ConTeXt explained

ConTeXt
Author:Mainly Hans Hagen and Pragma ADE
Developer:Mainly Hans Hagen, Taco Hoekwater,[1] Aditya Mahajan, Mojca Miklavec, Wolfgang Schuster
Latest Release Version:Mark IV 0.61
Latest Release Date:[2] [3] [4]
Operating System:Multiplatform (TeX)
Genre:Document processor, Document markup language
License:Program code under GPLv2 and Documentation under CC BY-NC-SA 3.0[5]
Website:contextgarden

ConTeXt is a general-purpose document processor. Like LaTeX, it is derived from TeX. It is especially suited for structured documents, automated document production, very fine typography, and multilingual typesetting. It is based in part on the TeX typesetting system, and uses a document markup language for manuscript preparation. The typographical and automated capabilities of ConTeXt are extensive, including interfaces for handling microtypography, multiple footnotes and footnote classes, and manipulating OpenType fonts and features. Moreover, it offers extensive support for colors, backgrounds, hyperlinks, presentations, figure-text integration, and conditional compilation. It gives the user extensive control over formatting while making it easy to create new layouts and styles without learning the low-level TeX macro language.

While comparisons can be made between ConTeXt and LaTeX, the primary objectives of the two systems are distinct. From the onset, ConTeXt has been a typography and typesetting system designed to give users straightforward and consistent access to advanced typographical control, which is crucial for general-purpose typesetting. LaTeX's original vision, on the other hand, was to insulate the user from typographical decisions—an approach particularly useful for tasks such as submitting articles to a scientific journal. Although LaTeX has evolved from this original vision, ConTeXt's unified design prevents the package clashes often experienced with LaTeX.[6] [7]

ConTeXt provides a multilingual user interface with support for markup in English, Dutch, German, French, and Italian and support for output in many scripts including western European, eastern European, Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. It also allows the user to use different TeX engines like LuaTeX (MkIV) and LuaMetaTeX (LMTX). Older versions (MkII) worked with pdfTeX or XeTeX.[7]

As its native drawing engine, ConTeXt integrates a superset of MetaPost called MetaFun,[7] which allows users to draw page backgrounds and ornaments with MetaPost. MetaFun can also be used directly with MetaPost. ConTeXt also supports the use of other external drawing engines, like PGF/TikZ[8] and PSTricks.[9]

ConTeXt also provides a macro package for typesetting chemical structure diagrams with TeX called PPCHTeX,[10] as well as many other modules.[9] [11] [12] This package can also be used with plain TeX and LaTeX.

Originally entitled pragmatex, ConTeXt was given its name around 1996[13] by Hans Hagen from PRAGMA Advanced Document Engineering (Pragma ADE), a Netherlands-based company.

License

ConTeXt is free software: the program code (i.e. anything not under the /doc subtree) is distributed under the GNU GPL; the documentation is provided under Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike license.[14]

The ConTeXt official manual(2001) and ConTeXt official mini tutorial (1999) are documents copyrighted by Pragma, but there is a repository of the future new manual[15] released under the GNU Free Documentation License.[16] [17] As of April 2009 there is an up-to-date version of the fonts and typography chapters.[18]

Versions

The current version of ConTeXt is LMTX, introduced in April 2019 as the successor to Mark IV (MkIV).[19] Previous versions — Mark II (MkII) and Mark I — are no longer maintained.

According to the developers, the principal difference between LMTX and its predecessors is that the newest version "uses a compilation and scripting engine that is specifically developed with ConTeXt in mind: LuaMetaTeX ... [which] has been optimised heavily for ConTeXt use." Previously, MkIV used LuaTeX and MkII used pdfTeX.

History

ConTeXt was created by Hans Hagen[20] and Ton Otten of Pragma ADE in the Netherlands[21] around 1991[22] [23] due to the need for educational typesetting material.

Around 1996, Hans Hagen coined the name ConTeXt meaning "text with tex" (con-tex-t; "con" is a Latin preposition meaning "together with").[20] Before 1996 ConTeXt was used only within Pragma ADE, but in 1996 it began to be adopted by a wider audience. The first users outside Pragma were Taco Hoekwater, Berend de Boer and Gilbert van den Dobbelsteen, and the first user outside the Netherlands was Tobias Burnus.[20]

In July 2004, contextgarden.net wiki page was created.[22] [24]

ConTeXt low-level code was originally written in Dutch. Around 2005, the ConTeXt developers began translating this to English, resulting in the version known as MKII, which is now stable and frozen.

In August 2007, Hans Hagen presented the MKIV version,[23] [25] and the first public beta was released later that year.[26]

During the ConTeXt User Meeting 2008, Mojca Miklavec presented[27] ConTeXt Minimals, a distribution of ConTeXt containing the latest binaries and intended to have a small memory footprint, thus demanding less bandwidth for updates.[28] In August 2008, this distribution was registered as a project in launchpad web site.[29]

In June 2008, Patrick Gundlach wrote the first post[30] in ConTeXt blog.

In July 2009, ConTeXt started git repository.[31]

In November 2010, the ConTeXt Group was created.[32]

In April 2019, LMTX (ConTeXt LuaMetaTeX) was announced.[33]

Example of code

Making ConTeXt documents is simple: one makes a plain text file, and compiles it with the context script.[34] The result of this process is a PDF file (ConTeXt also can generate a DVI file). An example is shown below.

ConTeXt documents come with the file extension .tex or an extension demarking the version required: .mkii, .mkiv, or .mkxl for regular TeX, .mkvi or .mklx for a dialect that supports named macro parameters in addition to TeX’s numeric ones.[35]

% This line is a comment because % precedes it.% It specifies the format of head named 'title'% Specifically the style of the font: sans serif% + bold + big font.

