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  4. Latex - A new (Exciting???) article series [modified]

Latex - A new (Exciting???) article series [modified]

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  • M Maximilien

    Never forget : if it ain't broken don't fix it.


    Maximilien Lincourt Your Head A Splode - Strong Bad

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    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    Well, then, I bless you with the Great Osmosian Blessing: "May God give you exactly what you're asking for."

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      Well, then, I bless you with the Great Osmosian Blessing: "May God give you exactly what you're asking for."

      T Offline
      T Offline
      Tal Even Tov
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      OK guys, sheesh :) OK, if you were to compare typesetting with Latex to creating an HTML page: You have plenty wysiwyg editors for creating web pages in HTML. So much so that anybody can put together a web page without knowing a stitch of HTML. However, if you want to then add more complex features using javascript, you wouldn't get very far without knowing HTML. If you wanted to change a picture every 3 seconds (for example), you would struggle. Similarly, typesetting can be done with any wysiwyg editor (free or not, makes no difference). If, however, you wanted to change/add something that the wysiwyg editor did not support you would either struggle or be unable to. You may or may not agree with the idea of scripting a document but whether you like it or not, Latex is used worldwide, mostly by academic institutes and research organisations (even Google). Almost every faculty, school and deparment at my university offers a course in Latex. In our School of Computer Science, it is the first course required for the undergraduate degree. The purpose of this article series would be to teach Latex from the ground up (as you would with HTML, say). It may seem difficult for some to understand the need for Latex but coming from an academic and research background, I couldn't get by without it.


      The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

      1 1 Reply Last reply
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      • T Tal Even Tov

        Hi all, I just wanted to ask you all about whether or not putting together a series of articles on Latex would be wanted. Latex is a scripting language used for generating high quality, standardized documents. It's focus is on typesetting the infamously difficult subjects such as complex mathematics for engineering and computer science. Latex is a standard in most tertiary education institutes and is used by scientists throughout the world. It is widely available for all platforms. Latex can be quite difficult for newbies and a series of articles would be valuable for those who want to use it. Please, if anyone wants this series please reply. Thanks -- modified at 4:41 Saturday 9th December, 2006

        The best times in life are the ones that you can't remember!!!

        T Offline
        T Offline
        Tal Even Tov
        wrote on last edited by
        #17

        OK, new question. If I were to write this article series, inwhich category should it be placed?


        The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

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        • T Tal Even Tov

          OK guys, sheesh :) OK, if you were to compare typesetting with Latex to creating an HTML page: You have plenty wysiwyg editors for creating web pages in HTML. So much so that anybody can put together a web page without knowing a stitch of HTML. However, if you want to then add more complex features using javascript, you wouldn't get very far without knowing HTML. If you wanted to change a picture every 3 seconds (for example), you would struggle. Similarly, typesetting can be done with any wysiwyg editor (free or not, makes no difference). If, however, you wanted to change/add something that the wysiwyg editor did not support you would either struggle or be unable to. You may or may not agree with the idea of scripting a document but whether you like it or not, Latex is used worldwide, mostly by academic institutes and research organisations (even Google). Almost every faculty, school and deparment at my university offers a course in Latex. In our School of Computer Science, it is the first course required for the undergraduate degree. The purpose of this article series would be to teach Latex from the ground up (as you would with HTML, say). It may seem difficult for some to understand the need for Latex but coming from an academic and research background, I couldn't get by without it.


          The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

          1 Offline
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          123 0
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          Tal Even-Tov wrote:

          In our School of Computer Science, it is the first course required for the undergraduate degree.

          And that seems reasonable to you?

          Tal Even-Tov wrote:

          ...coming from an academic and research background, I couldn't get by without it.

          Which, at least from my point of view, is very curious. How did Einstein manage? Newton? da Vinci? Euclid? for that matter, Moses? Please give me examples of the kinds of thoughts that can be easily and effectively expressed using Latex, that cannot be as easily or as effectively expressed using an appropriate wysiwyg editor, and that would therefore make an author attempting to express those thoughts unable to "get by without it".

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            Tal Even-Tov wrote:

            In our School of Computer Science, it is the first course required for the undergraduate degree.

            And that seems reasonable to you?

            Tal Even-Tov wrote:

            ...coming from an academic and research background, I couldn't get by without it.

            Which, at least from my point of view, is very curious. How did Einstein manage? Newton? da Vinci? Euclid? for that matter, Moses? Please give me examples of the kinds of thoughts that can be easily and effectively expressed using Latex, that cannot be as easily or as effectively expressed using an appropriate wysiwyg editor, and that would therefore make an author attempting to express those thoughts unable to "get by without it".

