On Jul 4, 2012, at 1:29 PM, Peter Münster wrote:
On Wed, Jul 04 2012, Hans Hagen wrote:
no, mixing this way is asking for troubles, if not now, than maybe in the future
just use \section
Yes, but isn't \startsection the recommended method for the future and needed for XML output?
XML documents should form a tree, so a structure like \startA % <A> \startB % <B> \stopA % </A> \stopB % </B> won't translate to XML. Grouping in TeX follows the same restrictions, and \start... and \stop... behave like \begingroup and \endgroup. The \stop... is supposed to restore the state before the corresponding \start... (at least I assume so -- \endgroup works that way). One cannot stop A in the middle of B and return to the state before \startA without also stopping B. So one should put \stopB before \stopA, not after it. Have you considered structuring your example like this?: \starttext \startsection[title=Tufte] \startcolumns[n=2] \input tufte \stopcolumns \stopsection \startsection[title=Tufte and Knuth] \startcolumns[n=2] \switchtobodyfont[big] % Note that the font size is switched back after \stopcolumns \input tufte \stopcolumns \input knuth \startcolumns[n=2] \input tufte \stopcolumns \stopsection \stoptext XML seems a nice way for machines to deal with data. But it's not a very human way to speak. I mean, if I write "\section{One}...\section{Two}" isn't it obvious that section One ends when section Two begins? Why should I have to write \endsection, when the machine can do the bookkeeping for me? The start/stop mechanism is nice as an option, if you plan to produce an XML document from ConTeXt. However the XML translator could implement 'if not first section then "</section><section>" else "<section>"' and add "if in_a_section then "</section>"' when \stoptext is reached. ________________________________ This e-mail message (including any attachments) is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this message (including any attachments) is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please contact the sender by reply e-mail message and destroy all copies of the original message (including attachments).