Taco Hoekwater wrote:
basically you want to follow a shape; this is not that hard to implement so i can have a look at it; lettrines is then an instance of it
Lettrine is easier than that, actually. I thought this would be quite funny, so here is a brand new module called t-lettri.tex, and an example.
ah, nice, so, lettrines only does a slanted shape? i played a bit with shapes last night and will probably add something to the drop macros, and probably also move the code to core-fnt; but it will be a bit more complex and take some more time; it's a good testbed for playing with things like glyph shape similarity and such; also, proper alignment is an issue. (i attached supp-fu3.tex, no production code, just for fun) concerning your module, maybe we should introduce a new category of modules, e.g. c-lettrines.tex with x meaning 'converted'; we can then collect them in another zip; remark 1: \sbox is already definined and in use, i remember someone telling me that this \hbox{{#1}} stuff is needed to satisfy latex's color mechanism, but that's not needed in context, so a simple \setbox\Lettrinetbox{} is not only even more efficient in terms of tokens and performance (unnoticable) but also does not clash with the core macro. remark 2: auto-lettrines (dropcaps etc) are kind of complex in the sense that it's not trivial to pick up the first 'something' in a paragraph in a robust way [we may want some extension to tex for that (so we have something to discuss during our trip to eurotex -) Hans ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | fax: 038 477 53 74 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------