            T Offline
            T Offline
            Tal Even Tov
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            Our courses are of the very theoretical type and often require our students to perform mathematical calculations, make observations and present those back to us. While it is theoretically unecessary for first years, it becomes quite necessary in the postgraduate degrees and since we hope that at least some of our students will make it that far, we decided to get them used to Latex.

            The Grand Negus wrote:

            How did Einstein manage? Newton? da Vinci? Euclid?

            Academic research, these days, has conformed to a standard in terms of reporting the results of the research. All major journals (ACM, IEEE, CSJSA, etc) require submitted documents to be typeset in Latex. If they are not then they don't even look at the documents.

            The Grand Negus wrote:

            Please give me examples of the kinds of thoughts that can be easily and effectively expressed using Latex

            In my area of research (Computational Molecular Biology, Pattern Recognition and Image/Signal Processing) I sometimes have to present work that requires complex statistical results and modeling data. While there are wysiwyg editors that can typeset this, Latex is the only one that has become a worldwide standard specifically designed for typesetting this.


            The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

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            • T Tal Even Tov

              Our courses are of the very theoretical type and often require our students to perform mathematical calculations, make observations and present those back to us. While it is theoretically unecessary for first years, it becomes quite necessary in the postgraduate degrees and since we hope that at least some of our students will make it that far, we decided to get them used to Latex.

              The Grand Negus wrote:

              How did Einstein manage? Newton? da Vinci? Euclid?

              Academic research, these days, has conformed to a standard in terms of reporting the results of the research. All major journals (ACM, IEEE, CSJSA, etc) require submitted documents to be typeset in Latex. If they are not then they don't even look at the documents.

              The Grand Negus wrote:

              Please give me examples of the kinds of thoughts that can be easily and effectively expressed using Latex

              In my area of research (Computational Molecular Biology, Pattern Recognition and Image/Signal Processing) I sometimes have to present work that requires complex statistical results and modeling data. While there are wysiwyg editors that can typeset this, Latex is the only one that has become a worldwide standard specifically designed for typesetting this.


              The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

              J Offline
              J Offline
              J4amieC
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              It doesnt matter how many times you put forward your eloquent and well-informed (not to mention educated) oppinion, the Grand Nag-us will insist that he is right and the whole world is doing it wrong. Give up while you have some sanity.

              --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

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              • T Tal Even Tov

                OK, new question. If I were to write this article series, inwhich category should it be placed?


                The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

                J Offline
                J Offline
                J4amieC
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                I doubt it fits well into any category on Codeproject - as CP is pretty much dedicated to .NET/VS with some other MS centric stuff thrown in for good measure. That is not to say that you shouldnt write an article on something that you obviously have knowledge and experience of - just that maybe CP isnt the best place for it. Of course, I dont work for CP so I dont make the decisions. If you write your articles and send them in we'll all see what happens.

                --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

                T 1 Reply Last reply
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                • 1 123 0

                  Well, then, I bless you with the Great Osmosian Blessing: "May God give you exactly what you're asking for."

                  T Offline
                  T Offline
                  toxcct
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  The Grand Negus wrote:

                  Well, then, I bless you with the Great Osmosian Blessing: "May God give you exactly what you're asking for."

                  F*ck Off. That's mine :cool:


                  Don't know where to start ?
                  Refer the Forums Guidelines and ask a friend

                  [VisualCalc 3.0][Flags Beginner's Guide]

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                  • T Tal Even Tov

                    Our courses are of the very theoretical type and often require our students to perform mathematical calculations, make observations and present those back to us. While it is theoretically unecessary for first years, it becomes quite necessary in the postgraduate degrees and since we hope that at least some of our students will make it that far, we decided to get them used to Latex.

                    The Grand Negus wrote:

                    How did Einstein manage? Newton? da Vinci? Euclid?

                    Academic research, these days, has conformed to a standard in terms of reporting the results of the research. All major journals (ACM, IEEE, CSJSA, etc) require submitted documents to be typeset in Latex. If they are not then they don't even look at the documents.

                    The Grand Negus wrote:

                    Please give me examples of the kinds of thoughts that can be easily and effectively expressed using Latex

                    In my area of research (Computational Molecular Biology, Pattern Recognition and Image/Signal Processing) I sometimes have to present work that requires complex statistical results and modeling data. While there are wysiwyg editors that can typeset this, Latex is the only one that has become a worldwide standard specifically designed for typesetting this.


