On Tue, 7 Apr 2015 13:37:54 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster
Can you show your output from the example and tell what you expect from the fit option.
For example: \setupbodyfont [scola,10pt] \startitemize [n] ... yields a reasonable output: 10. X \setupbodyfont [dejavu,10pt] \startitemize [n] ... the output is ugly: 10.X where the period and the X almost touch. AND if one goes to 100 items, then result is 100.X where the 0 and the X overlap (the period is in the right foot of the X). Using the scola font, the result with 100 is similar to the result with 10 in dejavu, so going to a fourth digit would be just as horrible as with three digits and dejavu. \setupbodyfont [whatever] \startitemize[n,fit] yields 10.X with no spacing in all fonts, and this is pretty ugly unless one also specifies [distance=\spaceamount]. Perhaps this correct (with distance=, by default) as fit should then fit with no spacing. HOWEVER, \startitemize [n] with no other options should simply work correctly "out of the box" for all fonts and not give such horrible results. I understand now: the default is a fixed offset to the list body that works OK for small itemizations (i.e. one digit) with most fonts and more-or-less well with two digits, but not with dejavu. Choosing the option "fit" and setting a "distance" gives a reasonable result, so we cannot call this a bug, but the result by default is rather surprising. Notice that \startitemize[R] works poorly with even less than 10 items. May I suggest that the default spacing (i.e. the list setup) that is used be enlarged a little bit, as two digit numbered itemizations are not rare and dejavu is such a useful font. Indeed, this is obtained with the option "broad". Indeed, in "the manual", broad (and 2*broad) is used in such examples. Perhaps the fixed spacing that is presently tuned works well with simple symbol item lists and passably with single digit numbered lists, which probably explains why this is the default. Also, I suppose that there is some aesthetic value in having item lists take a fixed, uniform distance by default in a document which is why "fit" is not a default option. Thus, a design choice (or compromise). Moral: read the manual! Alan -- Alan Braslau CEA DSM-IRAMIS-SPEC CNRS URA 2464 Orme des Merisiers 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette cedex FRANCE tel: +33 1 69 08 73 15 fax: +33 1 69 08 87 86 mailto:alan.braslau@cea.fr