On 12-12-2011 01:28, Paul Menzel wrote:
Am Montag, den 12.12.2011, 01:20 +0100 schrieb Paul Menzel:
[…]
I am also getting other errors now and even moving the ConTeXt file to a
new directory I keep getting this error from `mpost`.
fonts : using map file: original-ams-euler
Dear Hans and ConTeXt folks,
how do you want me to reference ConTeXt? Is there an article you prefer
or should I just use the reference manual or the Wiki?
Hans Hagen and others (2011), http://contextgarden.net/
Thanks,
Paul
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Hi ConTeXTt User's,
I was looking for the --pdfselect option in the context-command, but it
doesn't seem to be available.
This option is available in texexec to select certain pages from a pdf file.
Can it also be done in some way using the context-command?
Regards,
Gerard Verhaag
__
On 12-12-2011 11:10, Verhaag, G.C.H.M. wrote:
Hi ConTeXTt User's,
I was looking for the --pdfselect option in the context-command, but it
doesn't seem to be available.
This option is available in texexec to select certain pages from a pdf
file.
Can it also be done in some way using the context
On Fri, Dec 9, 2011 at 16:52, Wolfgang Schuster
wrote:
> \placelayer use the area of the current block (in this case the text are),
> one way out of this is to use the “pagemakeup” environment where all margins
> are set to 0pt.
"There were no results matching the query.
Create the page "pagem
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 12:07 PM, Mari Voipio wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 9, 2011 at 16:52, Wolfgang Schuster
> wrote:
>> \placelayer use the area of the current block (in this case the text are),
>> one way out of this is to use the “pagemakeup” environment where all margins
>> are set to 0pt.
>
> "T
Am 12.12.2011 um 12:07 schrieb Mari Voipio:
> On Fri, Dec 9, 2011 at 16:52, Wolfgang Schuster
> wrote:
>> \placelayer use the area of the current block (in this case the text are),
>> one way out of this is to use the “pagemakeup” environment where all margins
>> are set to 0pt.
>
> "There we
Am 08.12.2011 um 11:21 schrieb Philipp A.:
> hi list,
>
> i want to make an exercise sheet style. exercises are already correctly
> rendered as “Exercise <1>: ”, but sub-exercises should simply be like
> “)”.
>
> what i tried:
>
> \definestructureconversionset[ex][numbers,characters][numbers
Hi Hans,
has something changed with \definestartstop? Setting before and after do not
change the output.
\definestartstop[test][before=\blank,after=\blank]
\starttext
before \test{test} after
\stoptext
Tested with the current beta- and experimental-branch.
Regards
Andreas
__
Am 12.12.2011 um 12:55 schrieb Andreas Harder:
> Hi Hans,
>
> has something changed with \definestartstop? Setting before and after do not
> change the output.
>
> \definestartstop[test][before=\blank,after=\blank]
> \starttext
> before \test{test} after
> \stoptext
>
> Tested with the curre
Hi all,
I can't seem to get a list placed after a numbered heading. For example:
\starttext
\title{First one}
\placelist[chapter]
\chapter{Second one}
\placelist[chapter] % This won't be placed
\stoptext
Is this something I should be able to do? The reason I ask is that I'm
looking to generate
Am 12.12.2011 um 13:04 schrieb Felix Ingram:
> Hi all,
>
> I can't seem to get a list placed after a numbered heading. For example:
>
> \starttext
> \title{First one}
> \placelist[chapter]
> \chapter{Second one}
> \placelist[chapter] % This won't be placed
> \stoptext
>
>
> Is this something
Hi all,
When using
\startitemize[n,reverse]
one gets items numbered in reverse order. I wonder if this feature exists also
for enumerations. An example is given below in which the last enumeration is
written on top of the file and I wish it were possible to have the enumerations
number
On 12.12.2011, at 13:00, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
>
> Am 12.12.2011 um 12:55 schrieb Andreas Harder:
>
>> Hi Hans,
>>
>> has something changed with \definestartstop? Setting before and after do not
>> change the output.
>>
>> \definestartstop[test][before=\blank,after=\blank]
>> \starttext
>
Am 12.12.2011 um 13:33 schrieb Otared Kavian:
> Hi all,
>
> When using
> \startitemize[n,reverse]
> one gets items numbered in reverse order. I wonder if this feature exists
> also for enumerations. An example is given below in which the last
> enumeration is written on top of the file
Hi all,
I'm looking for some information on the command
\getcitedata [field][key] to \macroname
i only manage to get results using a bbl file \input bibtest.bbl
is there a way to use it with a bib file directly via
\setupbibtex[database=mylib] so i can run context just once?
