| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 2 years, 2 months |
| seen | Aug 5 '11 at 16:22 | |
| stats | profile views | 14 |
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Mar 9 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Dec 26 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Oct 2 |
awarded | Good Question |
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May 15 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Apr 13 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Aug 5 |
comment |
Capital letter expanded letter space kerning I was using the soul package initially but switched to microtype; they seem to give similar results. Putting a letter in {.} helps a lot. Out of curiosity, is there any way to take an argument specialties and convert it to {S}{P}{E}{C}{I}{A}{L}{T}{I}{E}{S}? |
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Aug 4 |
revised |
Capital letter expanded letter space kerning also needs textcase package |
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Aug 4 |
asked | Capital letter expanded letter space kerning |
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Aug 4 |
awarded | Critic |
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Aug 3 |
awarded | Editor |
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Aug 3 |
revised |
Spacing of hline after text depends on letters extending past baseline added 183 characters in body |
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Aug 2 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Aug 2 |
comment |
Spacing of hline after text depends on letters extending past baseline\smash{Section y} seems to really screw things up. One thing I want to achieve is to have an hrule, text, and another hrule such that the text is perfectly centered between the horizontal lines (same distance from the top of a capital letter to the top line and from the baseline to the bottom line). How big is a strut? |
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Aug 2 |
asked | Spacing of hline after text depends on letters extending past baseline |
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Jul 12 |
accepted | A new paragraph followed by a big skip |
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Jul 12 |
asked | A new paragraph followed by a big skip |
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Jun 17 |
comment |
Horizontal lines of different thickness above and below text which span the entire page. Thank you. After playing around with both solutions, I wound up using this. As it is lower level, I find it much easier to control the layout/spacings. |
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Jun 16 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Jun 16 |
accepted | Horizontal lines of different thickness above and below text which span the entire page. |
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Jun 16 |
comment |
Horizontal lines of different thickness above and below text which span the entire page. Excellent. I think using \section makes more sense. Thank you very much. |