\setupcolors[state=start] \starttext How can I use the brace-key right? \starttable[| \{ |]
the wiki entry is not that clear ("enclose the column in braces"). \{ is a just a grouping command (which directly gives a solution for your second answer)
Use [| a{\{}b{\}} |]
to add "braces"
\NC no braces \SR \stoptable
What I am doing wrong here? \starttable[ o1 | C{red} |]
\{C{red}
Ahh! I see! So '\{' is a table command NOT a FormatKey? But why is '\{' introduced in 'thrd-tab.tex' with \NewFormatKey \{{..} as a primitive key? The wikiwriter has obviously used this source too.
Should'nt \arg{bla} be \type{{bla}}?
\arg{bla} gives me 'argbla'! Wolfgang
wwl@musensturm.de wrote:
\setupcolors[state=start] \starttext How can I use the brace-key right? \starttable[| \{ |] the wiki entry is not that clear ("enclose the column in braces"). \{ is a just a grouping command (which directly gives a solution for your second answer)
Use [| a{\{}b{\}} |]
to add "braces"
\NC no braces \SR \stoptable
What I am doing wrong here? \starttable[ o1 | C{red} |] \{C{red}
Ahh! I see! So '\{' is a table command NOT a FormatKey?
But why is '\{' introduced in 'thrd-tab.tex' with \NewFormatKey \{{..} as a primitive key?
The wikiwriter has obviously used this source too.
Sorry, I don't know.
Should'nt \arg{bla} be \type{{bla}}?
\arg{bla} gives me 'argbla'!
I have no idea what it is used for. Using it in math environment $\arg{bla}$ gives me "arg {\it bla}" which is much better than 'argbla'. I guess it's a math only macro. Greetings, Peter
Wolfgang
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participants (2)
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Peter Rolf
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wwl@musensturm.de