On 2/23/2016 12:21 AM, Pablo Rodriguez wrote:
Well, Sumatra works fine with this concrete feature (at least, this is my experience). And mupdf is the only exception in this regard.
hm, sumatra uses the mupdf engine
Besides that, all other links use named destinations, so why are they so problematic (not from the coding perspective) when it somes to footnotes, references and indices? Sorry, but I don’t understand the difference.
because using named destinations has no advantage when ther eis no view and not all hyperlinked constructs have views (either because it's impossible due to lack of structure i.e. where does something begin/end, or because it's not yet implemented there) the hyperlink mechanism currently has the options page,name,auto (auto being default) so you can try name but still not get what you want; the page variant is needed for documents with 100K or more hyperlinks (and in fact the ability to choose between name/page is also there because in principle we can have backends that only support page linking ... i forgot the details but when pdf came out and acrobat / dvipsone was supported one had named only and the other page only destinations; if i kick out that kind of flexibility we're locked into pdf completely)
I think that (futhermore not being a default) ConTeXt should implemente what is an ISO standard nowadays. If viewers don’t follow the standard, users may complain, But if documents don’t follow any standard in this point, no viewer will be able to handle these documents properly.
well, i have been quite active in implementing what pdf provided and constantly had to adapt to what acrobat finally implemented (often the standard was ahead) and
And sorry for saying this (I have no other experience), but I had never an issue with that using LaTeX. I love ConTeXt and it’s a pity that this isn’t implemented yet.
i don't know about latex but i do know that depending on the engine to do it is quite fragile ... i don't know about today but inconsistent margins, no nesting or overlaying, tricky page dimensions ... the engine's built in mechanisms are heuristics and can fail in some cases ... as you don't make screen docs you probably never ran into that but if we hadn't done it in alternative ways in context i'd probably already had quit working on context a decade ago simply because some docs could not be produced anyway, it's no problem to implement things, given time and motivation, but anything implemented in context has to be predictable ok and above all consistent and the thing that annoys me the most is zooming that one moment gives you a effective 20 pt size and another time 17.5 pt depending on where / how you click and view so one handicap for me is that i won't make test docs for it for example: when one clicks, goto and the viewer zooms in to some piece of text on ehas to assume that the pdf generator guessed right about reasonable margins on top / bottom / left / right as one expect consistency ... it might be convenient on a 768x1024 screen (which imo is unuseable for reading anyway) but on a proper high res screen lack of quality starts dominating
It is an extremely useful feature and it isn’t reasonable to expect from users that they have huge screens to read PDF documents generated with ConTeXt. And in many scenarios, having a screen version (different from the print version) is not an option. And as explained in the sample code above, I have only a 15-inch screen.
actually i wonder if screens need to be huge ... small high res screens are quite readable (i consider reading pdf on a small phone a no-go whatever scaling gets applied and i expect epub like devices eventually to get the same quality as paper)
Well, A4 pages aren’t readable on a 15-inch screen (that is very common in laptops). I would say, no matter which resolution it has.
And sorry, not being the default, why is wrong reading pages in fit to width mode?
that one still has to make sure that there is a reasonable view area (so that one sees what went and comes) ... i'm not sure how you handle it but esp jumping from page to page in a fit width mode is quite annoying; fit width actually makes sense when one makes each chapter (or section) into one long page and i actually played with it but i found no viewer capable to keep the same scale each page btw, the upcoming zoom fashion is not the ones we have now but zoom to some tagged location (can be mid line)
Would it be possible that the destinations with links in a text all honored \setupinteraction[focus=standard]?
this can only be implemented stepwise (given that i can motivate myself so it also depends on the weather, music, reasonable background movie or talkshow, lack of other tasks, etc) .. and of course a reasonable viewer (i wasted too much time already on bypassing fuzzy features that i don't need myself)
Is there anything that I can do to help? I’m especially interested in this feature.
small few page examples with predictable positioning and predictable spacing (btw, footnotes will always be sort of a pain as they are rendered in special ways, but footnotes should be forbidden anyway; if a doc is also for screen endnotes are way better)
I think this is a basic feature that will benefit many ConTeXt users.
Many thanks for your help,
Pablo
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------