Hi, \startlines with the space=on option produces a spurious space. Is that intended? I don't see a reason to introduce a space. %%%%%%%%%%%% \setuplines [style=mono] \starttext % for <whatever> \startlines for <{\it whatever}> \stoplines % for < whatever> \startlines [space=on] for <{\it whatever}> \stoplines % Workaround % for <whatever> \startlines [space=on] for <{\it{}whatever}> % or for<{\it whatever}> \stoplines \stoptext %%%%%%%%%%%% Regards Marco Patzer
Am 16.10.2011 um 16:31 schrieb Marco:
Hi,
\startlines with the space=on option produces a spurious space. Is that intended? I don't see a reason to introduce a space.
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\setuplines [style=mono] \starttext
% for <whatever> \startlines for <{\it whatever}> \stoplines
% for < whatever> \startlines [space=on] for <{\it whatever}>
for <\italic{whatever}> You can use the commands \italic, \bold etc. which accept the text as argument or you can define your own commands with \definehighlight or \definestyle which will then also accept a argument like \italic above. Wolfgang
On 2011-10-16 Wolfgang Schuster
% for < whatever> \startlines [space=on] for <{\it whatever}>
for <\italic{whatever}>
This works, thanks. However I still don't know, where the space comes from, since the space after \it is eaten by TeX. Marco
participants (2)
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Marco
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Wolfgang Schuster