but I'm unable to find anything in
the archives. What I want: add a layer on top of the current page.
This page is created with the simpleslides-module, so it already
Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
Hi all,
I have a vague memory that there was a message (by Wolfgang Schuster?)
about this a couple of months ago, but I'm unable to find anything in
the archives. What I want: add a layer on top of the current page. This
page is created with the simpleslides-module,
On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 12:30 PM, Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl wrote:
Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
Hi all,
I have a vague memory that there was a message (by Wolfgang Schuster?)
about this a couple of months ago, but I'm unable to find anything in the
archives. What I want: add a layer on top of
On Jun 28, 2009, at 12:30 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
\defineoverlay[x][a]
\defineoverlay[x][b]
\setupbackgrounds ... [background={a,foreground,b}
etc .. in your module you can just add a few more in the chain
(unknown ones are ignored)
Thanks, Hans and Luigi, that was very fast! Yes, this
From http://texshow.contextgarden.net/ (\reference):
\starttext
See page \ref[p][myref 1] and \ref[p][myref 2].
\page
\reference[myref 1]{} This is the first reference.
\page
\reference[myref 2]{} This is the second one.
\stoptext
Works in MKII (at least on ConTeXt online), but produces the
On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 01:16, Ciro Soto wrote:
Hi all,
I finally got around the intallation of context minimals. Thank you for
those who helped. I ran my old tex files (in spanish) and found that \~n is
not working now.
It should create an n with a tilde on top, but what happens is that
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 01:16, Ciro Soto wrote:
Hi all,
I finally got around the intallation of context minimals. Thank you for
those who helped. I ran my old tex files (in spanish) and found that \~n is
not working now.
It should create an n with a tilde on top, but what
Tad Ashlock wrote:
From http://texshow.contextgarden.net/ (\reference):
\starttext
See page \ref[p][myref 1] and \ref[p][myref 2].
\page
\reference[myref 1]{} This is the first reference.
\page
\reference[myref 2]{} This is the second one.
\stoptext
Works in MKII (at least on ConTeXt
On Sun, 28 Jun 2009, Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
Hi all,
I have a vague memory that there was a message (by Wolfgang Schuster?) about
this a couple of months ago, but I'm unable to find anything in the archives.
What I want: add a layer on top of the current page. This page is created
with the
The solution to my search (thanks Wolfgang for your help) is below. I
have two overlays, one for the PDF and one for the rotated heading. I
reset the heading's setups at every \typeSQLfile so the name gets
changed. I just add both backgrounds (this is why I like ConTeXt,
stuff like that
Am 2009-06-26 um 19:33 schrieb Gerben Wierda:
\typefile balks on filenames with $ characters in their names.
Anything I can do about that?
Rename the file. It's an error if characters like that appear in a
file name.
You could even rename it using Lua from within your TeX code.
On 28 Jun 2009, at 19:17, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 2009-06-26 um 19:33 schrieb Gerben Wierda:
\typefile balks on filenames with $ characters in their names.
Anything I can do about that?
Rename the file. It's an error if characters like that appear in a
file name.
You could even
Gerben Wierda wrote:
I do not decide what the names of these files are, someone else produces
them, and my work flow should be able to handle all valid filenames.
I assume then the answer is no? (Con)TeX(t) can't handle this?
kpathsea can't handle files with $ signs in them, unless
the $
On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 8:59 PM, Gerben Wierda gerben.wie...@rna.nl wrote:
On 28 Jun 2009, at 19:17, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 2009-06-26 um 19:33 schrieb Gerben Wierda:
\typefile balks on filenames with $ characters in their names. Anything I
can do about that?
Rename the file.
Hallo Wolfgang! ;-)
Since my old letter and CV environment doesn't work anymore in MkIV,
I'm trying to reproduce it with t-letter.
At the moment I struggle with the reference keys:
\setupletterstyle[reference][
alternative=d,
list={name,street,city,,phone,skype,email,,date},
The 'n=' option to \setupnote doesn't have any effect, more ever 'n=0'
will give an Arithmetic overflow error. Minimal example:
\setupnote[footnote][n=0]
\starttext
This\footnote{one} and this\footnote{two} and this\footnote{three}.
\stoptext
Regards,
Khaled
--
Khaled Hosny
Arabic
Thank you all.
This is the feedback of your recommendations:
\enableregime[utf]
didn't work.
typing just ñ
worked fine.
\defineaccent ~ n {\ntilde}
worked using \~n and
This last solution is the one I was looking for because my keyboard has no ñ
thanks
Ciro
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