Denis Maier schrieb am 26.04.2024 um 19:18: >> Wolfgang Schuster hat am >> 26.04.2024 18:24 CEST geschrieben: >> Denis Maier via ntg-context schrieb am 26.04.2024 um 18:10: >>>> Pablo Rodriguez via ntg-context >>> > hat am 26.04.2024 17:25 CEST geschrieben: >>>> On 4/26/24 15:33, denis.maier@unibe.ch >>>> wrote: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> I’m trying to typeset a poem from XML, but I can’t figure out how to >>>>> make the inbetween key working here. >>>>> As the source is XML, I cannot just add an empty line to start a new >>>>> group of lines inside \startlines…\stoplines. I guess, there must >>>>> be a >>>>> command to do that, but \par seems to have no effect here. >>>>> How can this be done? >>>> Hi Denis, >>>> I must confess I don’t get which is your actual question. >>>> \blank works here and you know that (since you included it in your >>>> code). >>>> MkIV with \par works in your sample and LMTX with \par doesn’t. >>>> I wonder whether this might be a bug in LMTX. >>>> Just in case it might help, >>> Thanks for your answer and sorry for not being clearer. I was just >>> wondering why the \par seems to have no effect. (I first guessed >>> that it might be related to XML, to but then realized it happens >>> with context markup as well. Usually, you won't run into this >>> because an empty line works, but with XML that's not am option.) As >>> you've said, it looks like a bug then. >> >> The lines environment treats each line of the input as paragraph by >> adding \par at the end of it and adding another \par makes no >> difference here. >> >> BTW: ConTeXt has a module for poems which can be loaded with >> \usemodule[format]. >> >> Wolfgang >> > Ok. I'll have a look at this module. Just two questions: > 1. so did this behavior change? > 2. What is inbetween referring to then? If each line is a paragraph, > what's this group of paragraphs then? Can you manually switch to the > next one? The inbetween setting works because ConTeXt checks at the start of each line whether it's empty (in this case the value is used) or not. When you add a \par you just end the current line/paragraph and it doesn't matter how many \par's you use because TeX just ignores them. Wolfgang