On 04/09/2015 09:57 PM, Philip Taylor wrote: > Pablo Rodríguez wrote: >> >> I would say \totalhyphenmin may solve the issue, but I’m not totally >> sure whether there are some exceptions in Spanish that cannot be solved >> with \totalhyphenmin. > > OK, so if we can try to identify the potential problems : would I be > correct in thinking that in Spanish /most/ four-letter words should not > be hyphenated, but some may be,
I would be pretty confident in disabling hyphenation for /all/ four-letter words. > and therefore a \(total)hyphenmin = 5, even with an explicit list of > exceptions, would not solve the problemsince on encountering /any/ > word of fewer than \(total)hyphenmin letters TeX would not attempt to > hyphenate it, and therefore would not consult the list of exceptions ? In Spanish, a word of fewer than \totalhyphenmin letters (I would say) shouldn’t be hyphenated. What contains the list of exceptions: words with more than \totalhyphenmin letters which contain hyphenations that should be avoided? This is the real issue here. I see that in German (as Werner explained). And I’m not sure the same cannot happen in Spanish. Pablo -- http://www.ousia.tk
