I came across the command \WORD{} in the manual (nice place to look, eh?). This does all capitals (it can be more than one word) and doesn't have the issue with diacritics that \uppercased was having for me.
Thanks,
David
On Mar 25, 2005, at 5:30 PM, David Wooten wrote:
Greetings all,
Taco
David Wooten wrote:
so such files. It isn't clear to me which one to use. Does the encoding
refer to font encoding?
Yes. It describes where the glyph name is presented in the font.
in which case there is no enco-8r.tex or
to something else? enco-pdf.tex for example.
I think you are looking
Greetings Vit, all,
Thanks for the response.
I'm finally getting around to looking into this again. My first
attempts haven't yielded any good results. Could you (or someone) say a
little more (newbie-explicit)? I assume that the enco-*.tex files
you're referring to are in .../context/base/,
David Wooten wrote:
Greetings all,
Taco mentioned the command \uppercased{to get all uppercase letters},
and it works just fineuntil I try to use my self-installed fonts. The
quirks come up with diacritics, and this leads me to believe that there
is an [encoding] or [regime]/ /issue here, as I
Greetings all,
Taco mentioned the command \uppercased{to get all uppercase letters}, and it works just fineuntil I try to use my self-installed fonts. The quirks come up with diacritics, and this leads me to believe that there is an [encoding] or [regime] issue here, as I had similar issues