                    The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

                    1 Offline
                    1 Offline
                    123 0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    Tal Even-Tov wrote:

                    While it is theoretically unecessary for first years, it becomes quite necessary in the postgraduate degrees and since we hope that at least some of our students will make it that far, we decided to get them used to Latex.

                    In other words, "We require something in the first year that might be necessary - for a select few - several years later." Excuse the over-use of italics but I was trying to highlight the errors in your thinking - and it turned out to be almost the entire thought! This requirement seems reasonable to you? C'mon. I know you've got a vested interest in the thing, but be reasonable, man! Teaching students things they will probably never need and that they won't productively use in the short term is exactly what's wrong with the whole educational system!

                    Tal Even-Tov wrote:

                    Academic research, these days, has conformed to a standard in terms of reporting the results of the research. All major journals (ACM, IEEE, CSJSA, etc) require submitted documents to be typeset in Latex. If they are not then they don't even look at the documents.

                    And that seems reasonable to you? It's the journal's business to typeset things, not the author's. Meaningful submissions scribbled on a napkin should be acceptable - otherwise, we might miss something really important from somewhere "outside the box". It's just plain wrong to burden genius with bureaucracy. But even so. Let - no encourage - the author to type it up wysiwyg and let some program generate the Latex. Nobody is fool enough to hand-code a WORD document file because submissions are required in that format; why would they? Your argument here is essentially, "The powers that be are insisting on, and sustaining, an ineffective and unnecessarily complex way of doing things".

                    Tal Even-Tov wrote:

                    While there are wysiwyg editors that can typeset this, Latex is the only one that has become a worldwide standard specifically designed for typesetting this.

                    Same answer as above - use a wysiwyg editor and generate the Latex. Why burden an author with such unnecessary complexity and distracting indirectness? Where is the benefit? the benefit?

                    T 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • J J4amieC

                      I doubt it fits well into any category on Codeproject - as CP is pretty much dedicated to .NET/VS with some other MS centric stuff thrown in for good measure. That is not to say that you shouldnt write an article on something that you obviously have knowledge and experience of - just that maybe CP isnt the best place for it. Of course, I dont work for CP so I dont make the decisions. If you write your articles and send them in we'll all see what happens.

                      --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

                      T Offline
                      T Offline
                      Tal Even Tov
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      Thanks. You are probably one of the only people in the forums that can give a good, straight answer without all the extra BS. Yeah, perhaps CP is not the best place for these articles. I wasn't sure, hence the original point to this thread. I just thought that since it is a scripting language that maybe it would fit somewhere here. I'm not sure where else I could submit :confused:


                      The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

                      J 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • 1 123 0

                        Tal Even-Tov wrote:

                        While it is theoretically unecessary for first years, it becomes quite necessary in the postgraduate degrees and since we hope that at least some of our students will make it that far, we decided to get them used to Latex.

                        In other words, "We require something in the first year that might be necessary - for a select few - several years later." Excuse the over-use of italics but I was trying to highlight the errors in your thinking - and it turned out to be almost the entire thought! This requirement seems reasonable to you? C'mon. I know you've got a vested interest in the thing, but be reasonable, man! Teaching students things they will probably never need and that they won't productively use in the short term is exactly what's wrong with the whole educational system!

                        Tal Even-Tov wrote:

                        Academic research, these days, has conformed to a standard in terms of reporting the results of the research. All major journals (ACM, IEEE, CSJSA, etc) require submitted documents to be typeset in Latex. If they are not then they don't even look at the documents.

                        And that seems reasonable to you? It's the journal's business to typeset things, not the author's. Meaningful submissions scribbled on a napkin should be acceptable - otherwise, we might miss something really important from somewhere "outside the box". It's just plain wrong to burden genius with bureaucracy. But even so. Let - no encourage - the author to type it up wysiwyg and let some program generate the Latex. Nobody is fool enough to hand-code a WORD document file because submissions are required in that format; why would they? Your argument here is essentially, "The powers that be are insisting on, and sustaining, an ineffective and unnecessarily complex way of doing things".

                        Tal Even-Tov wrote:

                        While there are wysiwyg editors that can typeset this, Latex is the only one that has become a worldwide standard specifically designed for typesetting this.

                        Same answer as above - use a wysiwyg editor and generate the Latex. Why burden an author with such unnecessary complexity and distracting indirectness? Where is the benefit? the benefit?

