Am 11.07.2012 um 17:17 schrieb Meer, H. van der: > I want to make my figure captions both slanted and small, or bold and small,etc. > The wiki has for setupcaptions: > > headstyle normal, bold, .. , small, .. > style normal, bold, .. , small, .. > > I therefore expected to work the following setup: > > \setupcaptions[headstyle={slanted,small},style={bold,small}] > \starttext > \placefigure{A dummy figure}{\externalfigure[dummy]} > Caption test. > \stoptext > > But no, two seems too much. style={bold} does work and style={small} but style = {bold,small} does not. From the general principles of ConTeXt's parameter handling I would have expected this to work. > Of course I could have used style={\bf\switchtobodyfont[small]}, but I would prefer to refrain from low level font commands when possible. > > I am right the setupcaptions should work with combined fontsettings, or is it my mistake? You misunderstand how named styles work. When you have style key (can be style, textstyle etc.) for a command you can write “style=\bf” and use the font switch as argument. Another way to set the font is to use a name, e.g. “style=bold”. The argument in this case is a identifier which is defined as \definealternativestyle [\v!bold] [\bf] [] As you can see “bold” is only a synonym for \bf (with the third argument you can specify what should happen when a command when the identifier is used in a heading, see below for a example. \definehead[HeadA][section][style=bold] \definehead[HeadB][section][style=italic] \starttext \HeadA{normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal} normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal \HeadB{normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal} normal \style[style=italic]{italic} normal \style[style=bold]{bold} normal \style[style=\it]{it} normal \style[style=\bf]{bf} normal \stoptext Having a list as argument for the style key is interesting and you have my vote for this but it would be more complex and slower than the current mechanism. Wolfgang