On 11/5/2014 21:50 PM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> On 11/5/2014 10:28 AM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> > On 11/5/2014 8:09 AM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> > > Thank you very much Hans!
> > >
> > > Maybe you could tell me why the following still produces a space in
> > > front of the full stop:
> > >
> > > \defi
hello all,
i do not have nfts, but there are assume users that do not live in western
countries
and use characters that are not in ascii!!
just a thought.
regards
Keith.
> Am 07.11.2014 um 14:44 schrieb Christoph Reller :
>
> On Fri, 7 Nov 2014 09:11:09 +0100
> Alan Braslau mailto:al
On Fri, 7 Nov 2014 09:11:09 +0100
Alan Braslau wrote
> On Thu, 6 Nov 2014 16:15:36 +0100
> Christoph Reller wrote:
>
> > Of the above characters the following are disallowed on NTFS
>
> Not everyone uses NTFS.
Another reason for not making a "file-name cleaner" as such, but rather
restricting th
On Thu, 6 Nov 2014 16:15:36 +0100
Christoph Reller wrote:
> Of the above characters the following are disallowed on NTFS
Not everyone uses NTFS.
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If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an en
On 11/6/2014 9:58 AM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> we could have a specific filename cleaner but of course there will be
> users who have paths that have spaces after the \ ... okay, we could
> just not support evil paths like that
>
> Hans
A rigorous filename cleaner would have to treat a huge number of p
On 11/5/2014 9:50 PM, Christoph Reller wrote:
On 11/5/2014 10:28 AM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 11/5/2014 8:09 AM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> > Thank you very much Hans!
> >
> > Maybe you could tell me why the following still produces a space in
> > front of the full stop:
> >
> > \definetype[c
On 11/5/2014 10:28 AM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 11/5/2014 8:09 AM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> > Thank you very much Hans!
> >
> > Maybe you could tell me why the following still produces a space in
> > front of the full stop:
> >
> > \definetype[ctype][compact=absolute]
> > \starttext
> > \bTABLE
> >
On 11/5/2014 8:09 AM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> On 11/2/2014 2:27 PM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Why does \type{...} introduce spaces when used inside natural tables?
> >
> > MWE:
> >
> > \starttext
> > \type{\test\test} %<- no space introduced
> > \bTABLE
> > \bTR \bTD \t
> On 11/2/2014 2:27 PM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Why does \type{...} introduce spaces when used inside natural tables?
> >
> > MWE:
> >
> > \starttext
> > \type{\test\test} %<- no space introduced
> > \bTABLE
> > \bTR \bTD \typ{\test\test} \eTD \eTR %<- space introduced
> > \eTABLE
>
On 11/2/2014 2:54 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 11/2/2014 2:27 PM, Christoph Reller wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Why does \type{...} introduce spaces when used inside natural tables?
> >
> > MWE:
> >
> > \starttext
> > \type{\test\test} %<- no space introduced
> > \bTABLE
> > \bTR \bTD \typ{\test\test} \eTD
On 11/2/2014 2:27 PM, Christoph Reller wrote:
Hi,
Why does \type{...} introduce spaces when used inside natural tables?
MWE:
\starttext
\type{\test\test} %<- no space introduced
\bTABLE
\bTR \bTD \typ{\test\test} \eTD \eTR %<- space introduced
\eTABLE
\stoptext
it's the way tex works (when p
Hi,
Why does \type{...} introduce spaces when used inside natural tables?
MWE:
\starttext
\type{\test\test} %<- no space introduced
\bTABLE
\bTR \bTD \typ{\test\test} \eTD \eTR %<- space introduced
\eTABLE
\stoptext
Kind Regards,
Christoph
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