On 2014-05-04 15:46, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
On 05/04/2014 08:27 PM, Rik Kabel wrote:
Any of the following will work here. Which is or are idiomatic I will leave for others to say.
This cell has multiple lines.\\
This cell has multiple lines.\par
This cell has multiple lines.\blank[none] Many thanks for your reply, Rik.
I’m afraid none of them works. Here is my sample:
\starttext \startxtable[option=stretch] \startxrow \startxcell aaa\blank[none]aaa \stopxcell \startxcell \ConTeXt\ \contextversion \stopxcell \stopxrow \startxrow \startxcell This cell has multiple lines. Vertical spacing is wrong. \stopxcell \startxcell What am I missing? \stopxcell \stopxrow \stopxtable \stoptext
I’m using latest beta (2014.04.28 23:24) and the issue happens when there is text before and after the break.
Pablo Pablo,
With your example, I get which shows a problem in row 2. When I add \\ to the first line of text in row 2 column 1, as shown here \starttext \startxtable[option=stretch] \startxrow \startxcell aaa\blank[none]aaa \stopxcell \startxcell \ConTeXt\ \contextversion \stopxcell \stopxrow \startxrow \startxcell This cell has multiple lines.\\ Vertical spacing is wrong. \stopxcell \startxcell What am I missing? \stopxcell \stopxrow \stopxtable \stoptext I get which perhaps has some faults in the vertical spacing, but is much better than the original. The spacing can be improved by specifying [align=lohi] for that cell. I get the same result with the other two methods I suggested. Is there a reason that you cannot use one of these methods in row 2 as you do in row 1? Perhaps we would all benefit from an obeylines alignment option? -- Rik Kabel