I am inclined to agree, Aditya. At least it *is* odd in English typography.
Still thanks for the fix.
Alan
On Sat, Jan 16, 2016 at 12:55 PM, Aditya Mahajan
On Sat, 16 Jan 2016, Alan Bowen wrote:
When used in inside \emph, \quote puts the words cited into roman face.
Thus,
\starttext
\emph{The \quote{Problemata} in Medieval Times}
\emph{The \quote{\emph{Problemata}} in Medieval Times}
\stoptext
This seems odd. Should \quote not leave the style of the text as it is? That is, should the output of line 1 not look like that of line 2?
The same question was asked recently on TeX.SE http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/286743/context-quote-command-resets-f...
I think that this is just a bad default. You can use:
\setupdelimitedtext[quote][style=]
Aditya
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