> On 13 Sep 2016, at 07:57, Hans Hagen wrote:
> sure, but when you do
>
> \appendtoks
> \catcode`\‘=\active
> \def‘#1’{\csname #1\endcsname}
> \to …
FYI, this does not work for me; I must use LuaTeX \letcharcode:
\def\usemathcommand#1’{\csname #1\endcsname}
\appendtoks
\catcode`‘=\active
> On 13 Sep 2016, at 07:57, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> On 9/12/2016 10:02 PM, Hans Åberg wrote:
>> It does not happen with TeX using
>> \catcode`\‘=\active
>> \def‘#1’{\csname #1\endcsname}
>
> sure, but when you do
>
> \appendtoks
> \catcode`\‘=\active
> \def‘#1’{\csname #1\endcsname}
> \to .
On 9/12/2016 10:02 PM, Hans Åberg wrote:
On 12 Sep 2016, at 21:45, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 9/12/2016 8:25 PM, Hans Åberg wrote:
But then there seems to be a bug in the LuaTex \letcharcode command: There must
be a character between “$” and the first occurring \activecatcode letter.
Possibly
> On 12 Sep 2016, at 21:45, Hans Hagen wrote:
> fwiw, the current beta makes math characters also letters now
I saw it. Fine!
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> On 12 Sep 2016, at 21:45, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> On 9/12/2016 8:25 PM, Hans Åberg wrote:
>> But then there seems to be a bug in the LuaTex \letcharcode command: There
>> must be a character between “$” and the first occurring \activecatcode
>> letter. Possibly this also causes a bug in \star
On 9/12/2016 8:25 PM, Hans Åberg wrote:
Found a workaround: The idea is to use \csname …\endcsname with two delimiters
not likely to be used in math mode, below chosen to ‘…’.
But then there seems to be a bug in the LuaTex \letcharcode command: There must
be a character between “$” and the fir
Found a workaround: The idea is to use \csname …\endcsname with two delimiters
not likely to be used in math mode, below chosen to ‘…’.
But then there seems to be a bug in the LuaTex \letcharcode command: There must
be a character between “$” and the first occurring \activecatcode letter.
Possi
Just found that the code below does not work as intended, because \𝐝𝐢𝐦 will be
parsed as \𝐝 followed by 𝐢𝐦. Can’t tell if it ought to be changed, though one
could think other cases where it might be natural. The command definition of \𝐝
works though.
\setupbodyfont[xits,10pt]
\setupmathematic