Denis’ latest question reminded me of an earlier query he had about
hyphenation, asking why “applicable” and “obligated” were hyphenated by
ConTeXt as ap-plic-a-ble and ob-lig-at-ed, and not ap-pli-ca-ble and
ob-li-ga-te(d) like in Merriam-Webster (the discussion started at
Am 09.10.2020 um 14:48 schrieb Hans Hagen:
On 10/9/2020 9:01 AM, Denis Maier wrote:
[...]
I see. I've noticed lang-us.lua has a list of exceptions in it:
["exceptions"]={
["characters"]="abcdefghijlmnoprstuyz",
["data"]="as-so-ciate as-so-ciates dec-li-na-tion oblig-a-tory
On 10/9/2020 9:01 AM, Denis Maier wrote:
Am 09.10.2020 um 08:57 schrieb Taco Hoekwater:
On 9 Oct 2020, at 08:52, Denis Maier wrote:
Am 08.10.2020 um 19:05 schrieb Henning Hraban Ramm:
\starttext
{EN: \en\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
{DE: \de\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
Am 08.10.2020 um 19:05 schrieb Henning Hraban Ramm:
\starttext
{EN: \en\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
{DE: \de\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
\stoptext
Wow, that's super helpful. The English pattern seems to be "ap-plic-a-ble"
According to Meriam-Webster it should just be
On 10/9/2020 10:15 AM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 09.10.2020 um 08:52 schrieb Denis Maier :
Am 08.10.2020 um 19:05 schrieb Henning Hraban Ramm:
\starttext
{EN: \en\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
{DE: \de\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
\stoptext
Wow, that's super helpful.
On 10/8/2020 7:05 PM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 08.10.2020 um 17:41 schrieb Denis Maier :
where can I find the hyphenation patterns used by ConTeXt? I have two wrongly
hyphenated words, and I want to check whether this is due to incorrect
patterns. (I tried the source browser... not
> Am 09.10.2020 um 08:52 schrieb Denis Maier :
>
> Am 08.10.2020 um 19:05 schrieb Henning Hraban Ramm:
>> \starttext
>>
>> {EN: \en\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
>>
>> {DE: \de\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
>>
>> \stoptext
>>
> Wow, that's super helpful.
BTW \hyphenatedword works
Am 09.10.2020 um 08:57 schrieb Taco Hoekwater:
On 9 Oct 2020, at 08:52, Denis Maier wrote:
Am 08.10.2020 um 19:05 schrieb Henning Hraban Ramm:
\starttext
{EN: \en\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
{DE: \de\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
\stoptext
Wow, that's super helpful. The
> On 9 Oct 2020, at 08:52, Denis Maier wrote:
>
> Am 08.10.2020 um 19:05 schrieb Henning Hraban Ramm:
>> \starttext
>>
>> {EN: \en\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
>>
>> {DE: \de\hyphenatedcoloredword{applicable}}
>>
>> \stoptext
>>
> Wow, that's super helpful. The English pattern seems
> Am 08.10.2020 um 17:41 schrieb Denis Maier :
>
> where can I find the hyphenation patterns used by ConTeXt? I have two wrongly
> hyphenated words, and I want to check whether this is due to incorrect
> patterns. (I tried the source browser... not much luck so far.) The words are:
> 1.
Hi,
you can find patterns on this directory:
texlive/2020/texmf-dist/tex/context/patterns/mkiv/
Best wishes,
Tomáš
Thu, Oct 08, 2020 ve 05:41:09PM +0200 Denis Maier napsal(a):
# Hi,
#
# where can I find the hyphenation patterns used by ConTeXt? I have
# two wrongly hyphenated words, and I
On 25-2-2011 1:18, Heilmann, Till A. wrote:
Maybe the ConTeXt community can be of assistance to the LuaTeX bunch ...
As a new LuaTeX user, I came across the following problem: Using Lua(La)TeX,
customized kerning of letter pairs (via the FeatureFile capability of fontspec)
is ignored when it
Am Fri, 25 Feb 2011 14:35:10 +0100 schrieb Hans Hagen:
As a new LuaTeX user, I came across the following problem: Using
Lua(La)TeX, customized kerning of letter pairs (via the
FeatureFile capability of fontspec) is ignored when it coincides
with a possible hyphenation of a word (e.g. between
Am Fri, 25 Feb 2011 16:37:26 +0100 schrieb Heilmann, Till A.:
Am Fri, 25 Feb 2011 14:41:10 +0100 schrieb Ulrike Fischer:
In base mode kerning and and hyphenation
happen in the traditional tex way, so there is not much extra trickery
taking place.
Well, as you mention base mode: This
Am Fri, 25 Feb 2011 16:45:31 +0100 schrieb Ulrike Fischer:
Ah, yes, the transcript of my first example clearly shows fontspec operating
in node mode.
Yes, but I could also reproduce the problem without fontspec (only
with luaotfload).
Please excuse my naive asking: Is there any way to
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 03:41:10PM +0100, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
So I think it isn't true that the manual of luaotfload claims By
default mode=base is used.
It used to be like that but we changed it a while ago, looks like I
didn't update the manual.
Regards,
Khaled
--
Khaled Hosny
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 04:45:31PM +0100, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
Ah, yes, the transcript of my first example clearly shows fontspec
operating in node mode.
Please excuse my naive asking: Is there any way to continue using
fontspec's setmainfont command (it is convenient for someone
On 24-5-2010 2:16, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
There's no need to apologize. First, there's an infinite number of
foreign names, so that one simply cannot get all of them right. I
guess that Lju-bl-ja-na is not properly hyphenated either (Lu-bia-na
why not just use hyphenmin values of 3 to prevent
On Sun, May 23, 2010 at 11:38 PM, Mojca Miklavec
mojca.miklavec.li...@gmail.com wrote:
hyphenate properly in Italian. Italian is a
what-you-see-is-what-you-pronounce language (in contrast to English)
Apart some traps like
glicine vs tagliare
where syllable 'gli' is spelled in completely
Mojca Miklavec (2010-05-24 02:16):
Dear Claudio,
Thanks a lot for your prompt reply.
On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 00:39, Claudio Beccari wrote:
Dear Mojca,
no proper Italian word ends in ch (this digraph in normal Italian words is
pronunced as k, not as č or ć).
Nevertheless there are a
On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 01:22, Rogutės Sparnuotos wrote:
\setuplayout[textwidth=0.2cm]
\starttext
\language[la] Manovich.
\stoptext
hyphenates 'Manovich' into Ma-no-vi-ch, while it should be Ma-no-vich. The
same applies for Italian and Lithuanian languages (in LaTeX as well).
Could there
Dear Claudio,
Thanks a lot for your prompt reply.
On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 00:39, Claudio Beccari wrote:
Dear Mojca,
no proper Italian word ends in ch (this digraph in normal Italian words is
pronunced as k, not as č or ć).
Nevertheless there are a number of surnames dating back to the old
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