On 09 Aug 2014, at 14:33, Wolfgang Schuster <schuster.wolfgang@gmail.com> wrote:


Am 09.08.2014 um 14:29 schrieb Gerben Wierda <gerben.wierda@rna.nl>:

On 06 Aug 2014, at 18:25, Otared Kavian <otared@gmail.com> wrote:


On 06 Aug 2014, at 17:46, Gerben Wierda <gerben.wierda@rna.nl> wrote:
[…] Thanks,

Can this also be used with \footnote{}?

And out of curiosity & understanding on how ConTeXt works: what does setupindenting do in this example? Why is it necessary?

G

Hi Gerben,

The command
\setupindenting
is there for the main text to be indented (with the key « yes »). I guess Wolfgang gave it in order for you to have your main text to be indented, in accordance with what you wanted for your footnotes. The default value of setupindenting is « no ». If you wish you can have different indentations for your main text and for your footnotes.

On the other hand the command
\setupnotation[footnote][indenting={yes,medium}]
is there for your footnotes to have the desired indentation, and it is clear that you can use also
\footnote{\input knuth.tex}
and get your footnote with indentation (just try it… :-)

I tried. It gets me:

! Undefined control sequence.
l.141 \setupnotation
                    [footnote][indenting={yes,medium}]

When you use MkII you have to replace \setupnotation with \setupnotedefinition.

That works. Thanks.

G