Dear all,
Recently I read about the use of Harfbuzz-enhanced LuaTeX with LaTeX for
writing Arabic. Following that example, I wrote a minimal test text that worked
excellently for Kannada script as well:
-
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec}
\setmainfont{Kedage}[RawFeature={mode=h
On 19.12.20 09:10, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
YES… YES!
YES YES YES YES YES YES (I'm trying to express enthusiasm.) That's it!
The remaining question here is: where do I find such magical expressions like
"features=kannada-one"? (Why "kannada-one"? "One"???) If I know that, then (so
I assume) I c
On 19.12.20 03:42, Jairo A. del Rio wrote:
> You need to use the LuaHBTeX backend which isn't actually supported by
> ConTeXt (and Hans doesn't like it either, I think). There's a plugin mode,
> however. If not in the mailing list, more info about Harfbuzz in ConTeXt is
> available in some arti
Dear readers,
With great joy and a sense of relief I can now announce that my latest book, _A
Manual of Modern Kannada_ by Robert Zydenbos (Heidelberg / Berlin: CrossAsia
E-Publishing, 2020), a teaching manual of the Kannada language (Kannada belongs
to the Dravidian family of languages
I'll do some testing and see what I can contribute.
Robert
On 19.12.20 22:12, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
> On 12/19/20 8:46 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
>> [...]
>> can you wikify this?
> Wikified at https://wiki.contextgarden.net/Indic_Scripts.
>
> Please, Robert, could you improve it?
>
> Many thanks f
On 20.12.20 01:09, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
> Congratulations for the release of your book, Robert.
> It is really a pleasure to be able to page through the final PDF.
>>
>> [...] ConTeXt was The Solution [...].
>
> Would it be the [features=kannada-one] also a solution for a similar book?
I submit
Thank you, Joaquin, for this wonderfully systematic bit of work. I wish I had
had this three or four years ago.
There has been a bit of a discussion here about whether ConTeXt manuals should
start from the assumption that the reader already is familiar with LaTeX or
not. If I may cast a vote h
Today I wanted to print an entire document not in standard black, but in
blue. I added (Mk II) –
\setupcolors [state=start]
\define\kleur{blue} % so I can change the colour uniformly everywhere
through this variable
\startcolor [\kleur]
\setupnote[footnote][before={\color[\kleur]}]
\setupfoote
Greetings, Tomáš,
On 08.04.2018 17:41, Tomas Hala wrote:
Hi Robert,
I don't understand if you need solution for MkII, or
if you tried something from MkII.
For MkIV you can use this:
defmycmd#1{startcolor[kleur]#1stopcolor}
setupnotation[footnote][numbercommand=mycmd]
(But I don't know wheth
Greetings, Wolfgang,
On 08.04.2018 17:46, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
definecolor[kleur][blue]
setupcolors[state=start,textcolor=kleur]
setupnotedefinition[footnote][color=kleur]
setupnote [footnote][rulecolor=kleur]
…etc…
It works! Thank you for the solution.
One thing that puzzles me, ho
On 09.04.2018 00:49, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Mk II does not have setupnotation[footnote] yet, and when I
'translated' it to setupfootnotes (which ordinarily ought to work in Mk
II), it unfortunately did not work. (I need to use Mk II because I need
the functionality of XeTeX.)
1. setupnota
On 09.04.2018 09:45, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 4/9/2018 12:33 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
[…] (I need to use Mk II because I need the functionality of XeTeX.)
just curious: what do you mis in mkiv / luatex
Support for Indic scripts / fonts. (I think we had a little bit of
correspondence on this
On 09.04.18 14:14, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 4/9/2018 12:18 PM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
just curious: what do you mis in mkiv / luatex
Support for Indic scripts / fonts. (I think we had a little bit of
correspondence on this mailing list three or four years ago about
this, and we were not able
A question for the hardcore members. On http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Manuals I
read:
ConTeXt Sources (MkII)
Apart from the manuals, the source files (especially, some of the old ones)
contain excellent documentation and examples. If you want a pretty printed pdf
of a source file, say core-rul
> On 18. Apr 2018, at 09:35, luigi scarso wrote:
>
> Do you really need mkii ?
I'm afraid so. I need XeTeX for its support of Indic fonts. And for my purposes
MkII is already very, very nice.
Robert
___
If your q
t;
as mentioned on http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Manuals, but the server does not
respond.
> On 18. Apr 2018, at 09:39, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>
>
>> On 18. Apr 2018, at 09:35, luigi scarso wrote:
>>
>> Do you really need mkii ?
>
> I'm afraid so. I need XeTeX for its suppo
> On 18. Apr 2018, at 14:04, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> On 4/18/2018 9:39 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>>> On 18. Apr 2018, at 09:35, luigi scarso wrote:
>>>
>>> Do you really need mkii ?
>> I'm afraid so. I need XeTeX for its support of Indic font
I am looking for a way to keep a subject header and a following table together
on one page, without a page break. Something like:
---snippet begins---
\subsubject{Personal suffixes for the present tense}
\starttabulate
[|w(.1\textwidth)|p(.2\textwidth)|pI(.2\textwidth)|p(.2\textwidth)|pI(.2\te
YES! Thank you!
> On 3. May 2018, at 13:07, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> On 5/3/2018 12:22 PM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> I am looking for a way to keep a subject header and a following table
>> together on one page, without a page break. Something like:
>> […]
> you c
I've tried to go through the ConTeXt source to see what the possible parameters
of commands, the dependencies, inheritances and the defaults are. Is there any
file where I can see the order in which all the .mkii / .mkiv files are read?
RZ
Perhaps it is useful that I mention that this is a MkIV problem on my iMac with
TeXLive (2018 version). Using MkII, also with XeTeX, everything ran right out
of the box. For MkIV, I had to run a program to let LuaTeX find all the fonts,
and then it worked.
Robert
___
On my Mac (Mountain Lion) I would like to use ConTeXt with a complex OpenType
font named Kedage for the Indian language Kannada, and I thought that I could
do this using XeTeX (because LuaTeX seems unable to handle Indic fonts at
present).
This freely available font (found on Linux systems, for
Hans,
Just now I tried your suggestions:
On Aug 8, 2013, at 13:51 , Hans Hagen wrote:
>> Here I see two possibilities:
>>
>> (1) use the XeTeX parameters FakeSlant and FakeBold, which I have done in
>> LaTeX. But I do not know how this is done in ConTeXt.
>
> \starttext
>
> \definefontfeatu
This is a topic that is of great interest to me. I have been trying to make
tables in mkii (because I need XeTeX for my Indic fonts) that span across pages
and in which cells are more than one line (so I use the 'p' parameter).
I'm enclosing a test file below. Any suggestions?
RZ
---start of t
Is there also an equivalent of \placetable for use with Natural Tables?
Robert
On May 23, 2014, at 5:05 , Wolfgang Schuster
wrote:
> Am 23.05.2014 um 04:17 schrieb Robert Zydenbos :
>
> You have you use the “split” keyword when you want your tables to be broken
> acros
On May 27, 2014, at 15:37 , Wolfgang Schuster
wrote:
>> Is there also an equivalent of \placetable for use with Natural Tables?
>
> You can use \placetable for all table environments.
Thank you!
Now another one:
(a) I want to create a table using 'p' cells that does not use the full width
o
On May 28, 2014, at 13:51 , Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 5/28/2014 10:46 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote: [...]
>
> why xetex ... mkii is frozen
Sorry, Hans, but I need to use odd fonts for Indian languages that are not
(yet?) supported by mkiv. But the combination ConTeXt mkii+XeTeX gives me
On May 28, 2014, at 22:10 , Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 5/28/2014 8:25 PM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> On May 28, 2014, at 13:51 , Hans Hagen wrote:
>>
>>> On 5/28/2014 10:46 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote: [...]
>>>
>>> why xetex ... mkii is frozen
>>
Forgive me for what must seem a beginners’ question, but I really could not
find the solution in the documentation or the Wiki:
How do I create hyperlinks within a PDF to another spot in the text of that
same PDF? I had expected I could do something like:
Here is a \goto{link}[label:1].
…
\la
Yesterday I tried to create a fresh PDF from a revised text using MkII and
XeTeX (I have been using this combination for several months, because I need to
use Indic fonts, which are not -- yet? -- supported in MkIV). As a trick I
defined an Indic font as a mono font (\tt), so that automatically
Dear ConTeXt folk,
Is there any simple way to pass font features as a parameter to
XeConTeXt? i am thinking of things like what in LaTeX would be (between
square brackets) "\setromanfont [AutoFakeSlant=0.5, AutoFakeBold=0.5]
{Doulos SIL Phon}".
