Command/setupdelimitedtext
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\setupdelimitedtext
Syntax
\setupdelimitedtext[name][n][...,...=...,...] | |
[name] | name of the delimitedtext to set up |
[n] | (optional) nesting level to set up (1 = outermost) |
location | margin text paragraph: function unknown |
spacebefore | dimension: space above delimitedtext fragment |
spaceafter | dimension, spacebefore by default: space below delimitedtext fragment |
style | normal bold italic, etc |
color | color |
leftmargin | dimension: distance to edge of the page's left margin area |
rightmargin | dimension, leftmargin by default |
indentnext | yes no |
before | command |
after | command |
left | text |
middle | text |
right | text |
level=0, | unknown, 0 by default |
repeat | no yes |
method | unknown |
Description
Set up the appearance of a delimitedtext environment defined earlier with \definedelimitedtext. \quotation and \quote are delimitedtexts, too, so you can also set up those with this command; but for those you can also use the special commands \setupquotation and \setupquote.
Most of the parameters are self-explanatory, but two things should be borne in mind:
- Nearly all of the parameters apply only if the new kind of text is invoked with
\startmydelimitedtext
: if one uses\mydelimitedtext{...}
, onlyleft
andright
have any effect.
leftmargin
contains the distance to the actual left margin, not to the edge of the body text. If the new delimitedtext inherits fromquotation
, the text will be indented a bit with respect to the body text; if you want to line them up, set theleftmargin
to\leftmargindistance
rather than to0pt
.
Example
\definedelimitedtext[mydt] \setupdelimitedtext[mydt][left=\leftguillemot,right=\rightguillemot] \quotation{Clancy of the Overflow}, by Banjo Paterson \startmydt And an answer came directed in a manner unexpected, and I think the same was written with a thumbnail dipped in tar; 't was his shearing-mate who wrote it, and verbatim I will quote it: \quotation{Clancy's gone to Queensland droving, and we don't know where he are.} \stopmydt
Multiparagraph quotations
In English typography there is a custom of opening each paragraph in a multiparagraph quotation with a "repeated" opening quotation sign. This behavior may be turned on using the repeat
switch and middle
key, for example:
\setupquotation[repeat=yes, middle=“] % or equivalently \setupdelimitedtext[quotation][repeat=yes, middle=“]
See also
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