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LATEX Line by Line: Tips and Techniques for Document Processing [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 350 pages, kõrgus x laius: 240x184 mm, kaal: 550 g, bibliography, index
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-1993
  • Kirjastus: John Wiley & Sons Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0471934712
  • ISBN-13: 9780471934714
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LATEX Line by Line: Tips and Techniques for Document Processing
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 350 pages, kõrgus x laius: 240x184 mm, kaal: 550 g, bibliography, index
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Jan-1993
  • Kirjastus: John Wiley & Sons Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0471934712
  • ISBN-13: 9780471934714
Teised raamatud teemal:
A guide that can be used as a reference on particular problems by those already proficient with the LaTEX document preparation system, or read cover-to-cover as a tutorial by those encountering the software for the first time. The examples of typesetting can be used as templates by the user to format his or her own material by making only minor adjustments to the commands given. A glossary contains every LaTEX command and also some useful TEX commands. An optional disk is available from the publisher. Comb binding. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.

An easy-to-follow tutorial on the most popular text processing system used in the academic community. Explains formatting fundamentals including more complex techniques for presenting difficult mathematical formulas. Contains templates (most of them also available on disk) to create a variety of documents--from a business letter to a technical report--and introduces some advanced features of LaTeX which can be used to produce a customized document style. Numerous examples, an appendix of mathematical symbols and a glossary of typesetting terms are included.
Preface to the Second Edition vii
Acknowledgements xv
Why Use It?
1(6)
Introduction
1(1)
Quality of Output
1(1)
Producing Mathematical Formulas
2(1)
Producing Unusual Material
3(1)
Decreasing Drudgery
4(3)
Getting Started
7(14)
Introduction
7(2)
Latex Commands
9(3)
General Structure of an Input File
12(2)
Modes
14(2)
Altering the Size of the Output Page
16(1)
Defining your own Commands
16(1)
Coping with Errors
17(4)
Fancy Prose
21(10)
Accents and Non-English Letters
21(1)
Type-Changing Declarations and Commands
22(3)
Declarations that Change the Size of Type
25(1)
Punctuation Marks
26(3)
Footnotes
29(2)
List-like Environments
31(18)
Introduction
31(1)
The quote Environment
31(1)
The quotation Environment
32(1)
The verse Environment
33(1)
The flushright, center and flushleft Environments
34(1)
The itemize Environment
35(1)
The Enumerate Environment
36(2)
The description Environment
38(1)
The thebibliography Environment
39(2)
The newtheorem Command
41(3)
The list and trivlist Environments
44(2)
Environment Definition
46(3)
Boxes and Tables
49(18)
Boxes
49(2)
The minipage Environment and \parbox
51(1)
The tabular Environment
52(6)
Floats
58(5)
The tabbing Environment
63(2)
The verbatim Environment
65(2)
Making Bibliographies
67(12)
Introduction
67(1)
The Structure of a bib File
67(6)
Authors, Titles and Abbreviations
73(2)
Producing the Bibliography
75(2)
The harvard Package
77(2)
Making Indexes
79(4)
The Hard Way
79(1)
The Easy Way
80(2)
Some Glossary Commands
82(1)
Standard Document Classes
83(18)
The article Document Class
83(6)
The report Document Class
89(5)
The book Document Class
94(1)
The letter Document Class
95(3)
The Slides Document Class
98(3)
Basic Mathematical Formatting
101(16)
Introduction
101(1)
Decorating Expressions
102(5)
Framing Formulas
107(1)
Delimiters
108(4)
Spacing in Mathematical Formulas
112(5)
More Mathematical Formatting
117(12)
The array Environment
117(8)
Equation Arrays
125(4)
Introducing AMS-LATEX
129(14)
Some Deficiencies of Basic LATEX
129(1)
The align and align* Environments
130(3)
Non-numerical Labels
133(1)
Explanatory Notes in Aligned Equations
134(1)
Definition by Cases
135(1)
Fraction-like Structures
136(2)
Commutative Diagrams
138(5)
Simple Diagrams
143(14)
Introduction
143(4)
Straight Lines
147(1)
Disks and Circles
148(2)
Arrows and Ovals
150(2)
Saving and Reusing Boxes
152(2)
Contract Bridge Diagrams
154(1)
Bezier Curves
155(2)
A Mathematical Symbols 157(14)
Introduction
157(1)
Ordinary Symbols
157(5)
Unary Operators
162(2)
Binary Operators
164(1)
Binary Relation Symbols
165(4)
Opening and Closing Symbols
169(1)
Punctuation Symbols
170(1)
B Useful Notions 171(6)
Lengths and Length Parameters
171(2)
Environments
173(1)
Counters and Current \ref Values
173(1)
Moving Arguments and Fragile Commands
174(3)
C Glossary 177(92)
D When Things go Wrong 269(4)
Introduction
269(1)
LATEX Error Messages
269(1)
TEX Error Messages
270(1)
LATEX Warning Messages
271(1)
TEX Warning Messages
271(1)
When all else Fails
272(1)
E Differences 273(6)
Introduction
273(1)
Type-changing Declaration
274(1)
Increased Functionality
275(1)
Entirely New Commands
276(3)
Bibliography 279(4)
Index 283