\abovedisplayshortskip
Hi, is \abovedisplayshortskip inserted in formulas that come after short lines? Or is there a more ConTeXt-way to tune this? Small example file below, but I see no change after I set it, so I guess it is not used? /Mikael \starttext Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula \abovedisplayshortskip = -12pt Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula \stoptext
On Mon, Apr 15, 2019 at 1:42 PM Mikael P. Sundqvist
Hi,
is \abovedisplayshortskip inserted in formulas that come after short lines? Or is there a more ConTeXt-way to tune this? Small example file below, but I see no change after I set it, so I guess it is not used?
/Mikael
\starttext Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula
\abovedisplayshortskip = -12pt
Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula \stoptext
Bump. Nobody knows? /Mikael
Mikael P. Sundqvist schrieb am 20.04.2019 um 15:30:
On Mon, Apr 15, 2019 at 1:42 PM Mikael P. Sundqvist
wrote: Hi,
is \abovedisplayshortskip inserted in formulas that come after short lines? Or is there a more ConTeXt-way to tune this? Small example file below, but I see no change after I set it, so I guess it is not used?
/Mikael
\starttext Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula
\abovedisplayshortskip = -12pt
Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula \stoptext Bump. Nobody knows? ConTeXt inserts always the same vertical space before a formula independent of the length of the previous line.
Wolfgang
On Sat, Apr 20, 2019 at 7:55 PM Wolfgang Schuster
Mikael P. Sundqvist schrieb am 20.04.2019 um 15:30:
On Mon, Apr 15, 2019 at 1:42 PM Mikael P. Sundqvist
wrote: Hi,
is \abovedisplayshortskip inserted in formulas that come after short lines? Or is there a more ConTeXt-way to tune this? Small example file below, but I see no change after I set it, so I guess it is not used?
/Mikael
\starttext Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula
\abovedisplayshortskip = -12pt
Foo \startformula 1+1=2 \stopformula \stoptext Bump. Nobody knows? ConTeXt inserts always the same vertical space before a formula independent of the length of the previous line.
Wolfgang
Thanks Wolfgang! Hans, is there a chance to add support for this (that seems to be supported in TeX)? As of now, I have defined a new type of formula which has less vertical space above the formulas, but that is something one has to check manually. /Mikael
participants (2)
-
Mikael P. Sundqvist
-
Wolfgang Schuster