T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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66.1 | what does it do? | CLOSET::ANKLAM | | Fri Mar 06 1987 12:25 | 18 |
|
How are you using the tag? <hyphenate>(ex\am\ple) works for a
single occurrence of the word you specify. It doesn't set parameters
to indicate that 'all occurrences of this word' be hyphenated.
We are providing for V1.0 a description of how to include hyphenation
exceptions either locally, for all doctypes, or on a doctype-specific
basis. If this is what you are doing, we can provide that info here.
If this is not what you're doing, I'll need to see a file that is
causing the problem.
(Also, our plans for full internationalization of DOCUMENT call
for the local language versions to have hyphenation patterns set
for the different languages, so that there won't be a need for
extensive hyphenation dictionaries.)
patti anklam
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66.2 | got it | HAM::HOFFMANN | | Fri Mar 06 1987 15:09 | 10 |
| yeah, I thought this would work like the \hyphenation in
TeX. If this is not to much extra work, would you please
supply the offered additional information. We have some
documents in production right now - and we have lots of
hyphenation-exceptions with the desired doctypes.
When you are talking about the fieldtest update, what
timeframe are you thinking of?
detlef.
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66.3 | Interim workaround? | COOKIE::JOHNSTON | | Fri Mar 06 1987 18:07 | 29 |
| Is there some fix until V1.0 that can be used to words that must *never* be
hyphenated? Strange hyphenation doesn't occur that often in text,
but I have several product names that appear in tables many times; these names
must not be broken across rows. Right now I'm getting things like:
Max R-
Widget
which should appear as:
Max
R-Widget
"Max R-Widget" is in the table a dozen times. Must I <hyphenate>(R-Widget\)
a dozen times? I've been working around it with <align_char>, but would
prefer a simpler solution whereby I defined it once and that's all.
This situation is not peculiar; I and others on my writing team
expect many similar situations in the future.
Thanx for any help you can give.
Rose
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66.4 | <KEEP> | CLOSET::ANKLAM | | Mon Mar 09 1987 09:10 | 5 |
|
You can use <KEEP>(R-widget) to keep the text from breaking. Will
post the hyphenation info requested in .2 shortly.
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66.5 | hyphenation and "umlaute" | HAM::HOFFMANN | | Wed Mar 18 1987 03:07 | 8 |
|
Is it true, that in the current version any word that contains
"umlaut"-characters will not get hyphenated? Is there a simple
way to turn this on (like enabling hyphenation for capitalized
words)?
detlef (who is fighting <TeX>s hyphenation algorithm with only
limited success ...)
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66.6 | Local hyphenation | VAXUUM::SEGAL | | Wed Mar 18 1987 14:19 | 31 |
| Some notes on tuning DOCUMENT/TeX hyphenation:
A system adminstrator can add hyphenation exceptions
to TeX's exception dictionary on a system-wide basis by inserting
them into the local system elements file (requires the logical
DOC$LOCAL_ELEMENTS be defined), or on a doctype basis by adding
them to the doctype design file(s). As with macro definitions,
the latest exception entry for any word replaces prior entries.
Entries in TeX's hyphenation dictionary are global (they are
not affected by grouping), and must consist entirely of
letters plus hyphens, or letters plus NO hyphens.
(No hyphens = no hyphenation.) Plural terms are
unique words, and not affected by exception entries for
singular forms. For example:
\hyphenation{digital
trace-point trace-points time-slicing
task-name task-names mne-mon-ic mne-mon-ics
mod-ule-name mod-ule-names syn-chron-ous}
When TeX prepares to hyphenate, it converts the word to
lowercase, then compares the results to entries in the
exceptions dictionary *UNLESS* your doctype specifically
excludes hyphenation of uppercase words (most permit it).
In that case, it just forgets about hyphenating (and
converting the word to lowercase for comparison) when
it finds ANY word that begins with an uppercase letter.
Lee
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