Thanks Michael
__
Hi Wolfgang,
Thank you for your attention: in fact you pointed out how to solve the problem…
Beginning with what you wrote, after a few trials and errors I ended up with
the following which gives what I meant:
%%% begin reverse-enumeration.tex
\definenumber[ReverseNumberOrder][numberorder=revers
Thanks Wolfgang - that works as expected. I'm trying to create a table
from the headings (as previously mentioned). Something like this:
\setuplist[chapter][criterium=all,alternative=command,command=\MySummaryTable,before={\setupTABLE[frame=on]\bTABLE\bTABLEbody},after={\eTABLEbody\eTABLE}]
\defi
hi all,
referring to my previous question: the following gives me a correct pdf with
mkII but nothing at all with mkiv. is this a bug?
thanks an best michael
\setupbibtex [database=mylib]
\def\mycite#1{
\bgroup
\getcitedata[title][#1] to \mytitle
\mytitle
\egro
Hello,
We are moving the mail server from Germany to Jožef Stefan Institute
in Ljubljana and would like to let you know that mailing list archive
won't be updated when that happens.
So: copy of mailing list archive (archive.contextgarden.net) won't be
updated for at least some time, but there is
Dear ConTeXt folks,
I have two coefficients saved in a text file
-0.157737135681261
-0.211443105668896
and I want to use them to plot a line with gnuplot.
Having several of those files I want to use Lua to create the formula
for the line for me.
I have not yet figured out how
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 22:39, Paul Menzel wrote:
> Dear ConTeXt folks,
>
>
> I have two coefficients saved in a text file
>
> -0.157737135681261
> -0.211443105668896
>
> and I want to use them to plot a line with gnuplot.
>
> Having several of those files I want to use Lua to create
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 23:07, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
>
> However, \startGNUPLOTinclusions is parsed and you could in theory
> misuse that, but it would be very bad coding practice.
(Wait, I'm not sure about that. I think that I fixed that for the same
reason, but I need to check.)
Either way the
On 12-12-2011 22:39, Paul Menzel wrote:
Dear ConTeXt folks,
I have two coefficients saved in a text file
-0.157737135681261
-0.211443105668896
and I want to use them to plot a line with gnuplot.
Having several of those files I want to use Lua to create the formula
for the l
On 12-12-2011 23:13, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
Either way the moral of the story is still the same: context parsing
is very very very confusing and you don't want to go there. In
particular you never know if something should be parsed and executed
before or after gnuplot processing.
Actually this
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 23:17, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> You have to twist your mide a bit:
>
> \startluacode
> local x = 10
> context.startGNUPLOTscript{ "lua" }
> context("plot %s",1.2 * x + 3)
> context.stopGNUPLOTscript()
> \stopluacode
>
>
> \starttext
> \useGNUPLOTgraphic[lua]
> \stoptext
Oh
Am Montag, den 12.12.2011, 23:07 +0100 schrieb Mojca Miklavec:
> On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 22:39, Paul Menzel wrote:
> > I have two coefficients saved in a text file
> >
> >-0.157737135681261
> >-0.211443105668896
> >
> > and I want to use them to plot a line with gnuplot.
> >
> > Ha
Am Montag, den 12.12.2011, 23:13 +0100 schrieb Mojca Miklavec:
[…]
> One more example. One thing that would most probably work (I didn't
> try it) would be the following:
>
> \startGNUPLOTscript[name]
> plot sin(x) t '$\pi = \ctxlua{math.pi()}$'
> \stopGNUPLOTscript
It has some syntax errors, b
All,
I have a conditional expression that checks to see if the current node
has any ancestor whose xml:id attribute matches a string
\xmldoifelse{#1}{ancestor::div[@xml:id='apr_engl']}
What I need is a test to see if the current node has any ancestor
whose xml:id attribute _contains_ a substring
On Fri, 2011-12-09 at 20:26 +0100, Hans Hagen wrote:
> I only see
>
> cont-en.fmt : format file, sits in the cache and stays there
> cont-en.lui : lua startup stub, idem
>
> handbook.tex : your file, is kept where it is
>
> Hans
Then I am not sure what file it is missing then since all of tho
On Mon, 12 Dec 2011, Otared Kavian wrote:
Hi Wolfgang,
Thank you for your attention: in fact you pointed out how to solve the problem…
Beginning with what you wrote, after a few trials and errors I ended up with
the following which gives what I meant:
%%% begin reverse-enumeration.tex
\definen
On Mon, 12 Dec 2011, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 23:17, Hans Hagen wrote:
You have to twist your mide a bit:
\startluacode
local x = 10
context.startGNUPLOTscript{ "lua" }
context("plot %s",1.2 * x + 3)
context.stopGNUPLOTscript()
\stopluacode
\starttext
\useGNUPLOTgra
On Mon, 12 Dec 2011, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
It would be a lot better to come up with some proposal how to change
the interface to enable what you want to do. (To be honest, it is
still on my todo list to migrate to Aditya's filter module in the
background, but I don't find the courage to start si
On 13 déc. 2011, at 07:39, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
> […]
> Untested, but
>
> \defineenumeration[Lecture][number=ReverseNumberOrder]
>
> should also work.
>
> Aditya
Hi Aditya,
Thanks for the hint, but unfortunately it does not work as expected: no numbers
show up.
Maybe there is a way by usin
On Tue, 13 Dec 2011, Otared Kavian wrote:
On 13 déc. 2011, at 07:39, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
[…]
Untested, but
\defineenumeration[Lecture][number=ReverseNumberOrder]
should also work.
Aditya
Hi Aditya,
Thanks for the hint, but unfortunately it does not work as expected: no numbers
show u
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