On Mon, Jun 28, 2004 at 11:10:45PM +0300, Micha Feigin wrote: > On Mon, Jun 28, 2004 at 12:07:37PM +0100, Jon Dowland wrote: > > On Sat, 26 Jun 2004 23:21:41 -0500, cecil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > Someone told me today at lunch that what with my "wierd obsession", as > > > he called it, to perhaps go without a gui(X), I should try "that latex > > > thingie". My buddy is a real wordmaster. LOL. I did some reading up on > > > it; it's interesting. I never knew that you could do all that with no > > > window system. Does anyone here use it on a regular basis, and if so, > > > how hard is it to use, setup, print, etc? > > > > I used it to write up my 3rd year project, and I think it probably > > ended up being as useful as writing it in microsoft word (not taking > > into account of course the unavailability of word for linux). > > > > Word does have most of the features of latex if you are very careful, > use it correctly and _really_ know what you are doing (i.e styles) and > still the output always seems to come out looking less professional. > > Somehow word seems to end nowhere, it supposedly gives you complete > control over the graphics appearance (as a knowledgeable typesetter > would need) but it keeps trying to do what it wants instead of what you > want assuming that it knows better what you want it to do. > > Latex doesn't give you full control directly (unless you know tex and > aren't scared to dirty your hands) but it also doesn't pretend to do it > and then insist on doing something else behind your back. > > If you want to write professional looking documents, latex is the tool, > for typesetting (most people don't need this) use tex and the like > (there are probably graphic tools), for graphical page layout, you need > freehand and the like. > > Word is good for writing short notes with a little more control then > latex and less head ache then tex, but will generally take you more > time and effort for anything serious then latex will and still look > worse.
Yup. Even a one-page note I wrote with two other students (I wasn't the one operating word, though) concerning how we were to proceed on one of our assignments looked very bad. I tried to do it in LaTeX at home, was finished much quicker, and it looked far better. I didn't have to specify _any_ layout (of course) since I just used \title, \author, \section and \emph constructs. When I have to do separate assignments which have to be bundled at a later time, I create files like meesterproef.tex and part-meesterproef.tex. In the former, only the preample and \begin and \end{document} constructs are placed, with an \input in between. In the latter, the actual text follows with \sections, since I use the article class. When I have to hand in a portfolio, I create a document portfolio.tex which has different \chapters (report class) and each chapter \inputs a part-whatever.tex and I'm done! With latex2html I create a website if that is needed. In Word, I believe that would cost a lot of extra time cutting and pasting stuff. Or am I wrong? David -- Hi! I'm a .signature virus. Copy me into your ~/.signature to help me spread! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]