On Wed, Sep 26, 2007 at 10:39:55AM -0700, David Brodbeck wrote: > On Sep 25, 2007, at 7:17 PM, John Hasler wrote: > > >David Brodbeck writes: > >>TeX is awesome for writing books and scientific papers. If you're > >>writing a letter to Grandma, though, OpenOffice is better suited. > > > >Now _that_ sounds like driving a semi truck to the supermarket to > >pick up a > >bottle of milk. > > Depends on your perspective, I guess. It just feels like by the time > I get all the preliminary verbiage TeX needs typed out, I could have > written the whole letter in OO. Also, looking at my copy of 'The Not > So Short Introduction To LaTeX,' it's not clear to me what document > class I'd use. They're all going to be a bit clumsy and > inappropriate. It's not an "article", it's not a "report", and it's > certainly not a "book"... >
Here's my personal letter template. I copy it to the correct file name, edit it, then latex it. The letter text itself is just plain text. Doug. --- \documentclass[letterpaper,12pt]{article} %preamble here \begin{document} % no page number on this first page \thispagestyle{empty} \begin{flushleft} Douglas A. Tutty\\ xxx xxxxxxxxx, RR. x\\ xxxxxx, ON xxx xxx\\ Ph: (xxx) xxx--xxxx\\ Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] \end{flushleft} \noindent \today \bigskip \noindent Dear: \bigskip \begin{flushleft} Yours truly, \vspace{2cm} Douglas A. Tutty. \end{flushleft} \end{document} -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]