What is the "proper" way to reset the setups made by \setupTABLE so that successive TABLEs do no inherit the properties set by previous TABLEs? -- Troy Henderson
Hello,
how about to enclose the former TABLE (including its \setupTABLE) into a group - {} or \bgroup ... \egroup?
I guess setups are local...
Regards,
Lukas
On Mon, 23 Jun 2014 07:30:52 +0200, Troy Henderson
What is the "proper" way to reset the setups made by \setupTABLE so that successive TABLEs do no inherit the properties set by previous TABLEs?
-- Troy Henderson
-- Ing. Lukáš Procházka [mailto:LPr@pontex.cz] Pontex s. r. o. [mailto:pontex@pontex.cz] [http://www.pontex.cz] Bezová 1658 147 14 Praha 4 Tel: +420 241 096 751 Fax: +420 244 461 038
On Mon, Jun 23 2014, Troy Henderson wrote:
What is the "proper" way to reset the setups made by \setupTABLE so that successive TABLEs do no inherit the properties set by previous TABLEs?
There are at least 3 methods: 1.) \startsetups[my-table1] \setupTABLE[..........] \setupTABLE[..........] \stopsetups \startsetups[my-table2] \setupTABLE[..........] \setupTABLE[..........] \stopsetups \bTABLE[setups=my-table1] .... \eTABLE \bTABLE[setups=my-table2] .... \eTABLE 2.) \bTABLE \setupTABLE[..........] % attention: some settings don't work here .... \eTABLE 3.) See message from Lukáš. -- Peter
participants (3)
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Peter Münster
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Procházka Lukáš Ing. - Pontex s. r. o.
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Troy Henderson