Ah, I got it now! \quotation is quite different from \{start|stop}quotation. I was attempting to affect the changes using just \quotation{}, which has no (or in my case asymmetrical and strange) effects on the margins, at least within simpleslides. Now, I don't know whether there should be a difference in behaviour, but there definitely is. When I simply integrated your \setupdelimitedtext and \{start|stop}narrower into my existing slide presentation, there was no change. As I kept reducing the presentation there still was no change in behaviour until the only thing staring up at me was \quotation{}. Glad I chased this down even though it might have been painful for others to read of my bumbling about. It gives me another core piece for doing my presentations. Cheers. On 12-07-24 12:22 AM, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
You’re doing to wrong, below you can see two different ways to have a quotation with margins. The first method uses the quotation environment where you can control the margin with the leftmargin and “rightmargin keys, the second method uses the quotation command which is put in a narrower environment to create the margins/offset.
\showframe[text][text]
\startbuffer Pito Salas, a developer at ATG, decided to attack this problem. After a few months of studying existing real-world examples, it became clear that the data, views of that data, and the formulas that acted on that data were very separate concepts. Yet in every case, the existing spreadsheet programs required the user to type all of these items into the same (typically single) sheet’s cells.% \stopbuffer
\starttext
\startquotation \getbuffer \stopquotation
\setupdelimitedtext[quotation][leftmargin=3cm]
\startquotation \getbuffer \stopquotation
\quotation{\getbuffer}
\startnarrower[3*middle] \quotation{\getbuffer} \stopnarrower
\stoptext
Wolfgang
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