Am Sat, 19 May 2018 10:06:01 +1200 schrieb Henri Menke:
>> I can't search for e.g. the a or z if I compile
>
> You probably have to search for 푎 (U+1D44E) and 푧 (U+1D467).
Well yes, but I have some doubts that Lance meant this.
--
Ulrike Fischer
http://www.troubleshooting-tex.de/
On 05/19/2018 08:01 AM, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
> Am Thu, 17 May 2018 05:19:05 -0600 schrieb Lance Larsen:
>
>> One really nice feature with equations is that by default you can
>> search for variable names in equation in a PDF reader like
>> acrobat.
>
> I can't search for e.g. the a or z if I
Am Thu, 17 May 2018 05:19:05 -0600 schrieb Lance Larsen:
> One really nice feature with equations is that by default you can
> search for variable names in equation in a PDF reader like
> acrobat.
I can't search for e.g. the a or z if I compile
\starttext
$z_1 = x_1 + y_1$
$a = b + c$
i, 18 May 2018 18:55:14 +1200
> From: Henri Menke <henrime...@gmail.com>
> To: ntg-context@ntg.nl
> Subject: Re: [NTG-context] Fonts and equations
> Message-ID: <12743277-ebd0-67c7-2393-fe33e97bf...@gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
>
On 17/05/18 23:19, Lance Larsen wrote:
I have a context document with several equations. One really nice
feature with equations is that by default you can search for variable
names in equation in a PDF reader like acrobat. However, I needed to
configure the document to use arial for the
I have a context document with several equations. One really nice feature
with equations is that by default you can search for variable names in
equation in a PDF reader like acrobat. However, I needed to configure the
document to use arial for the text. Once I do this, the equations are no
longer