I want to make my figure captions both slanted and small, or bold and small,etc. The wiki has for setupcaptions: headstyle normal, bold, .. , small, .. style normal, bold, .. , small, .. I therefore expected to work the following setup: \setupcaptions[headstyle={slanted,small},style={bold,small}] \starttext \placefigure{A dummy figure}{\externalfigure[dummy]} Caption test. \stoptext But no, two seems too much. style={bold} does work and style={small} but style = {bold,small} does not. From the general principles of ConTeXt's parameter handling I would have expected this to work. Of course I could have used style={\bf\switchtobodyfont[small]}, but I would prefer to refrain from low level font commands when possible. I am right the setupcaptions should work with combined fontsettings, or is it my mistake? Hans van der Meer
Am 11.07.2012 um 17:17 schrieb Meer, H. van der:
I want to make my figure captions both slanted and small, or bold and small,etc. The wiki has for setupcaptions:
headstyle normal, bold, .. , small, .. style normal, bold, .. , small, ..
I therefore expected to work the following setup:
\setupcaptions[headstyle={slanted,small},style={bold,small}] \starttext \placefigure{A dummy figure}{\externalfigure[dummy]} Caption test. \stoptext
But no, two seems too much. style={bold} does work and style={small} but style = {bold,small} does not. From the general principles of ConTeXt's parameter handling I would have expected this to work. Of course I could have used style={\bf\switchtobodyfont[small]}, but I would prefer to refrain from low level font commands when possible.
I am right the setupcaptions should work with combined fontsettings, or is it my mistake?
You misunderstand how named styles work. When you have style key (can be style, textstyle etc.) for a command you can write “style=\bf” and use the font switch as argument. Another way to set the font is to use a name, e.g. “style=bold”. The argument in this case is a identifier which is defined as \definealternativestyle [\v!bold] [\bf] [] As you can see “bold” is only a synonym for \bf (with the third argument you can specify what should happen when a command when the identifier is used in a heading, see below for a example. \definehead[HeadA][section][style=bold] \definehead[HeadB][section][style=italic] \starttext \HeadA{normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal} normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal \HeadB{normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal} normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal \stoptext Having a list as argument for the style key is interesting and you have my vote for this but it would be more complex and slower than the current mechanism. Wolfgang
On 11-7-2012 22:29, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Having a list as argument for the style key is interesting and you have my vote for this but it would be more complex and slower than the current mechanism.
indeed too much of a slowdown Hans ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | voip: 087 875 68 74 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------
participants (3)
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Hans Hagen
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Meer, H. van der
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Wolfgang Schuster