Several iterations of MK2 ago (in 2007), I was able to produce:
1. History
1.1 Pre-Greek (Babylonian and Egyptian) sundials
1.2 Greek and Roman sundials
1.3 Byzantine sundials
2. Catalog (descriptions with photos, rough dating, evaluation)
2.1 The Tower of the
2007/10/23, WN [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi,
I want to make a numbered list as follows
*Artikel 1. First artikel
*1.1. Text for item 1.1.
1.2. Text for item 1.2
*Artikel 2. Second artikel*
2.1. Text for item 2.1
2.2. Text for item 2.2
etc.
I am trying to accomplish this with
Hi Wolfgang
In the meantime I found another way of getting the desired result. I am
now using
enumerations out of the box, without needing extra counters.
After a bit of experimenting, this is what I did
% test code
Hi,
I want to make a numbered list as follows
*Artikel 1. First artikel
*1.1. Text for item 1.1.
1.2. Text for item 1.2
*Artikel 2. Second artikel*
2.1. Text for item 2.1
2.2. Text for item 2.2
etc.
I am trying to accomplish this with \setupitemgroup and \defineitemgroup as
follows, but
Hi, Aditya—
This works perfectly (after changing the Yen-signs for backslashes).
It behaves as expected when adapted and will be a great help in
producing a number of the TOCs that are on my horizon. Many thanks
for your time and help!
All best, Alan
On Oct 1, 2007, at 8:11 PM, Aditya
Am 2007-09-30 um 23:29 schrieb Aditya Mahajan:
\startitemize[repeat,4*borad]\getbuffer\stopitemize
^^^
(add this)
been too much to the movies, eh? ;-)
I guess that should be broad...
Greetlings from Lake Constance!
Hraban
---
Hi, Aditya—
Many thanks. That works and looks quite good. I experimented and find
that
\startitemize[repeat,broad]\getbuffer\stopitemize
looks best. The only downside is that there is still largish a gap
between the stopper and the text of the main item as in
1.History
Hi Alan,
On Mon, 1 Oct 2007, Alan Bowen wrote:
1. History
1.1 Pre-Greek (Babylonian and Egyptian) sundials
1.2 Greek and Roman sundials
1.3 Byzantine sundials
is the goal. Sadly, adding “serried” destroys the indentation of the
subitems.
I could not find a clean way to
I need to produce an lengthy itemization of the form:
1.
1.1
1.2
2.
2.1
I can get:
1.
1
2
2.
1
easily enough, but how can I get the main division number to repeat
in the subitem numeration?
Alan
2007/9/30, Alan Bowen [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I need to produce an lengthy itemization of the form:
1.
1.1
1.2
2.
2.1
I can get:
1.
1
2
2.
1
easily enough, but how can I get the main division number to repeat in the
subitem numeration?
On Sun, 30 Sep 2007, Alan Bowen wrote:
I need to produce an lengthy itemization of the form:
1.
1.1
1.2
2.
2.1
I can get:
1.
1
2
2.
1
easily enough, but how can I get the main division number to repeat
Thanks, Wolfgang. This is good start. The problem now is that
with
\def\firstlevelnumber#1{\xdef\thefirstlevelnumber{#1}#1}
\defineconversion[firstlevelnumber][\firstlevelnumber]
\def\secondlevelnumber#1{\thefirstlevelnumber.#1}
\defineconversion[secondlevelnumber][\secondlevelnumber]
\starttext
Thanks, Aditya, I have adapted this as follows—
\startbuffer
\item item 1
\startitemize[n,stopper={},width=1em]
\item item 1.1
\item item 1.2
\item item 1.3
\stopitemize
\item item 2
\startitemize[n,stopper={},width=1em]
\item item 2.1
\item item 2.2
\item item 2.3
On Sun, 30 Sep 2007, Alan Bowen wrote:
Thanks, Aditya, I have adapted this as follows—
\startbuffer
\item item 1
\startitemize[n,stopper={},width=1em]
\item item 1.1
\item item 1.2
\item item 1.3
\stopitemize
\item item 2
\startitemize[n,stopper={},width=1em]
\item item 2.1
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