On 25-11-2011 10:29, Ian Lawrence wrote:
Maybe it’s possible with MkIV to check if the text before the \unit command was a number but of the number is part of the unit them put in the command, such things are always tricky with TeX and it’s better to force users to use proper input.
Within \type{phys-dim.lua} all the units and all the prefixes seem to have capitalised names; in fact, they should be all lowercase (even when they are named after some person). The exception is Celsius.
I suggested a list to Hans some time ago, so more than one person has this opinion...
The list is just an internal one. The reason for capatilzation is that in the old module we had \Bla \Foo etc an dI want to keep that property and it's easier to lowercase a string than to selectively uppercase it. Also, for some cases Capitalization gives more robust parsing as we can have collapsed units. Anyway, users can use lowercase so they can avoid it.
I think this is a feature because Hans saves also a lowercase version of all keywords and you can use both as input.
I wonder whether \tex{unit} should only parse and format units, and have another macro \tex{quan} or \tex{quantity} to handle number+unit combinations (obviously using \tex{digit} and \tex{unit}).
I put my solution to this (expressing physical quantities) on the wiki a while ago….
First we need to get the parsing right, then we can look into other features and cultural issues. Hans ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | voip: 087 875 68 74 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------