                        T Offline
                        T Offline
                        Tal Even Tov
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #25

                        I can only assume by your lengthy argument that you have never performed any worthwhile research (and if you have) never had it published.

                        The Grand Negus wrote:

                        And that seems reasonable to you? It's the journal's business to typeset things, not the author's. Meaningful submissions scribbled on a napkin should be acceptable - otherwise, we might miss something really important from somewhere "outside the box". It's just plain wrong to burden genius with bureaucracy.

                        Journals like ACM receive thousands of papers and articles for publishing and so it is unreasonable to request them to typeset it for you. If you had to submit some report to your boss you wouldn't submit it via napkin! You have a point in the fact that having to typeset your work yourself is cumbersome but if it is your work, you have a responsibility to typeset it yourself. The general consensus ammong ALL researchers today is that presenting your work is just as important as doing the work. If you have put all this effort into discovering something new but cannot communicate it effectively then there is no point in even researching in the first place. Latex has it's place in the world (whether you like it or not) and yes I do have a vested intrest in it as do at least a million other people around the world.


                        The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

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                        • T Tal Even Tov

                          Hi all, I just wanted to ask you all about whether or not putting together a series of articles on Latex would be wanted. Latex is a scripting language used for generating high quality, standardized documents. It's focus is on typesetting the infamously difficult subjects such as complex mathematics for engineering and computer science. Latex is a standard in most tertiary education institutes and is used by scientists throughout the world. It is widely available for all platforms. Latex can be quite difficult for newbies and a series of articles would be valuable for those who want to use it. Please, if anyone wants this series please reply. Thanks -- modified at 4:41 Saturday 9th December, 2006

                          The best times in life are the ones that you can't remember!!!

                          T Offline
                          T Offline
                          Tal Even Tov
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #26

                          Thanks to most of you for communicating on this thread. CodeProject has advised me that, currently, there is no place (category) for the proposed article series. However, they will be adding a category to accommodate articles like these. Thanks CP :-D They also advised me to begin the article series. Thanks all for your input. I will also include (somewhere) in the article series about using wysiwyg editors that use Latex. Since this brings out heated debates I thought it better to cover both sides of the coin. Thanks and I'll check you guys around CP. :cool:


                          The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

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                          0
                          • T Tal Even Tov

                            Thanks. You are probably one of the only people in the forums that can give a good, straight answer without all the extra BS. Yeah, perhaps CP is not the best place for these articles. I wasn't sure, hence the original point to this thread. I just thought that since it is a scripting language that maybe it would fit somewhere here. I'm not sure where else I could submit :confused:


                            The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            J4amieC
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #27

                            Maybe one of the scientific journals would be interested in running a series of beginner articles on LaTeX? Also, Im sure there will be many websites dedicated to scientific research and documentation!

                            --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

                            T 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • J J4amieC

                              Maybe one of the scientific journals would be interested in running a series of beginner articles on LaTeX? Also, Im sure there will be many websites dedicated to scientific research and documentation!

                              --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

                              T Offline
                              T Offline
                              Tal Even Tov
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #28

                              Unfortunately, most scientific journals target people that already know Latex. I am trying to find an "untapped audience". CP has told me that because it is a scripting language, they will accomodate the article series. So I will publish it here and see what the response is. I am only trying to pass my knowledge around.


                              The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

                              J 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • T Tal Even Tov

                                Unfortunately, most scientific journals target people that already know Latex. I am trying to find an "untapped audience". CP has told me that because it is a scripting language, they will accomodate the article series. So I will publish it here and see what the response is. I am only trying to pass my knowledge around.


                                The best times in life are the ones you can't remember!!!

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                J4amieC
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #29

                                Good on you!!

                                --- How to get answers to your questions[^]

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                                • T Tal Even Tov

                                  Hi all, I just wanted to ask you all about whether or not putting together a series of articles on Latex would be wanted. Latex is a scripting language used for generating high quality, standardized documents. It's focus is on typesetting the infamously difficult subjects such as complex mathematics for engineering and computer science. Latex is a standard in most tertiary education institutes and is used by scientists throughout the world. It is widely available for all platforms. Latex can be quite difficult for newbies and a series of articles would be valuable for those who want to use it. Please, if anyone wants this series please reply. Thanks -- modified at 4:41 Saturday 9th December, 2006

                                  The best times in life are the ones that you can't remember!!!

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Jeffrey Walton
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #30

                                  > series of articles on Latex would be wanted. Of course! Jeff

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