I've looked on the wiki and in the manuals for an equivalent to LaTeX's \begin{verse} environment. I found a macro in a file on the wiki, but the definition of it seems to be obsolete. What I'm working on is converting a wedding service set using LaTeX and the booklet package over to ConTeX and its built-in Imposition features. -Gary Tucker ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dr. Gary A. Tucker Associate Professor, Computer Science & Mathematics Averett University 420 West Main St., Danville, VA 24541 434/791-5709
Hi Gary, I do not know what this LATeX package is able to do. However in Context you can use \startalignment[middle] %[left] or [right] ... \stopalignment You may play with \startnarrower[left] %[3*left] [right] or whatever you want the indentation to be. ... \stopnarrower You can use \starlines ... \stoplines Kind regrds Willi Gary A. Tucker wrote:
I've looked on the wiki and in the manuals for an equivalent to LaTeX's \begin{verse} environment. I found a macro in a file on the wiki, but the definition of it seems to be obsolete.
What I'm working on is converting a wedding service set using LaTeX and the booklet package over to ConTeX and its built-in Imposition features.
-Gary Tucker
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dr. Gary A. Tucker Associate Professor, Computer Science & Mathematics Averett University 420 West Main St., Danville, VA 24541 434/791-5709
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participants (2)
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Gary A. Tucker
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Willi Egger