On 2017-01-23 14:09, Rik Kabel wrote:
On 2017-01-23 00:06, Alan Braslau wrote:
> On Sun, 22 Jan 2017 22:39:53 -0500 Rik Kabel > wrote: > >> So, how can I make the
inner glyph (‘?’ in the example below) >> transparent, so that the
background shows through along with >> anything else that lives
On Tue, 10 Jan 2017, Robert Blackstone wrote:
So my main problem is that I need, in the command \startchapter, a third
form for the chapter title to fit in the header and a compatible version
of the setup for the headertexts.
This is what the `marking` key is for.
\starttext
\startchapter[ti
On 2017-01-23 00:06, Alan Braslau wrote:
On Sun, 22 Jan 2017 22:39:53 -0500 Rik Kabel > wrote: > >> So, how can I make the
inner glyph (‘?’ in the example below) >> transparent, so that the
background shows through along with >> anything else that lives on a
lower layer? I’ve seen a method fo
Hi,
I'm trying to declare a new font style. I declare it with \definefontstyle
[sx] [sx] but the compilation fails when I use \sx in my document.
I found an older message from 2009 similar to my issue but with public
solution. May be some private response from Hans Hagen is missing? (
https://mai
Thanks Aditya!
Seems like there is no double vertical bar in the ASCIIMATH specs. I
don’t use it anyway.
Sorry for making noise.
On 01/23/2017 09:05 AM, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Jan 2017, Henri Menke wrote:
>
>> Dear devs,
>>
>> In mathematics the norm of something is usually denoted
Thank you very much. I was using the (old) bibtex module. Using the mkvi
publication mechanism was the key.
Antoine
On 19 January 2017 at 16:19, Alan Braslau wrote:
> On Thu, 19 Jan 2017 08:19:03 +0100
> Antoine Cailliau wrote:
>
> > How can I adjust the publication list to display [Kup03a] in
On Sat, 21 Jan 2017, John Culleton wrote:
I need to have text wrap around figures. Is this
automatic? The discussion of placing figures In chapter 16 does not
cover this point.
Do you mean:
\starttext
\startplacefigure
[
title=A wrapped figure,
location=left,
]
\exter
On Fri, 20 Jan 2017, Henri Menke wrote:
Dear devs,
In mathematics the norm of something is usually denoted by the double vertical
bars, e.g. ||v||. This is not available in asciimath.
\usemodule[asciimath]
\starttext
$\asciimath{ x^* = min { x | sum_{kk} ||f(x_{kk}^{20})|| } }$
\stoptext
Co