Hi Peter
===== Original Message From Peter
===== I'm typesetting a text with some citations in nineteenth-century Dutch and French, in which I don't want hyphenation. How can this be done? I now have two macros: \def\stophyph{\pretolerance=15000\tolerance=400} \def\starthyph{\pretolerance=200\tolerance=400}
At the beginning of every citation I enter \stophyph{} and at the end \starthyph{}. But the cited words are still hyphenated.
Here is a better approach: ================================================== \setupoutput[pdftex]% \installlanguage[NH][lefthyphenmin=100,righthyphenmin=100] \starttext \language[NH] \input knuth \language[en] \input knuth \stoptext ================================================== Even better, take the definition of [nl] in type-ger.tex and add it to \installlanguage[NH]. Hans: the following would be nice to have: \setuplanguage[<name>][hyphenation=off]
Putting single words in a mbox also doesn't help... ;(
mbox?!? Dost thou blaspheme!?! :-) Best Idris ============================ Professor Idris Samawi Hamid Department of Philosophy Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523