Difference between revisions of "Command/Cap"

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m (→‎See also: Add \sc to see also)
m (Use {{See also casing commands}})
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== See also ==
 
== See also ==
* {{cmd|sc}} -- start using small caps (preserve capitals)
+
{{See also casing commands}}
 
 
* {{cmd|cap}} -- turn text into small caps
 
* {{cmd|Cap}} -- turn first character into small caps
 
* {{cmd|Caps}} -- turn first character of each word into small caps
 
* {{cmd|CAP}} -- change specific letters to small capitals (MkII)
 
 
 
* {{cmd|Word}} -- turn first character into uppercase
 
* {{cmd|Words}} -- turn first character of each word into uppercase
 
* {{cmd|WORD}}, {{cmd|WORDS}} -- turn text into uppercase
 
  
 
== Help from ConTeXt-Mailinglist/Forum ==
 
== Help from ConTeXt-Mailinglist/Forum ==

Revision as of 09:03, 26 March 2013

\Cap

Syntax

\cap{...}
{...} text

Description

Turns the first character of the text into a small capital, regardless of case. In Mkii, this works as a solution for fonts lacking small capitals.

Example

\setupbodyfont[9pt]
Uppercase or lowercase to small caps:\crlf
\Cap{Mayday, Mayday}; \Cap{mayday, mayday}.\crlf

Punctuation counts as the first character:\crlf
\Cap{'ayday, 'ayday}.\crlf

See also

  • \sc — start using small caps (preserve capitals)
  • \cap — turn text into small caps
  • \Cap — turn first character into small caps
  • \Caps — turn first character of each word into small caps
  • \CAP — change specific letters to small capitals (MkII)
  • \Word — turn first character into uppercase
  • \Words — turn first character of each word into uppercase
  • \WORD, \WORDS — turn text into uppercase
  • \setcharactercasing — Pass casing command (Word, WORD, etc) as a keyword
  • typo-cap.mkiv

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