Difference between revisions of "Command/fillinline"
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<cd:description>A line on which the reader may fill in an answer. | <cd:description>A line on which the reader may fill in an answer. | ||
− | Typically | + | Typically each fill-in line should be its own paragraph, because it behaves a bit oddly: it pushes the actual fill-in field to the end of the paragraph while also keeping the required width on that side free.</cd:description> |
− | <cd:examples><cd:example title=""><context source="yes" text="This gives:"> | + | <cd:examples><cd:example title=""><context source="yes" mode="mkiv" text="This gives:"> |
− | \setuppapersize[ | + | \setuppapersize[A7,landscape] |
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\starttext | \starttext | ||
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\fillinline[width=2cm]{\it name}\par | \fillinline[width=2cm]{\it name}\par | ||
− | + | \fillinline[width=2cm]{\it Which quote is this?} \input ward\par | |
\stoptext | \stoptext | ||
</context></cd:example></cd:examples> | </context></cd:example></cd:examples> |
Latest revision as of 14:49, 16 November 2021
Contents
\fillinline
Summary
The command \fillinline creates fill-in lines.
Settings
Description
A line on which the reader may fill in an answer.
Typically each fill-in line should be its own paragraph, because it behaves a bit oddly: it pushes the actual fill-in field to the end of the paragraph while also keeping the required width on that side free.
Examples
Example 1
\setuppapersize[A7,landscape] \starttext \fillinline[width=2cm]{\it name}\par \fillinline[width=2cm]{\it Which quote is this?} \input ward\par \stoptext
This gives: