Difference between revisions of "Languages"
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− | Finally, for older content, we keep a page [[Encodings and Regimes - Old Content]] about including accents, composite characters, and how "ä" and alike were produced in LaTeX/ConTeXt mkii. | + | Finally, for older content, we keep a page [[Encodings and Regimes - Old Content]] about including accents, composite characters, and how "ä" and alike were produced in LaTeX/ConTeXt mkii. [[Second Step]] gave an example for german language. |
[[Category:International]] | [[Category:International]] | ||
[[Category:Language]] | [[Category:Language]] |
Revision as of 13:30, 7 June 2020
Contents
Two commands to set up the language aspects
Today, with the international use of the UTF-8 standard for input and output encoding, you only need two commands and the language tag you want in brackets:
- \mainlanguage, to set the language of auto-generated language elements, like the title of the table of contents or the appendix.
- \language, to change the hyphenation rules, quotation marks, all that sort of thing, to that of a different language. (The default language is English.)
Language-specific pages
- Arabic and Hebrew
- Chinese Japanese and Korean
- Czech
- Greek
- Russian
- Vietnamese
- RTL for dealing with Right-To-Left texts as well as BiDi (bidirectional) texts
Language tags
Here's the list of ConTeXt's language tags, also available in the latest official Languages manual. Sources are available).
\usemodule[languages-system] \loadinstalledlanguages \showinstalledlanguages
Other links
Finally, for older content, we keep a page Encodings and Regimes - Old Content about including accents, composite characters, and how "ä" and alike were produced in LaTeX/ConTeXt mkii. Second Step gave an example for german language.