Dear list,
sorry for bothering with this again:
\setuplanguage[agr][patterns={agr, en}] \setuplanguage[en][patterns={en, agr}] \starttext \hyphenatedword{judgmental} \agr\hyphenatedword{judgmental} \stoptext
I wonder why English cannot have extra hyphenation patterns, while ancient Greek allows them.
Have I hit a bug or am I missing something?
Sorry for insisting, but I get weird results with column balancing (registers).
On 7/10/2018 5:20 PM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote: there are no patterns 'en', just 'us' and 'uk' \enabletrackers[language*] \setuplanguage[en] [patterns={us,agr}] \setuplanguage[agr][patterns={us,agr}] \setuplanguage[nl] [patterns={nl,agr}] \setuplanguage[de] [patterns={de,agr}] \starttext \en \hyphenatedword{judgmental} \agr \hyphenatedword{judgmental} \nl \hyphenatedword{judgmental} \de \hyphenatedword{judgmental} \usemodule[languages-hyphenation] \startcomparepatterns[en,nl,de] judgmental \stopcomparepatterns \stoptext ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | www.pragma-ade.nl | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------