non-standard still breaks as non-stan- dard the stan- protruding from the text-block, whilst the rest of the line is compressed as much as possible... Maybe context thinks, if it breaks at the hyphen you can't tell that there was meant to be a hyphen, so to be clear it uses two...? I can't make much sense of it. Severin On 03/12/2012 01:58 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 11-3-2012 15:51, S Barmeier wrote:
On 03/11/2012 07:30 PM, Hans Hagen wrote:
On 10-3-2012 21:52, S Barmeier wrote:
non-standard breaks as
non-stan- dard
Is there a way to tell context to break the word at the hyphen that already exists?
\hyphenation{bla-bla-bla}
Hans Before \starttext after \starttext, \hyphenation{non-standard} is resisting... (see attached) Setting \hyphenation{non-standard}, I'm surprised it breaks like \hyphenation{non-stan\-dard}...
You need to make sure that a language is set and patterns are loaded.
\mainlanguage[en] \hyphenation{bla-bla}
Thank you, Severin
P.S.: Is there a way to break words without adding a hyphen, e.g. beginner/intermediate/advanced breaking into
beginner/ intermediate/advanced?