Hello, it doesn't seem to work. Let's have "t-TypeF2.mkiv" with the following content: --- \setuptyping[default][bodyfont=small,style={\ttx\setupinterlinespace}] % 1 % 2 \starttext % 3 \typefile[default][start=4]{t-TypeF2.mkiv} % = This file; 4 \typefile[default][start=4,stop=99]{t-TypeF2.mkiv} % = This file; 5 \typefile[default][lines={4,+1}]{t-TypeF2.mkiv} % = This file; 6 \stoptext % 7 --- If you see the result, all lines are printed in all cases. Moreover, "4" and "99" are also printed in the front and at the end of the typed file in the second case. 2Luigi:
Not an answer, but quick recipe: With mkiv is trivial ; use lua to skip the first n-1 lines. With mkii just use luatex as lua interpreter to call with \executesystemcommand and then see previous point.
I had also such idea, but I believed to be simply solvable even with the existing \typefile command - supposing there is start/stop line option (or it couldn't be so complicated to provide them). So I supposed the valid syntax is unknown for me.
Lukas
On Fri, 15 Oct 2010 10:00:10 +0200, Henning Hraban Ramm
\typefile[default][start=10]{a_file.txt} % Start at line 10
According to older ML messages and the source, \typefile[start=10] should work. Maybe it need "stop" also? Otherwise it's undocumented.
see http://source.contextgarden.net/tex/context/base/buff-ver.mkii?search=typefi... (MkII) http://source.contextgarden.net/tex/context/base/buff-ver.mkiv?search=typefi... (MkIV)
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