Hello -
On Wed, 08 Dec 2010 11:24:36 +0100, Florian Wobbe wrote:
Minimal example that uses Tex Gyre Pagella and Heros for serif and sans, and
either Cambria, Asana, Neo Euler, or XITS for math (comment in your choice and
make sure that context finds the fonts):
\starttypescript [myface]
\
> To get back to my problem:
>
> The default Ctx bodyfont (CMR) is all right for me, I don't need to change it
> (but it's possible, if it should simplify something).
If you don't need CMR, than simply don't use. It does not have greek
boldmath/upright anyway.
> If I understand well, the defau
Hello -
On Mon, 06 Dec 2010 11:11:34 +0100, Vladimir Lomov wrote:
Suppose I want to use serif bold italic font for vectors and sans bold
italic for tensors (this is recommendation of NIST, see sp811.pdf on
nist.gov). Of course I could enter vectors and tensors as symbols from
appropriate unico
Hello -
On Sun, 05 Dec 2010 22:48:47 +0100, Florian Wobbe wrote:
On Dec 5, 2010, at 20:27 , Procházka Lukáš wrote:
\definetypeface [\typescriptone] [mm] [math] [cambria] [default]
just a placeholder, which comes in handy when you want to define multiple
entries at once:
OK, I understan
On 5-12-2010 1:18, Procházka Lukáš wrote:
- So does it mean that the Vladimir's "cambria case" is exactly the
seldom case when regular and bold math are available, both defining
Greek chars like \alpha as well?
afaik cambria has no bold font (although it has the unicode bold
alphabet etc)
** Hans Hagen [2010-12-04 09:55:25 +0100]:
[...]
>>>\setupbodyfont[cambria]
>>>
>>>\starttext
>>>This is a test.
>>>$a=\alpha$
>>>$\bf a=\alpha$
>>>$\bi a=\alpha$
>>>\stoptext
>>>
>>>BTW, I not sure if I use "correct" way to switch fonts in math mode (in
>>>LaTeX commands to switch fonts are differ
On Dec 5, 2010, at 20:27 , Procházka Lukáš wrote:
> Hello -
>
> On Sun, 05 Dec 2010 18:34:34 +0100, Florian Wobbe
> wrote:
>
>> \definetypeface [\typescriptone] [mm] [math] [cambria] [default]
>
> - I don't know what the meaning of individual parameters is:
>
> \definetypeface
> [\typescri
Hello -
On Sun, 05 Dec 2010 18:34:34 +0100, Florian Wobbe wrote:
\definetypeface [\typescriptone] [mm] [math] [cambria] [default]
- I don't know what the meaning of individual parameters is:
\definetypeface
[\typescriptone] % What actually the \typescriptone does? What are other
option
On Dec 5, 2010, at 14:58 , Procházka Lukáš wrote:
> Hello,
>
> thanks for the explanation -
>
> On Sat, 04 Dec 2010 09:55:25 +0100, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
>> On 3-12-2010 5:00, Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o. wrote:
>>>
>>> to get slanted chars, I have to call \it or \sl or \bi explicitly
Hello,
thanks for the explanation -
On Sat, 04 Dec 2010 09:55:25 +0100, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 3-12-2010 5:00, Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o. wrote:
to get slanted chars, I have to call \it or \sl or \bi explicitly. OK, I
In fact in math these are not font switches, but switches to
On 3-12-2010 5:00, Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o. wrote:
Hello,
thanks for the example. I can see that:
- In another font(s) (at least in cambria in your example) bold Greek
chars are OK.
- \bf in math mode causes chars to become "vertical", i.e. when I want
to get slanted chars, I hav
Hello,
thanks for the example. I can see that:
- In another font(s) (at least in cambria in your example) bold Greek chars are
OK.
- \bf in math mode causes chars to become "vertical", i.e. when I want to get slanted
chars, I have to call \it or \sl or \bi explicitly. OK, I thought that the "
Hi.
** Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o. [2010-12-03 08:51:41 +0100]:
> Hello all,
>
> I'd to explain some effects in the .pdf from the code bellow. It was copied
> from co-font.pdf, pg. 19-20; just "Abc" was added to try something.
>
> ---
> \enableregime[cp1250]
>
> \starttext
> $Abc
Hello all,
I'd to explain some effects in the .pdf from the code bellow. It was copied from
co-font.pdf, pg. 19-20; just "Abc" was added to try something.
---
\enableregime[cp1250]
\starttext
$Abc\sqrt{625}=5\alpha$
$\bf Abc\sqrt{625}=5\alpha$
$Abc\sqrt{625}=\bf5\alpha$
$\bfmath Abc\sq
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