No that was not what I meant. I meant what change does the knuth.tex text makes to the number of hyphenation that you get? do you get more hyphenetaion with knuth.tex than using Lorem Impsum. By Lorem Ipsum, I did not mean that there is a tex file but only meant the text itself as in http://lipsum.com/
I was only curious about the difference. On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 12:21 AM, Khaled Hosny <[email protected]> wrote: > \input Lorem Ipsum > \bye > > Does not work here. > > Regards, > Khaled > > On Sat, Nov 05, 2011 at 12:16:35AM +1100, Vafa Khalighi wrote: > > what change does that make if one uses Lorem Ipsum... instead knuth.tex? > > > > On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 12:08 AM, Khaled Hosny <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > On Fri, Nov 04, 2011 at 10:21:41AM +0000, Philip TAYLOR (Webmaster, > Ret'd) > > wrote: > > > > > > > > > Robin Fairbairns wrote: > > > > > > >except phil doesn't use latex, so can't use polyglossia. > > > > > > True. But Khaled Hosny's solution was perfect: > > > > > > >\input knuth > > > >\uselanguage{british} % or ukenglish or UKenglish, all synonyms > > > >\input knuth > > > >\bye > > > > > > once I realised that "\input Knuth" was neither required > > > nor productive ! > > > > Sorry, that was a bit of ConTeXtish habit of using knuth.tex as a > test > > and I thought it is obvious (now I realise that it is even part of > > ConTeXt and you might not even have it unless you installed ConTeXt). > > > > Regards, > > Khaled > > > > >
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