Hello !
Sorry, I'm a bit new to context ... but I try it for presentation
slides... And up to now, I like it very much ...
I tried to compile different examples included in the base
distribution ... but some, I fail to compile ... And I do not know
where I'm wrong ...
For example, I tried s-pr
Is there a way to change the title font being used for a table of
contents page being displayed by \completecontent? My original
thought was to use the same layout as a regular chapter:
\chapter{Table of Contents}
\placecontents
but after reading the manuals a few times, I realized this was doom
Ville Voipio said this at Mon, 2 May 2005 20:49:45 +0300:
>I've been trying to make capitalized (uppercase)
>headings with little success. I'd like to have
>the titles simply capitalized as with \cap or
>\WORD.
>
>A minimal example:
>
>---
>
>\setuphead[title][style=WORD]
>
>\starttext
>\title{T
My understanding is that the following code should produce two chapter
pages with a page number at the top, followed by an index page without a
page number. That is not what happens. Am I correct that this is a bug?
Is there a bugzilla or something similar where I should be reporting the
problem?
I'd like to reset the page number with each chapter and prepend the
chapter number to the page number. Something like
Chapter One
Foo 1-1
Bar 1-2
Chapter Two
Baz 2-1
Qux 2-3
Now here's where it gets complicated: I also need to generate an index
using this same numbering.
> Try adding the --afmpl switch to your texfont command. It switches over
> to the afmpl utility, which does better with preserving ligatures and
> kerns.
Thank you! Now it works.
I added this onto the Wiki page, as well. I did a few other changes
there, as well (mostly according to your suggesti
Ville Voipio said this at Mon, 2 May 2005 20:56:28 +0300:
>I installed a new font (Gentium, TrueType).
>Everything went relatively smoothly except
>for one thing: When I type -- I really get
>two hyphens instead of the expected en
>dash.
>
>I have been able to work around this by
>using UTF regim
I installed a new font (Gentium, TrueType).
Everything went relatively smoothly except
for one thing: When I type -- I really get
two hyphens instead of the expected en
dash.
I have been able to work around this by
using UTF regime and typing the en dash
into the source file. However, it would
be
I've been trying to make capitalized (uppercase)
headings with little success. I'd like to have
the titles simply capitalized as with \cap or
\WORD.
A minimal example:
---
\setuphead[title][style=WORD]
\starttext
\title{This is a title}
The title should be \cap{capitalized} or \WORD{capital
> Just for my understanding. Does texfont.pl only
> read in TEXMFMAIN or does it also write (can it
> be a search path or does it require for TEXMFMAIN
> to be just one directory)?
texfont.pl checks several places. By a very quick look
at the sources, it looks for the following:
TEXMFMAIN
TEX
> if you download the latest alpha release, the engine subpath stuff
> should work; if not, run:
Please pardon my tedious questions. I have tried doing what you
suggest, but I must be doing something wrong. I downloaded the alpha
cont-tmf.zip. Then I unzipped it into an empty ~/texmf. Then I ran
t
Thank you for the answers to my problem. When under "\placefigure" I
added [ ] in front of the brackets containing the reference name, it
worked. I thought that if you didn't want to specify anything (such as
"here"), one could leave it out entirely. That shows you the kind of
problems beginner
Gerben Wierda said this at Mon, 2 May 2005 17:10:03 +0200:
>> The problem is really in the font installation script (type-tmf.dat).
>> There the root (i.e. the source tree for the fonts) is explicitly given
>> as TEXMFMAIN. And this does not work in gwTeX, because if something is
>> given, it has
> The problem is really in the font installation script (type-tmf.dat).
> There the root (i.e. the source tree for the fonts) is explicitly given
> as TEXMFMAIN. And this does not work in gwTeX, because if something is
> given, it has to be TEXMFTE.
Just for my understanding. Does texfont.pl only
On May 2, 2005, at 3:47 PM, Adam Lindsay wrote:
Impressive stuff, there.
Thomas, from what I've heard, it seems like they "only" handle
monotonic
greek for the moment. So for the Greek scholars/users out there, is the
greek-antt.enc encoding that's out there sufficient? Is there a better
canonical
On 5/2/05, h h extern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The polish font gurus did it again: two more complete digitized fonts (latin,
> vietnamese, greek, cyrillic and math are covered); so ... the question is "who
Wow, I'm so happy :)
> is prepared to look into the encoding part of greek and
h h extern said this at Mon, 2 May 2005 15:14:20 +0200:
>Hi,
>
>The polish font gurus did it again: two more complete digitized fonts
(latin,
>vietnamese, greek, cyrillic and math are covered); so ... the question is
>"who
>is prepared to look into the encoding part of greek and cyrillic" or mor
Hi,
The polish font gurus did it again: two more complete digitized fonts (latin,
vietnamese, greek, cyrillic and math are covered); so ... the question is "who
is prepared to look into the encoding part of greek and cyrillic" or more
precise: with what encoding tfms should the font be shipped (
Hello,
I want to insert a table of contents but all I get is the following
error message in the created pdf-file:
[part,chapter,section,subsection,subsubsection not found/processed]
According to the mp-cb-en.pdf page 51/52 documentation I included the
following lines to the setup area:
\definel
generated fonts metrics are put in a given path:
And this is not the problem.
I have to apologise for the bad wording of my previous message. I am not
saying there would be anything wrong with the Perl script. The only
slight annoyance there is the error message, which states:
"unknown subpath
Gerben Wierda wrote:
My quick'n'dirty was to make new file type-tmf-gwtex.dat by replacing
all occurrences of TEXMFMAIN by TEXMFTE. Running that one in batch
mode works fine.
one can specify the fontroot on the commandline
in most cases texfont is is used for installing fonts not in a tex tree (o
Gerben Wierda wrote:
On Apr 29, 2005, at 15:03, Ville Voipio wrote (on the ConTeX list, but
this also is interesting for all gwTeX users):
I have spent some very interesting time trying to install the TeXlive
fonts by using texfont type-tmf.dat. What happened was that a lot of
complaints about
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