On 03/06/2014 08:38 PM, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 06.03.2014 um 19:35 schrieb Pablo Rodriguez:
\leftskip2em \parindent-2em
Would it be possible to have a reverse option in \setupindenting, whic could be applied with the other options?
Many thanks for your help,
\definestartstop [weird] [before={\startnarrow[left=2em,default=left]\setupindenting[yes,-2em]}, after={\stopnarrow}]
\setupindenting[yes,2em]
Many thanks for your fast reply, Wolfgang. I have a book that I want to typeset using ConTeXt, to show its author the results. \leftskip and \parindent work fine for me. The problem is the length. I need the reverse indenting only in the final chapter (it’s a book list, that I would like to avoid to input as a BibTeX bibliography). The book will have a general \setupindenting, but I don’t know whether it will be small, medium or big. And in the last chapter, I want this vaules to be the same, but with a reverse indenting. Here is the sample. \setupindenting[yes,medium] \starttext \dorecurse{5}{\input knuth\par} I can change indenting value, but I cannot get an inverse indenting. \setupindenting[yes,small] \dorecurse{5}{\input knuth\par} \stoptext I think that \setupindenting[reverse] makes sense as an option. So the user can set inverse indentings for the whole document. And (s)he will have to change the value only once, if applied before as standard indenting. Many thanks for your help again, Pablo -- http://www.ousia.tk