On 6/6/2021 12:11, Steffen Wolfrum wrote:
Hi,

yet another strange thing: «ap-plic-»????

See code below, Steffen


\mainlanguage[en]

\startexceptions[en]
appli-ca​ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

\startexceptions[de]
appli-ca​ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

\startexceptions[it]
appli-ca​ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

\setuplayout[width=1cm]


\starttext

\currentmainlanguage

\currentlanguage

\hyphenatedword{applicable}

applicable

\hyphenatedword{obligated}

obligated

\blank

\language[de]

\currentmainlanguage

\currentlanguage

\hyphenatedword{applicable}

applicable

\hyphenatedword{obligated}

obligated

\blank


\mainlanguage[de]

\currentmainlanguage

\currentlanguage

\hyphenatedword{applicable}

applicable

\hyphenatedword{obligated}

obligated


\stoptext




Am 09.10.2020 um 16:38 schrieb Denis Maier <denismaier@mailbox.org>:

Hi,
another weird thing:
In this example I use  \startexceptions to set hyphenation exceptions: 

```
\mainlanguage[en]
\startexceptions[en]
appli-ca​ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

\setuplayout[width=1cm]

\starttext
\currentmainlanguage

\currentlanguage

\hyphenatedword{applicable}

applicable

\hyphenatedword{obligated}

obligated
\stoptext
```

What am I missing?

Best,
Denis

When I edit this example with Vim, I see, in part:

\startexceptions[en]
appli-ca<200b>ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

\startexceptions[de]
appli-ca<200b>ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

\startexceptions[it]
appli-ca<200b>ble
obli-gated
\stopexceptions

So it seems that the answer remains the same from when Denis posted a similar question a few months ago.

--
Rik