> but now why can't I use word wrap and justify? I don't usually read this list on the Web, I just read the mail that the list sends me -- and at this point I have lost track of your original post to the list.
My mail client is plain-text only (Latin-1). Can you post a message containing a \markup command *without* word-wrap & justify which gets the character-order right, and then, secondly, the \markup command *with* word-wrap & justify, so that I can look at it? You don't have to use the actual characters in the two \markup examples. You could just use ascii characters ABC...; it would still show me the structure of the command you're using. Thanks for your patience... -- Tom ************************************************************** On Mon, 22 Aug 2005, Aaron Mehl wrote: > --- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > Aaron Mehl wrote: > > > > > but actually for each word the letters are in the > > > correct order but the words themselves go left to > > > right instead of right to left. > > > > With automatic text reversal, I would expect > > \markup { ONE TWO THREE } > > to produce > > ENO OWT EERHT > > exactly > > which is what it does once I removed the > justification and wordwrapping > > > But, with a pair of quote-marks added, I would > > expect > > \markup { "ONE TWO THREE" } > > to produce > > EERHT OWT ENO > > > > > bravo! > > > In the first case, \markup handles 3 arguments, one > > after the other. > > > > In the second case, \markup handles one single > > argument. > > > > but now why can't I use word wrap and justify? > maybe I need some escape charactor? > > Thanks so far, > Aaron > > > -- Tom _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user