Thanks all.
There are different levels of folding, 0--8: Alt-0, Alt-1, .... Alt-8. Alt-0 collapses all, use Alt-Shift-<n> to uncollapse to the desired degree.
These work ok indeed. Nevertheless, the folding marks and foldings themselves run awkwardly in some tex files. Back to readme.txt : --- 2) Folding a) ... All \start-stops are foldable, and you can easily add your own in the User-Defined-Language dialog; just select "ConTeXt" and you can edit all entries. --- Strange... the "User Define Dialog" "User Language" drop down box has only one entry: "User Define Language". There is nothing else, no "ConTeXt" entry. Has this feature changed since Npp 4.2 ? Alan On Sat, Aug 23, 2008 at 9:03 PM, Idris Samawi Hamid ادريس سماوي حامد < ishamid@colostate.edu> wrote:
On Sat, 23 Aug 2008 10:56:03 -0600, Alan Stone
wrote: Two other questions, if I may...
(1) The folding feature behaves strangely.
- Instead of folding it collapses everything what's underneath.
- Once a folding section gets initiated from within the ConTeXt setup area ( at a \startsomething command ), it runs straight down to \stoptext instead of from every \startsomething to \stopsomething
There are different levels of folding, 0--8: Alt-0, Alt-1, .... Alt-8. Alt-0 collapses all, use Alt-Shift-<n> to uncollapse to the desired degree.
(2) Preferences -> "New Document" tab
* Format: Windows - Unix - Mac -> are (*.tex) files between these OSs incompatible ?
Should make absolutely no difference, since TeX looks for a blank line to mark paragraph breaks -- or a '\par' -- and does not care about linebreak conventions
OTOH: Maybe support will be added for unicode parsep at some point...
* Encoding: UTF 8, UTF 8 with BOM -> what must be selected for ConTeXt ?
Either will work for mkiv. If you enable the utf-8 regime in mkii that should also work.
Looks like great editor nevertheless, much better than SciTE.Thanks again for the ConTeXt package.
You are welcome :-)
Best wishes Idris
-- Professor Idris Samawi Hamid, Editor-in-Chief International Journal of Shi`i Studies Department of Philosophy Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523