[wplug] OT again: LaTeX primers

Hagbard Celine hceline at fnordnet.net
Fri Aug 5 17:48:08 EDT 2005


Learn by example, definitely!  What I really like to do is have the reference
handy, and go into an existing document to see what was done, flipping back
to the text to see what else the particular construct does, and to see what
other constructs exist which were not used in the example document.

HC

On Thu, Aug 04, 2005 at 02:30:48AM -0400, Brandon Kuczenski wrote:
> On Wed, 3 Aug 2005, Hagbard Celine wrote:
> 
> >Hi again,
> >
> >Following an Eric Cooper suggestion, I downloaded teTeX, built it, and even
> >played with it a bit.  Looks like this may work!  Yay!
> >
> >One thing I wonder, though.  Can someone (Eric, maybe), point me to some
> >introductory and/or reference texts to TeX/LaTeX?  I might as well learn 
> >*how*
> >to use it... :o)
> >
> >Thanks again,
> >HC
> >
> 
> I'll also toss in my $0.02 .. 0.03, 0.04... make that $0.16:
> 
> First, comp.text.tex is a very responsive and knowledgeable newsgroup, 
> though they do expect question-askers to do due diligence (in particular, 
> construct a minimal example -- which usually exposes the problem without 
> posting!)
> 
> TeX is slow learning.  Little things like "Type 1 fonts" versus "Type 3 
> fonts" messing up PDF documents, or the cryptic error messages produced 
> when compilation fails, can be very difficult to adapt to.
> 
> But I'm flatly convinced that it's the most powerful document preparation 
> system in existence.  I went from zero (last January) to everything in 
> about 18 months -- now I use it for posters, slideshows, papers, letters 
> ...
> 
> Others have suggested the "Not so short introduction to LaTeX" -- well, in 
> the greatest spirit of open source, once you've learned from the manual, 
> read the manual's TeX source!  I found it here:
> 
> http://www.arcetri.astro.it/CC/guides/lshort-english/src/
> 
> IMHO, LaTeX is easiest to learn by example, and that guide is a real, 
> publishable work done all in LaTeX.
> 
> If you want to see some really neat stuff, check out the pstricks package:
> TeX + postscript provides some amazing graphics capability.  [However, 
> using pstricks requires going through postscript before creating a pdf, 
> since pdflatex doesn't understand the specialized postscript commands.]
> 
> http://tug.org/PSTricks/main.cgi/
> 
> -Brandon
> 
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