Difference between revisions of "Command/breakhere"
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(Created page with "Documentation for \breakhere") |
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<cd:commandgroup name="breakhere" xmlns:cd="http://wiki.contextgarden.net/commanddoc/20200807"> | <cd:commandgroup name="breakhere" xmlns:cd="http://wiki.contextgarden.net/commanddoc/20200807"> | ||
<cd:shortdesc><!-- a short command summary goes here --> | <cd:shortdesc><!-- a short command summary goes here --> | ||
− | The command <tt>\breakhere</tt> is used to specify where to break consecutive equations. | + | The command <tt>\breakhere</tt> is used to specify where to break consecutive equations. |
</cd:shortdesc> | </cd:shortdesc> | ||
<cd:variants> | <cd:variants> | ||
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\stopformula | \stopformula | ||
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+ | \stoptext | ||
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</context></cd:example></cd:examples> | </context></cd:example></cd:examples> | ||
<cd:notes></cd:notes> | <cd:notes></cd:notes> |
Revision as of 13:21, 8 May 2024
Contents
\breakhere
Summary
The command \breakhere is used to specify where to break consecutive equations.
Description
Examples
Example 1
\setuppapersize[A6,landscape] \starttext \startformula (a_1 x + b_1) (a_2 x + b_2) \alignhere = (a_1 + a_2) x^2 + a_1 b_1 x + b_1 a_2 x + b_1 b_2 \breakhere = (a_1 + a_2) x^2 + (a_1 b_1 + b_1 a_2) x + b_1 b_2 \stopformula \stoptext