On 6-1-2012 00:25, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 06.01.2012 um 00:06 schrieb Wagner Macedo:
As I know, yes, this is the intended behavior. You should be thinking in a
WYSIWYG way, but TeX, as most languages (except Python, that I know) works
apart you write every code in one line or write
On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 00:25, Wolfgang Schuster
schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com wrote:
No, this is a bug because with the “text” keyword you can create a inline
item which doesn’t start a new paragraph.
Wolfgang
Thanks for the confirmation. I hope it will be fixed soon.
Vianney
Hello,
If I type
Blabla. \startitemize[a,text] \item one \item two \stopitemize Blabla.
I get a linebreak before and after the itemize. Is this the intended
behaviour? How can I get a fully inline enumeration?
Thanks,
Vianney
As I know, yes, this is the intended behavior. You should be thinking in a
WYSIWYG way, but TeX, as most languages (except Python, that I know) works
apart you write every code in one line or write pretty indented.
I hope you understood.
--
Wagner Macedo
2012/1/5 Vianney le Clément
Am 06.01.2012 um 00:06 schrieb Wagner Macedo:
As I know, yes, this is the intended behavior. You should be thinking in a
WYSIWYG way, but TeX, as most languages (except Python, that I know) works
apart you write every code in one line or write pretty indented.
No, this is a bug because
Ah... sorry. I read the manual but I didn't remember this feature.
--
Wagner Macedo
On 5 January 2012 20:25, Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@googlemail.com
wrote:
No, this is a bug because with the “text” keyword you can create a inline
item which doesn’t start a new paragraph.