Difference between revisions of "Command/cap"
< Command
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(add See Also) |
|||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
− | + | * {{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}} -- doesn't work | ||
+ | |||
+ | * {{cmd|Word}} -- turn first character into uppercase | ||
+ | * {{cmd|Words}} -- turn first character of each word into uppercase | ||
+ | * {{cmd|WORD}} -- turn first word into uppercase | ||
+ | * {{cmd|WORDS}} -- turn text into uppercase | ||
== Help from ConTeXt-Mailinglist/Forum == | == Help from ConTeXt-Mailinglist/Forum == |
Revision as of 17:23, 28 March 2012
\cap
Syntax
\cap{...} | |
{...} | text |
Description
Turns the entire text into small caps, regardless of upper- or lowercase.
Example
\cap{Eve and Adam}
yields
See also
- \cap -- turn text into small caps
- \Cap -- turn first character into small caps
- \Caps -- turn first character of each word into small caps
- \CAP -- doesn't work
- \Word -- turn first character into uppercase
- \Words -- turn first character of each word into uppercase
- \WORD -- turn first word into uppercase
- \WORDS -- turn text into uppercase
Help from ConTeXt-Mailinglist/Forum
All issues with: