Am 22.09.2008 um 18:38 schrieb Taco Hoekwater:
Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
... while dealing with colored elements:
having the footnote number (down in front of the footnote text) in dark green is not that bad, just, why can't it be colored in an other way?
I tried in vain both in \setupfootnotes and \setupfootnotedefinition: numbercolor, color... Only \setupfootnotes[textcolor=magenta] affects the footnote number in the main text.
But nothing changes in the footnote area.
\setupfootnotedefinition[before={\color[green]}]
Ahh, now I see where my problem lays: \setupcolors[state=start] \starttext \setupinteraction[state=start] \setupfootnotes[textcolor=magenta] \setupfootnotedefinition[before={\color[green]}] test\footnote{test} \stoptext Despite the fact that interaction carries its own color, elements can be re-colored by their own color definition (see above). Only the number of the note in front of the footnote text always gets overridden by interaction color! This distinction I didn't expect. Why should exclusively that poor little number not be allowed to have its own color? Steffen