On Mon, 17 Aug 2020, jbf wrote:
Am completely new to using Metafun, which I presume I would need to use to achieve a Hansen Memoir-style Chapter heading (chapter title overlayed on a large lightgray number). Of course, I am assuming I would need to use Metafun to create this...
So my first question is to ask if I could achieve the same effect without Metafun?
I have read through the Metafun manual, and I think I can understand how to overlay text on a graphic (MP), but it would be currently beyond me to draw numbers of the kind we find in, say, the Memoir examples.
Has anyone created such an example? I was keenly looking for one in the manual and elsewhere, in terms of ConTeXt/Metafun commands, but could not find one. But I'd be quite prepared to 'have a go' at this, if I had some pointers of just where to start! I assume I would have to \defineoverlay[number] and then add text on top \framed (but without the frame borders). Am I at least correct about this?
You don't need metafun for something this simple. Here is a crude implementation: \setuphead[chapter] [ numberstyle={\switchtobodyfont[48pt]}, numbercolor=gray, alternative=command, command=\MemoirChapter, ] \define[2]\MemoirChapter% {\startoverlay {#1} {#2} \stopoverlay} \starttext \startchapter[title={This is a test}] \stopchapter \stoptext Overlays don't allow tuning the location...for that you need layers. See the chapter on ornaments in the details manual, which also explains an alternative method to set title of chapters (toward the end of that chapter), which is useful if you need absolute positioning. Aditya