\setuphead[title][style={\ss\bfd}, before={\begingroup}, after={John Doe, the author\smallskip% \currentdate\bigskip\endgroup}]

\starttext

\title

\section\CONTEXT\ is a document preparation system for the \TEX\ typesetting program. It offers programmable desktop publishing features and extensive facilities for automating most aspects of typesetting and desktop publishing, including numbering and cross-referencing (for example to equation \in[eqn:famous-emc]), tables and figures, page layout, bibliographies, and much more.

It was originally written around 1990 by Hans Hagen. It could be an alternative or complement to \LATEX.

\sectionWith \CONTEXT\ we could write maths. Equations can be automatically numbered.

\placeformula[eqn:famous-emc]\startformula E = mc^2\stopformulawith\placeformula[eqn:def-m]\startformula m = \frac\stopformula

\stoptext

See also

External links

Official pages

Manuals and tutorials

Comparison between ConTeXt and LaTeX

Notes and References

  1. http://www.tug.org/interviews/hoekwater.html Dave Walden interview with Taco Hoekwater. TeX User Group 2006.
  2. Web site: Release notes of ConTeXt at contextgarden . 2009-03-09 . 2005-12-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20051226203050/http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Release_Notes . dead .
  3. Web site: List of releases of ConTeXt . 2009-03-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061124101941/https://foundry.supelec.fr/frs/?group_id=14 . 2006-11-24 . dead .
  4. Web site: ConTeXt files in Supelec . 2009-10-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101106003346/http://foundry.supelec.fr/gf/project/contextrev/frs/ . 2010-11-06 . dead .
  5. http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Read_Me Read Me
  6. Web site: FAQ of the UK TeX Archive . 2009-03-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100518111729/http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=context . 2010-05-18 . dead .
  7. http://wiki.contextgarden.net/What_is_ConTeXt "What is ConTeXt" page at contextgarden
  8. http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/graphics/pgf/base/doc/generic/pgf/pgfmanual.pdf PGF/TikZ official manual. Version 2.0
  9. http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Modules List of ConTeXt modules at contextgarden
  10. http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Chemistry PPCHTeX Module for ConTeXt reference page at contextgarden
  11. http://modules.contextgarden.net/ List of ConTeXt modules (static page)
  12. http://dl.contextgarden.net/modules/ List of ConTeXt modules in web server for downloading
  13. https://tug.org/interviews/hagen.html Hans Hagen Interview, 2006
  14. Web site: Read Me . 2010-07-13 . Hagen . Hans . 2005-11-24.
  15. http://foundry.supelec.fr/gf/project/contextman/scmsvn/?action=browse&path=%2Fcontext-reference%2F Repository of new reference manual
  16. http://foundry.supelec.fr/gf/project/contextman/scmsvn/?action=browse&path=%2Fcontext-reference%2FCOPYING&view=log License notice of new official manual
  17. Part of thread about context manual where Taco Hoekwater recognises that new manual is licensed under the GFDL and he should put license note on the current directory of manual
  18. Up-to-date chapters of manual: Fonts and Typography. April 2009.
  19. Web site: LMTX - Wiki. 2020-08-30. wiki.contextgarden.net.
  20. http://www.tug.org/interviews/interview-files/hans-hagen.html Dave Walden interview Hans Hagen. TeX User Group 2006.
  21. http://www.tug.org/pracjourn/2005-1/asknelly/ "Ask Nelly ..." PracTeX Journal. TeX User Group. 2005
  22. http://meeting.contextgarden.net/2007/share/taco/history.pdf Taco Hoekwater "A short History of $2^4$ parts". ConTeXt User Meeting 2007 (march 24)
  23. http://meeting.contextgarden.net/2007/programme.shtml Programme of the ConTeXt User Meeting 2007
  24. Web site: contextgarden 5th birthday on 24 July 2009 . 22 July 2009 . 18 July 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110718092025/http://contextgarden.wordpress.com/2009/07/17/happy-birthday-contextgarden/ . dead .
  25. http://meeting.contextgarden.net/2007/share/hans/mkiv-epen-2007.pdf Hans Hagen The Road to MKIV. ConTeXt User Meeting 2007.
  26. http://wiki.contextgarden.net/Mark_IV MKIV at contextgarden
  27. http://meeting.contextgarden.net/2008/programme.shtml ConTeXt User Meeting 2008 web page
  28. Web site: ConTeXt Minimals web page . 2009-01-22 . 2018-11-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181116060213/https://wiki.contextgarden.net/ConTeXt_Minimals . dead .
  29. https://launchpad.net/context ConTeXt at Launchpad.net
  30. http://contextgarden.wordpress.com/2008/06/23/garden-admins-at-the-context-meeting/ First ConTeXt blog post
  31. Web site: Post of announce of git repository . 2009-07-22 . 2010-03-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100324105956/http://contextgarden.wordpress.com/2009/07/17/new-git-repository/ . dead .
  32. http://www.journal-officiel.gouv.fr/association/index.php?ACTION=Rechercher&JTY_WALDEC=W353009428 Official announcement of ConTeXt Group registration
  33. https://ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2019/094488.html Announcement of lmtx
  34. http://www.pragma-ade.com/general/manuals/mtexexec.pdf "TeXEXEC explained" manual. Pragma ADE.
  35. Web site: [NTG-context] Official file ending?]. Hagen. Hans. 2020-02-04. mailman.ntg.nl. 2020-02-12. 2021-06-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20210628083507/https://mailman.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2020/096906.html. dead.