A Beginner’s Book of TEX
Traducere de Silvio Levy Cuvânt înainte de D. Foata Autor Raymond Seroulen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 feb 1995
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780387975627
ISBN-10: 0387975624
Pagini: 284
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 1991. Corr. 3rd printing 1995
Editura: Springer
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States
ISBN-10: 0387975624
Pagini: 284
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 1991. Corr. 3rd printing 1995
Editura: Springer
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States
Public țintă
Professional/practitionerDescriere
The
last
two
decades
have
witnessed
a
revolution
in
the
realm
of
typography,
with
the
virtual
disappearance
of
hot-lead
typesetting
in
favor
of
the
so-called
digital
typesetting.
The
principle
behind
the
new
technology
is
simple:
imagine
a
very
fine
mesh
superimposed
on
a
sheet
of
paper.
Digital
typesetting
consists
in
darkening
the
appropriate
pixels
(tiny
squares)
of
this
mesh,
in
patterns
corresponding
to
each
character
and
symbol
of
the
text
being
set.
The
actual
darkening
is
done
by
some
printing
device,
say
a
laser
printer
or
phototypesetter,
which
must
be
told
exactly
where
the
ink
should
go.
Since
the
mesh
is
very
fine-the
dashes
surrounding
this
sentence
are
some
six
pixels
thick,
and
more
than
200
pixels
long-the
printer
can
only
be
controlled
by
a
computer
program,
which
takes
a
"high-level"
description
of
the
page
in
terms
of
text,
fonts,
and
formatting
commands,
and
digests
all
of
that
into
"low-level"
commands
for
the
printer.
TEX
is
such
a
program,
created
by
Donald
E.
Knuth,
a
computer
scientist
at
Stanford
University.
Cuprins
1:
What
is
TEX.-
1.1
The
birth
of
TEX.-
1.2
How
TEX
works.-
1.3
The
good
news
and
bad
news
about
TEX.-
1.4
TEX
who
and
what
for?.-
1.5
TEX
processing:
an
overview.-
1.6
Looking
ahead.-
1.7
Creating
a
master
file.-
1.8
Error
messages.-
2:
The
characters
of
TEX.-
2.1
Characters
that
are
special
to
TEX.-
2.2
Quotes.-
2.3
Ligatures
and
special
characters.-
2.4
Accents.-
2.5
Two
exercises.-
3:
Groups
and
modes.-
3.1
Groups.-
3.2
Modes.-
3.3
For
the
aspiring
wizard.-
4:
The
fonts
TEX
uses.-
4.1
TEX’s
fonts.-
4.2
Preloaded
fonts.-
4.3
Loading
other
fonts.-
4.4
A
cornucopia
of
fonts.-
4.5
Scaling
of
fonts.-
4.6
Global
scaling.-
4.7
For
the
aspiring
wizard.-
4.8
Exercise.-
5:
Spacing,
glue
and
springs.-
5.1
Horizontal
spacing.-
5.2
Vertical
spacing.-
5.3
Glue,
or,
spaces
that
stretch
and
shrink.-
5.4
Springs.-
5.5
Spacing
and
breaks.-
5.6
Summaryof
basic
spacing
commands.-
5.7
Spacing
between
paragraphs.-
5.8
More
spring
like
creatures.-
5.9
Leaders
in
their
full
glory.-
5.10
For
the
experienced
user.-
5.11
Examples.-
6:
Paragraphs.-
6.1
Beginning
and
ending
a
paragraph.-
6.2
What’s
in
a
paragraph?.-
6.3
Automatic
indentation.-
6.4
Obeying
lines.-
6.5
Left
and
right
margins.-
6.6
Ragged
margins.-
6.7
Quotations.-
6.8
Centering
text.-
6.9
Series
of
items.-
6.10
More
on
hanging
indentation.-
6.11
Paragraphs
with
fancy
shapes.-
6.12
Footnotes.-
6.13
Twonew
macros
for
the
aspiring
wizard.-
7:
Page
layout.-
7.1
Page
layout
in
plain
TEX.-
7.2
A
more
elaborate
layout.-
7.3
The
title
page.-
7.4
Starting
a
fresh
page
and
leaving
a
blank
page.-
7.5
Placing
a
title.-
7.6
Choosing
line
and
page
breaks
by
hand.-
7.7
Floats.-
7.8
A
complete
example.-
7.9
Penalties:
or,
the
carrot
and
the
stick.-
8:
Boxes.-
8.1
What
is
a
box?.-
8.2
Putting
boxes
together.-
8.3
What
goes
in
a
box?.-
8.4
Creating
a
box:
summary.-
8.5
Storing
a
box.-
8.6
The
baseline.-
8.7
The
dimensionsof
a
box.-
8.8
Some
practical
situations.-
8.9
Spacing
between
boxes.-
8.10
Rules.-
8.11
More
practical
examples.-
8.12
For
the
a
spiring
wizard.-
9:
Alignments.-
9.1
The
preamble,
a.k.a.
recipe.-
9.2
Simple
alignments.-
9.3
Somepractical
suggestions.-
9.4
Treating
special
cases.-
9.5
Excessivelywide
entries.-
9.6
Inserting
material
betweenrows.-
9.7
Combining
columns.-
9.8
Aligningdigits.-
9.9
Horizontal
rules
and
spacing.-
9.10
Vertical
rules.-
9.11
Braces
and
tables.-
9.12
Fixing
the
width
of
an
alignment.-
9.13
Vertical
alignments.-
10:
Tabbing.-
10.1
Setting
tabs.-
10.2
Centering.-
10.3
Choosing
column
widths.-
10.4
Equally
spaced
tabs.-
10.5
Clearing
tabs.-
10.6
Tabs
and
rules.-
10.7
Tabs
and
springs.-
10.8
Typesetting
code.-
10.9
Tabs
and
alignments:
a
comparison.-
11:
Typesetting
mathematics.-
11.1
Generalities.-
11.2
Math
symbols.-
11.3
Fonts
in
math
mode.-
11.4
Subscripts
and
superscripts.-
11.5
Accents.-
11.6
Spacing
in
math
mode.-
11.7
The
four
styles.-
11.8
Function
names.-
11.9
Fractions.-
11.10
Large
operators
and
limits.-
11.11
Radicals.-
11.12
Horizontally
extensible
symbols.-
11.13
Vertically
extensible
symbols.-
11.14
Stacking
up
symbols.-
11.15
Combining
relations.-
11.16
More
custom-made
symbols:
limits.-
11.17
Phantoms.-
11.18
Displaying
several
formulas.-
11.19
Aligning
several
formulas.-
11.20
Labeling
formulas.-
11.21
Matrices.-
11.22
Adjusting
the
spacing.-
11.23
Ellipses.-
11.24
Diagrams.-
12:
TEX
Programming.-
12.1
Generalities.-
12.2
Abbreviations
and
clones.-
12.3
Macros
with
arguments.-
12.4
Fine
points
of
macro
syntax.-
12.5
Category
codes.-
12.6
Active
characters.-
12.7
How
TEX
reads
and
stores
your
text.-
12.8
Registers.-
12.9
Conditionals.-
12.10
For
the
aspiring
wizard.-
13:
Dictionary
and
Index.