Hi,
Bruce Pourciau schrieb:
Some time ago Karsten Heymann offered the advice below (about
oldstyle figures, but not about footnotes). Bruce
Well, there isn't much about oldfigs in my text :)
mail.k wrote:
Can anyone tell me how to use oldstyle figures in my body text
(i.e., text figures or
That's useful advice, thanks!
Do you know where I should look to implement this trick for nonstandard
fonts?
For example, to use a Linotype font with Walter Schmidt's package, that
has two versions: l__x & l__j?
Many thanks,
E.
Bruce Pourciau wrote:
Some time ago Karsten Heymann o
Some time ago Karsten Heymann offered the advice below (about oldstyle
figures, but not about footnotes).
Bruce
use
\usepackage{mathpazo}
(or even better \usepackage[sc]{mathpazo} if your latex is new enough)
for better math support (and better \textsc output).
See
http://ftp.dante.de/te
mail.k wrote:
> C'mon, somebody has to know, right?
The following works for me with mathpazo:
\usepackage[osf]{mathpazo}
\newcommand{\nooldstylenums}[1]{{\fontfamily{ppl}\selectfont #1}}
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
}
The redefinition of the footnotesymbol depends on the class you are usi
Now, on the other hand, the response is overwhelming.
C'mon, somebody has to know, right?
mail.k wrote:
Can anyone tell me how to use oldstyle figures in my body text (i.e.,
text figures or the "j" version of the fonts)
and lining figures for my footnotes (the "x" version of the font)?
Can anyone tell me how to use oldstyle figures in my body text (i.e.,
text figures or the "j" version of the fonts)
and lining figures for my footnotes (the "x" version of the font)?
I prefer the appearance of osf, but in the footnotes I must use a more
scientific look.
(I've asked this qu