ctly. Also
install teTeX from source in /opt, and set my
PATH so that when I say texexec I get the real
tetex and not debian's broken tetex.
Luckily, the price of disk space continues to drop. ;)
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP pu
the Manual".
I always use explicit hyphen like this:
Don't second|-|guess me.
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]| http://noserose.net/e/pgp/
___
ntg-context mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
the degree where I'd
know how to make use of both their features in a practical way.
--
--Ed L Cashin
help make electronic forums easier to use:
http://www.uwasa.fi/~ts/http/quote.html
___
ntg-context mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL
u use the ams fonts, $\integers$ and $\rationals$ should work
I went grepping around for the commands that you and Giuseppe Bilotta
refer to, but I couldn't find them. Perhaps my context version is too
old?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] tmp$ texexec --version
TeXExec 1.9 - ConTeXt / PRAGMA A
Giuseppe Bilotta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Wednesday, September 10, 2003 Ed L Cashin wrote:
>
>> I went grepping around for the commands that you and Giuseppe Bilotta
>> refer to, but I couldn't find them. Perhaps my context version is too
>> old?
>
ish mes: english
...
The resulting test.pdf has only one horizontal line. It's above
"whassup there".
My second question is how do I make vertical lines in tabulate tables?
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]| ht
Patrick Gundlach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
>
>
> Ed L Cashin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Hi. I have two questions, really. I know that I can get a horizontal
>> line with \ML in a tabulate table. \HL doesn't seem to work for me,
>&
t that I couldn't easily put a vertical line
in a table. :)
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]| http://noserose.net/e/pgp/
___
ntg-context mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
return code : 256
run time : 1 seconds
total run time : 1 seconds
make: *** [p.pdf] Error 1
Compilation exited abnormally with code 2 at Thu Oct 9 11:19:52
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]| http://nos
Ed L Cashin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi. I have the following code in my source, to try to get a
> combination of two figures in one:
>
> \placefigure
> {10,000 random|-|value pixels added}
> \startcombination[2]
> {\externalfigure[noise1][he
andable and I hope someone has already
> done something like this...
Some months ago another columns implementation came out, but if I
recall correctly, when you have columns of vboxes separated by very
stretchy glue, the new columns implementation can't bottom-align them
either.
--
Hans Hagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> At 22:50 12/10/2003, Ed L Cashin wrote:
...
>>Some months ago another columns implementation came out, but if I
>>recall correctly, when you have columns of vboxes separated by very
>>stretchy glue, the new columns implementat
me=context *cont-uk.ini' failed
`pdfetex -ini -jobname=mptopdf -progname=mptopdf mptopdf.tex' failed
[EMAIL PROTECTED] texmf#
I tried "texexec --make", but texexec is still just showing a usage
message and exiting. The --verbose option doesn't change that.
Any sugge
Ed L Cashin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
...
> Just to see what would happen, I then got pdftex 14h and unzipped it
> in the bin dir, moving the pool files to texmf/web2c. Then I did
> mktexlsr and fmtutil --all, but I see this error message in the
> output:
>
>
Ed L Cashin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
...
> Texexec still just shows a usage message. I bet I have to change
> something in texexec.ini, but I couldn't find it last time I looked.
> I'll look again.
>
> Now by doing "pdfetex \&cont-en test.tex" I&
e been wondering for a while, though.
Why are certain commands, like startitemize, absent from the list of
texshow commands?
Is there a way to add commands to the web version?
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]| http://noserose.net/e/pgp/
__
all together.
Or if you have an interest, you can install the Cygnus tools and from
the command line do,
cd my_directory
find . ! -perm -0200 -print0 | xargs -0 chmod u+w
... which says, find everything under this subdirectory that doesn't
have write permission for the file owner, an
which case I'd like to know :-)
A lot of TeX-philes still use 8-character name + 3-character extension
filenames. I think it's for compatibility with DOS.
--
--Ed L Cashin| PGP public key:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]| http://noserose.net/e/pgp/
_
\text {DB freigeben ;\\ return 1;\\}
> \stopFLOWcell
>
> $ texexec --output=test --pdf modem.tex
>
> The resulting pdf file is missing the 1 from
> \text {DB freigeben ;\\ return 1;}
>
> changing 1 into 0 shows a 0.
I had a problem like that in metapost a long time ago.
20 matches
Mail list logo