Thank you all.
This is the feedback of your recommendations:
\enableregime[utf]
didn't work.
typing just ñ
worked fine.
\defineaccent ~ n {\ntilde}
worked using \~n and
This last solution is the one I was looking for because my keyboard has no ñ
thanks
Ciro
-- Links of your interest:
http://www-personal.engin.umd.umich.edu/~cirosoto/
http://www.TheGuitarMakerExploration.com
http://www.myspace.com/sotoaguirre
On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 10:31 AM, Hans Hagen
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 01:16, Ciro Soto wrote:
Hi all, I finally got around the intallation of context minimals. Thank you for those who helped. I ran my old tex files (in spanish) and found that \~n is not working now. It should create an n with a tilde on top, but what happens is that there is no letter printed at all.
I guess that you are asking about MKIV since it seems to work OK in MKII.
What is the fix for this? Any switch?
(I know I could use \char but I am looking for a more elegant solution)
The most elegant solution is to use just ñ and it should work out of the box there. But still I would ask Hans to add the following line to enco-ini.mkiv:
\defineaccent ~ N {\Ntilde} \defineaccent ~ n {\ntilde}
You can try to modify the file yourself, then run "context --make" and it should start working.
(I always thought that these lines were "auto-generated" from Unicode data on the fly.)
not this one; the ntild probably got lost at some point during cleaning up
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