Hans wrote,
> Columnsets are rather special and mostly meant for magazine like
> documents, where content can span columns, images are explicitly placed
> on the grid, etc. For that reason columnset soperate on a rather strict
> grid that gets setup based in the lineheight and although content c
On 9/19/2013 4:25 PM, Lars Huttar wrote:
Hans wrote,
Columnsets are rather special and mostly meant for magazine like
documents, where content can span columns, images are explicitly placed
on the grid, etc. For that reason columnset soperate on a rather strict
grid that gets setup based in the
On 9/18/2013 11:47 PM, Lars Huttar wrote:
Regarding "sane" interlinespace,
Hans wrote,
ok, but then, an interlinespace is normally around 1.2 times the
bodyfontsize
OK. That's helpful.
But notice that in the following example, the interline space that
causes the problem is in the *first* sect
Regarding "sane" interlinespace,
Hans wrote,
> ok, but then, an interlinespace is normally around 1.2 times the
> bodyfontsize
OK. That's helpful.
But notice that in the following example, the interline space that
causes the problem is in the *first* section (where htdp is 12pt and
baselineskip
Hans wrote,
> Just wondering ... do you think that the first pages look ok?
Thanks for your response.
By "look ok", are you referring to the closeness of the lines of text?
It does seem kind of close, but within acceptable limits, depending on
other constraints; however I'm not really the one to m
On 9/17/2013 8:57 PM, Lars Huttar wrote:
Can you point me to documentation on the constraints that define what
kind of interlinespace is sane?
the default is 2.8ex which is pretty safe, then there is the ht/dp ratio
which in some cases has to be adapted to fonts esp when they are
non-typical
Aditya wrote:
> Any particular reason you are using columnsets rather than \startcolumns
> or \startmixedcolumns. Columnsets are for specialized layout requirements,
> and in my experience, mixing columnsets with text that is not in
> columnsets is a bit tricky.
>
Thanks for suggesting a potent
On 9/16/2013 11:29 PM, Lars Huttar wrote:
I was advised to report the bug back to this list, with an even more
minimized example.
Here it is below.
This bug occurs in both mkiv and mkii, in the latest versions (current
beta).
|\setupinterlinespace[line=12pt]
\definecolumnset[columnset1][n=2]
\s
On 9/17/2013 5:02 PM, Lars Huttar wrote:
Aditya wrote:
Any particular reason you are using columnsets rather than \startcolumns
or \startmixedcolumns. Columnsets are for specialized layout requirements,
and in my experience, mixing columnsets with text that is not in
columnsets is a bit tricky.
On Mon, 16 Sep 2013, Lars Huttar wrote:
I was advised to report the bug back to this list, with an even more
minimized example.
Here it is below.
This bug occurs in both mkiv and mkii, in the latest versions (current
beta).
|\setupinterlinespace[line=12pt]
\definecolumnset[columnset1][n=2]
\se
I was advised to report the bug back to this list, with an even more
minimized example.
Here it is below.
This bug occurs in both mkiv and mkii, in the latest versions (current
beta).
|\setupinterlinespace[line=12pt]
\definecolumnset[columnset1][n=2]
\setupcolumnset[columnset1][distance=5mm,balan
FYI, I have posted this question on
http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/133586/bug-unwanted-gap-in-2nd-columnset
Marco and phg were able to reproduce the problem, including in the
latest versions.
I don't plan to keep posting in both places, but wanted to leave a
pointer from this thread to the
It should also be mentioned that we need the second section to have a
tighter line spacing than the first, but despite the
\setupinterlinespace[line=9.3pt]
command, and despite the red grid lines being tighter, the text itself
seems to have the same interline spacing as in the first section. How
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