Dear list,
the following sample doesn’t work as expected:
\starttext
\Words A CCC
\stoptext
Is there no way to get all words in lowercase characters and the initial
uppercase characters?
Many thanks for your help,
Pablo
--
http://www.ousia.tk
Am 2014-12-03 um 22:52 schrieb Pablo Rodriguez oi...@gmx.es:
the following sample doesn’t work as expected:
\starttext
\Words A CCC
\stoptext
Is there no way to get all words in lowercase characters and the initial
uppercase characters?
\Words{} uppercases the
On 12/03/2014 06:09 PM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 2014-12-03 um 22:52 schrieb Pablo Rodriguez:
[...]
Is there no way to get all words in lowercase characters and the initial
uppercase characters?
\Words{} uppercases the first character of the words in its brackets.
What do you
Hi,
I uploaded a new beta. This one has some new font code
- the generic code now uses the context code as of 2014-12-01
- that code uses a slightly faster access method
- it works in plain but for latex the wrapper might need to be adjusted
(as the base pass is now integrated)
The context
On 12/3/2014 5:52 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Dear list,
the following sample doesn’t work as expected:
\starttext
\Words A CCC
\stoptext
use this grouped: \Words{}
Is there no way to get all words in lowercase characters and the initial
uppercase
On Wed, Dec 03 2014, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
I thought \Words{A} would do the same for the characters others
than the first one in each word.
\def\myWords#1{\Words{\lowercase{#1}}}
\starttext
\myWords{A CCC}
\stoptext
--
Peter
On 12/1/2014 9:57 PM, Neal Lester wrote:
What is the best way to obtain precise control over the space between
lines in a multi-line running header. I need to be able to set the font
size within each line by point size. Different lines may have different
font sizes (indeed, there may be
On Wed, 3 Dec 2014 19:05:22 +0100
Peter Münster pmli...@free.fr wrote:
On Wed, Dec 03 2014, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
I thought \Words{A} would do the same for the characters others
than the first one in each word.
\def\myWords#1{\Words{\lowercase{#1}}}
\starttext
\myWords{A
Many thanks for your new beta, Hans.
From the previous beta with the new hyphenator, I have two issues.
With the new hyphenator, \hyphenation isn’t honored, such as in this sample:
\setuphyphenation[method=traditional]
\hyphenation{Nietz-sche}
\starttext
\hsize\zeropoint
On 12/03/2014 07:01 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 12/3/2014 5:52 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
[...]
\Words A CCC
use this grouped: \Words{}
My fault.
Is there no way to get all words in lowercase characters and the initial
uppercase characters?
I'll add \camel
On 12/03/2014 07:05 PM, Peter Münster wrote:
On Wed, Dec 03 2014, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
I thought \Words{A} would do the same for the characters others
than the first one in each word.
\def\myWords#1{\Words{\lowercase{#1}}}
\starttext
\myWords{A CCC}
\stoptext
On 12/03/2014 07:16 PM, Alan BRASLAU wrote:
On Wed, 3 Dec 2014 19:05:22 +0100 Peter Münster wrote:
\def\myWords#1{\Words{\lowercase{#1}}}
\starttext
\myWords{A CCC}
\stoptext
This is because we want \Words{} to respect some upper case, for
example, \Words{Acronyms, such
On 12/3/2014 7:48 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Many thanks for your new beta, Hans.
From the previous beta with the new hyphenator, I have two issues.
With the new hyphenator, \hyphenation isn’t honored, such as in this sample:
\setuphyphenation[method=traditional]
On 12/3/2014 7:48 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Many thanks for your new beta, Hans.
From the previous beta with the new hyphenator, I have two issues.
With the new hyphenator, \hyphenation isn’t honored, such as in this sample:
\setuphyphenation[method=traditional]
Dear Sirs
I need to represent a calendar in Portuguese language. You want to use the
Tikz calendar package, but the result is unsatisfactory (please see
attach). The problem is in the translation of the names of months and days
of the week. How can I fix this problem?
Thanks in advance.
Jorge
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