The YaDCM macros work very well standalone; I haven't yet tried them with a package. They are fairly flexible, for example you can type
.dropcap "B\h'2n'right is the ring" 4 darkblue B P 0 2n 0 of words When the right man rings them, Fair the fall of songs When the singer sings them. If filling is turned off, however, e.g. to set lines of verse, they fail. And they also fail in a diversion. I tried the rarely used .dt but it hasn't worked on its own. There are also references to \$7 which is not a required argument. I have my own drop cap macro in -markup, written independently, and I shall be pleased to use the ideas of YaDCM if I ever get round to my plan to generalise it -- thanks. This application is an instance of putting a picture into a shaped insert in the text. One of my groff wishes for a long time is a parshape command, e.g. .parshape indent line-length ... This would be so useful, and it's quite difficult to simulate. Denis On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 11:40:47 +0100 Patrik Schindler <p...@pocnet.net> wrote: > Hello Peter, > > Am 23.02.2011 um 18:58 schrieb Peter Schaffter: > > > The mom macros have a fairly sophisticated dropcap mechanism based > > on the number of lines to drop the cap plus the cap-height of > > running text. You might want to study it for ideas. > > > Thank you! May I ask for a hint, for which command to look? Can't > find anything in the docs on the first look. > > > :wq! PoC > > > -- () ascii ribbon campaign - against html e-mail /\ www.asciiribbon.org - against proprietary attachments