From: Aleks K. <Aleks_Kleyn@MailAPS.org> - 2005-11-09 15:10:47
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Alex Thank you. I will look these commands one time more. \ exhyphenpenalty prevents hyphenation, so I need little different. About Arnold. Even this wrote typesetter, but not Arnold, this simply means only one. It is written according grammar. And typesetter is not less familiar with TeX then Arnold. Aleks Kleyn http://www.geocities.com/aleks_kleyn -----Original Message----- From: mik...@li... [mailto:mik...@li...] On Behalf Of Alex Degtyarev Sent: Wednesday, November 09, 2005 3:40 AM To: mik...@li... Subject: RE: [MiKTeX] hyphenation _____ I think you are familiar with Russian. I opened Arnold book (uravneniya v chastnyh proizvodnyh, 1999) on page 23. He writes ... yvlyaetsya li ono harakteristicheskim dlya kakogo-libo uravneniya. I think it's not Arnol'd who writes this (if you mean the line break) but the typesetter. And I wasn't speaking about adjusting the LANGUAGE (especially nationwide), just about the typesetting habbits (cf. Knuth referring to \penalty as the `aesthetic cost' of the break). Say, hyphenating "ty-pe" in English as you suggest is pretty much the same as "ti-p" in Russian. But if you insist you can make TeX do it (both in English and in Russian). Anyway, look towards \exhyphenpenalty, \hyphenpenalty, \hyphenation, \discretionary, etc. (I guess it's \exhyphenpenalty that governs hyphenation like "kogo- nibud'".) |