There has to be some way to do this, but I seem unab
Hans Hagen wrote:
> On 7/6/2015 9:13 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> Dear ConTeXt folk,
>>
>> Is there any simple way to pass font features as a parameter to
>> XeConTeXt? i am thinking of things like what in LaTeX would be (between
>> square brackets)
Greetings all,
Is there a simple way in ConTeXt to temporarily switch off hyphenation for a
single word? I am thinking of something like the trick which works in (La)TeX:
\hbox{thisisaverylongword}. I tried this in ConTeXt (MacTeX TeXLive 2010-64),
but without success.
Robert
First question: I am considering using endnotes in my book instead of
footnotes. There is a command \endnote, but I do not see the notes appear
anywhere in my text. What am I doing wrong?
What I tried:
\starttext
Dit is iets met een endnote.\endnote{Wat een zooi. Werkt het?}
\page
Het zou moet
That was useful! But now I would like to go another step further: in the
following, slightly altered example, I use a footnote and endnotes. I know that
with "\setupfootnotes [conversion=characters]" the footnote markers are changed
to letters instead of numbers. Is there any way of doing this a
On 24. Jul 2018, at 20:43, Hans Hagen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> […]
> That said, a logical question is how about next versions of context. Are
> there fundamental features missing? Is more needed? […]
At the risk of sounding like a scratched, repeating gramophone record --
support for Indic scripts wo
A puzzle for note specialists: I would like to use both endnotes as well as
footnotes in one and the same document, for different kinds of notes.
Ideally, I should be able to write something like:
-
Here is a footnote,\footnote{The footnotes comes here.} and now comes an note
that should ap
27/07/18 12:01, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> A puzzle for note specialists: I would like to use both endnotes as well as
>> footnotes in one and the same document, for different kinds of notes.
>> Ideally, I should be able to write something like:
>> -
>> Here is a footn
> On 28. Jul 2018, at 16:48, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> On 07/27/2018 11:47 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> This works fine with MkIV, but not with MkII (I tried by altering
>> \setupnotation to the MkII command \setupfootnotes, but that doesn't
>> work). I need
When using endnotes, it seems that all the notes that are collected in the text
are placed together in a frame – but I have so many notes in a chapter that the
frame runs off the last page.
Is there any way to let the endnotes run on naturally to the next page?
Robert
__
. It was solved by \setupfootnotes[location=none].
Robert
> On 6. Aug 2018, at 17:48, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> On 08/06/2018 12:54 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> When using endnotes, it seems that all the notes that are collected
>> in the text are placed together in a frame
Sorry for all these footnote questions, but here's another one. I want to print
the notes without the footnote marker jutting out into the margin, but flushed
with the left margin of the main text.
Any help will be highly appreciated.
Robert
_
> On 7. Aug 2018, at 17:54, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> On 08/06/2018 11:59 PM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> Sorry for all these footnote questions, […]
>
> Hi Robert,
>
> […]
>
> I hope it helps,
>
> Pablo
That is it. I have no idea why – but that is the
On 8. Aug 2018, at 00:54, Alan Braslau wrote:
>
> tex/context/interface/mkiv/i-context.pdf
Thank you! I didn’t know I already had this updated version of a document I’ve
already been using. But however useful this document already is, it does
illustrate some of my problems. For instance, in th
A simple footnote question this time. I would like to print endnotes at the end
of every chapter in my book, and then reset the footnote counter so that in the
next chapter the first note will be ‘1’ again. I suppose this should be done by
means of \setupfootnotes – but with which parameter?
Ro
>
> On 08/08/2018 03:55 PM, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
>>> On 8 Aug 2018, at 15:33, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>>>
>>> A simple footnote question this time. I would like to print
>>> endnotes at the end of every chapter in my book, and then reset the
>>>
y says "the counter named X (=footnote counter) is
now 0 again", which I could insert at the beginning of every chapter, the
problem would be solved. (Not so elegant, but it would be a solution.)
Robert
> On 8. Aug 2018, at 17:36, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> On 08/08/20
> On 8. Aug 2018, at 17:28, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> Hi Robert,
>
> […] I might be totally missing your point here, but it seems to me that you
> try to know what can be achieved in general with ConTeXt, even before to
> learn how to use ConTeXt for your typesetting needs.
Not really. My requ
tex.stackexchange.com has page titled “How to manually reset the footnote
numbering in ConTeXt?”
(https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/359702/how-to-manually-reset-the-footnote-numbering-in-context),
where exactly the same question was asked:
---begin quote---
“I have a document with many fo
gt; On 9. Aug 2018, at 16:37, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
>
> On Thu, 9 Aug 2018, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>
>> I have tried ‘\resetcounter [footnote]’ (a suggested solution on that web
>> page), but it does not work (at least not in MkII+XeTeX). ‘\setupcounter
>> [footnote] [
gt; On 9. Aug 2018, at 16:37, Aditya Mahajan wrote:
>
> On Thu, 9 Aug 2018, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>
>> I have tried ‘\resetcounter [footnote]’ (a suggested solution on that web
>> page), but it does not work (at least not in MkII+XeTeX). ‘\setupcounter
>> [footnote] [
Another footnote question for the experts. I want to refer to a note from
within another, later note. I thought I could do this in the following way:
…
\footnote[uvu-avu]{These two suffixes […]
…
\footnote{See n.~\note[uvu-avu].}
…
But I get this result:
There are two things wrong:
(1) I wan
> On 12. Aug 2018, at 17:52, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> Sorry, Robert, I almost forgot it.
>
> If you reset the footnote numbers in each chapter, I’d rather suggest
> something similar to:
>
> \footnote{See n.~\in[uvu-avu] on p.~\at[uvu-avu].}
>
> Since footnote numbers aren’t unique, consid
> On 12. Aug 2018, at 17:38, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> Hi Robert,
>
> the reference command in notes is \in (for both MkII and MkIV), such as in:
>
>\starttext
>\dorecurse{30}{\footnote{Footnote}}
>\footnote[uvu-avu]{These two suffixes […]}
>\dorecurse{30}{\footnote{Footnote}}
Dear wizards of ConTeXt,
In the final stage of completing a book project, I was wondering how to
automatize cross references to chapters. I’ve already figured out how to refer
to pages (using “\at[REFERENCE]”), but how is this done with chapters? I’m
apparently too simple-minded to understand t
s because I am using MkII with XeTeX?
Robert
> On 22. Feb 2019, at 20:47, Wolfgang Schuster
> wrote:
>
> Robert Zydenbos schrieb am 22.02.19 um 17:14:
>> Dear wizards of ConTeXt,
>> In the final stage of completing a book project, I was wondering how to
>> aut
chapter
% in another chapter:
As we already saw in \in{chapter}[wild-stuff], on p.~\at[wild-stuff]
% that was in the other chapter
% end of example
and the result would be: “As we already saw in chapter 4, on p.~38”…
Can such a thing be done?
Robert
> On 22. Feb 2019, at 22:04, Robert Zyden
Dear list members,
In my book I am creating an index. I know that there are commands for
formatting index entries, like:
\index{sl::īga}
if I want the word 'īga' to be printed in slanted type. I also know that we can
create sub-entries, like
\index{īga+emphasized}
But now I want the word 'īg
Sorry, that works fine in MkIV, but not in MkII, which I need to use.
Robert
> On 21. Aug 2019, at 17:33, Wolfgang Schuster
> wrote:
>
> Robert Zydenbos schrieb am 21.08.2019 um 10:59:
>> Dear list members,
>>
>> In my book I am creating an index. I kn
\page [\v!yes ]\stopnameds...
...
l.5\stoptext
> On 21. Aug 2019, at 17:10, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
>
> On 8/21/19 10:59 AM, Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>> Dear list members,
>>
>> In my book I am creating an index. I know that there ar
I seem to have a problem with Unicode in the indexing function for my book: a
word like āyitu (beginning with an 'a' with a macron over it) is considered a
word that starts with a 'y'; the word īga (beginning with an i with a macron)
is placed as if it is 'ga'.
Is there any way to tell the inde
That helps!
But in any case, it looks like the problems are actually several (also the one
of the precise order of the words in the index), and I think the 'fastest'
solution for now is that I just compile the index (only 4 pages), make a
separate component file and rearrange the contents by co
On 22. Aug 2019, at 18:17, Wolfgang Schuster
wrote:
> A PDF with the wrong sorting order doesn't help when you can't show a working
> minimal example to reproduce the problem. When you need more control about
> the sorting order of the index you should switch to MkIV which has more
> options
> On 13. Sep 2019, at 12:31, luigi scarso wrote:
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 12:20 PM Robert Zydenbos wrote:
>
> When ConTeXt MkIV (rather: LuaTeX) supports Indic fonts, I'll gladly do that.
> :-)
>
>
> luahbtex (in texlive 2020) has harfbuzz embedded
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