Several months ago I posed the following question.
When I start a paragraph with a \quote or a \quotation the left
quotemark does not protrude, but when I use Unicode quotes it does. I
would prefer to use the commands. Any suggestions on how I can
achieve proper left protrusion without resorting to Unicode characters?
Wolfgang suggested the following lines of code; which worked perfically.
\setupquotation [method=font]
\setupquote [method=font]
Returning to this project after several months I observe that when I use a \start- stopquotation environment, the quotation is not narrowed. The \setupquotation command obviously affects both the \quotation command and \start- stopquotation environment.
Is there an elegant way to apply the \setupquotation command and retain the quotation indentation?
Cheers,
Michael
Here's a mwe.
\showframe
\showgrid
\setupwhitespace[medium]
% Setup hanging punctuation, less severe style
\definefontfeature
[default]
[default]
[protrusion=punctuation,expansion=quality]
\setupalign[hz,hanging]
% Provide protrusion for quotations.
\setupquotation[method=font] % Toggle this line to see the effect.
\setupquote[method=font]
\starttext
\startparagraph
\quotation[method=font]{Love makes the world go round,} as an old proverb has it\ldots
\stopparagraph
\startquotation
\input tufte
\stopquotation
\stoptext