Difference between revisions of "Command/textwidth"
< Command
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m |
m |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
<context source=yes> | <context source=yes> | ||
\starttext | \starttext | ||
+ | \blackrule[height=1pt,width=\makeupwidth,] | ||
\startcolumns[rule=on,] | \startcolumns[rule=on,] | ||
\scale[maxwidth=\textwidth]{ | \scale[maxwidth=\textwidth]{ | ||
Line 16: | Line 17: | ||
This line avoids the scaled command and will be split using line breaks. | This line avoids the scaled command and will be split using line breaks. | ||
\stopcolumns | \stopcolumns | ||
+ | \blackrule[height=1pt,width=\makeupwidth,] | ||
\stoptext | \stoptext | ||
</context> | </context> |
Revision as of 04:42, 28 February 2014
Description
The \textwidth command contains a value that represents the width of the current line on the page. The value is contextual in that if the current line is within a columnar environment, then \textwidth returns the value of the current column width.
Example
The following example scales a long line of text to prevent it from breaking over multiple lines.
\starttext \blackrule[height=1pt,width=\makeupwidth,] \startcolumns[rule=on,] \scale[maxwidth=\textwidth]{ This line uses the scaled command to fit within a column's width. } \column This line avoids the scaled command and will be split using line breaks. \stopcolumns \blackrule[height=1pt,width=\makeupwidth,] \stoptext