Hi Joaquín,
Here is a small suggestion, which would have a few different uses. The
following link, which I copied from the index, should take you to the
definition of \vbox:
https://webs.um.es/jal/docs/introCTX_eng.pdf#%5B%7B%22num%22%3A117%2C%22gen%...
This works at least in some browsers, or by passing the stuff after #
as a suitable command-line argument to some PDF viewers.
So, it would be really nice to make those named destinations stable and
readable, for instance
https://webs.um.es/jal/docs/introCTX_eng.pdf#vbox
I suspect this is either a switch you turn on in ConTeXt, or something
that would still need to be implemented as a feature.
Best,
Augusto
On Mon, Jan 4, 2021 at 12:00 AM Henning Hraban Ramm
Am 03.01.2021 um 22:24 schrieb Hans Hagen
: I understand that and it is all well and good. I am wondering if
On 1/3/2021 10:02 PM, BPJ wrote: there already is *another* text which presupposes basic knowledge of TeX and general knowledge of LaTeX, perhaps in a by-topic style. I think this relates to the question how someone comes to tex and then to context. Are tex macro packages used alongside and such? Are there 'from word/office to tex' or reverse manuals? What could be a motivation to write one.
I guess most ConTeXt users migrated from LaTeX at some point, so that guide would really make sense. But I can’t write it either, even if I’m also working with LaTeX (but just as a user of one special class).
If I run into a problem in LaTeX that I know to solve in ConTeXt, the approach is never right.
I think the similarities of LaTeX and ConTeXt are mostly misleading, you’re better off trying to forget everything and start anew.
In LaTeX most problems are solved with “use this or that package”, without the need to understand the commands and settings involved, while in ConTeXt most problems are solved with \setupsomething[somekey=somevalue].
Of course it helps to understand basic TeX stuff – but you’re not supposed to use (plain) TeX commands in LaTeX, while it is or was much more usual in ConTeXt.
Writing my book I have users of text processors (Word/LibreOffice) and layout applications (InDesign etc.) in mind, even if I assume that most readers (if I’ll ever publish it...) will come from LaTeX.
So, one way out could be to have some collection of tips / suggestions and turn that into a kind of manual. Something to do by those who make some transition or use alongside. The wiki is the place start with that.
So .. up to users.
Yes, and that means: up to users migrating from LaTeX and documenting their struggles.
Hraban
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