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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: tlug: Office suite for use under Linux
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: tlug: Office suite for use under Linux
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
- Date: Tue, 21 Apr 1998 15:52:26 +0900 (JST)
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>>>>> "jb" == Jonathan Byrne <jpmag@example.com> writes: jb> Well, yes and no. Any major word processor today offers the jb> ability to have different style formats for different jb> sections, so you just choose the one you want, much like doing jb> it manually in TeX. This is fine, of course. As a matter of taste, I like seeing the logical divisions, ie, I dislike WYSIWYG on principle. One reason why I like LaTeX and higher level additions, and SGML, is that by adding more abstraction you can achieve "What You See Is The Structure Of Your Thought", ie, WYSITSOYT, without annoying details. The only universal advantage that has over WYSIWYG, of course, is the number of letters in the acronym is greater. But I _like_ it. jb> If I'm writing a book (not something most people do very jb> often), I can set up style sheets for the various parts, type jb> it, and forget it. The sytle sheet will take care of the jb> formatting automatically. I will admit to having never jb> bothered doing any but the most basic style sheets, but they jb> were essentially point and click. I'm not sure how long it jb> would take to do a more complex one, but in the worst case jb> imaginable, it could take no longer than learning to do it in jb> TeX. You _can_ set up style sheets, basic ones are faster than learning TeX macros or LaTeX commands and parameters, but doing a complex one is much harder than doing it in TeX because the point'n'click mechanism makes it hard to take care of exceptions, like too long line length and so on. As time goes on, that will improve, but for the moment TeX is much better. This is important because it encourages the user to go back and change the fonts or whatever, and ignore the style sheet. It's really hard to tinker locally with a TeX command; this encourages the writer to go back and fix the original definition. I like that focus. I think text formatting languages emphasize the reader; high-end word-processors the writer's artistic creativity. What I would like to see is a Tsukuba-dai mandated thesis style sheet that Word would _enforce_. Then the last objection is moot. But I don't really see this happening. If you need to read long documents in a foreign language, then a good style sheet really helps. Word strongly encourages ad hoc design. That is only slightly edged out by the horrors of block copy. It's bad enough to read an illiterate abstract, but then you have to read the same words again in the intro, body, and conclusion. This has nothing to do with either writing or reading in a foreign language, of course. However, the toys that Word provides do tend to encourage spending time on exciting visual presentation that would be better spent editing the text. Manuscripts written in TeX tend to be more uniform in style, have bland visual presentation, and better thought out text. Not to mention properly formatted equations. Guess which sensei likes? :-) As for ease of use, [X]Emacs + AUC-TeX + LaTeX solves that in the long run. Word has it all over TeX for "sit down and be productive," of course. I can't speak for Lyx, but the idea is excellent. jb> There is very little that can be done under TeX today that jb> cannot be done with similar or equal quality by a high-end jb> word processor (and I'm not just talking Mac, Windows, OS/2 jb> here; Applix Words rocks, and it runs on Linux :-) ). Circular paragraphs? Or any other algorithmic shape you happen to like. :-) TeX is Turing complete. (Of course, the recent rash of Word viruses is proof that so is Word, I guess. Never heard of a TeX virus. Have you? :-) jb> One of the few areas where this may not be true (or may; it's jb> something I have no experience with) is typesetting jb> mathematics. While MS Word's equation editor is apparently jb> suitable for most equations, this may be an area in which jb> things like TeX still excel. But as I say, I have no jb> experience in that area, and could be completely wrong, and MS jb> equation editor could be utterly horrible; perhaps someone who jb> does know about it can comment on this :-) MS's equation editor as of two years ago knew very little about mathematics, and it is still very easy (as of the Jan 1998 round of Master's theses in my department) for users to get it to produce really ugly math. Naive users also tend to know words like "subset" or "in", and thus tend to select the correct symbol when using TeX, where they are invoked by name. They often make mistakes (sometimes intentionally - "well, they look the same to me and that one's prettier") in selecting from a palette. But this is getting to be a moot point, as Mathematica knows how to produce both good looking TeX and good looking Word, and many students are using Mathematica because it improves the accuracy of their symbolic computations. This still has its disadvantages for professionals, who write variations on a theme, because Mathematica's editor stinks, and the LaTeX it produces can't be edited. (It's like the HTML tables produced by most HTML assistant-type applications.) But we can expect that in the long run equations will normally be produced by Mathematica or similar applications, and the capabilities of Word and LaTeX will be equally moot. --------------------------------------------------------------- Next Nomikai: 15 May Fri, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 Next TLUG Meeting: 13 June Sat, Tokyo Station Yaesu gate 12:30 Featuring Stone and Turnbull on .rpm and .deb packages --------------------------------------------------------------- a word from the sponsor: TWICS - Japan's First Public-Access Internet System www.twics.com info@example.com Tel:03-3351-5977 Fax:03-3353-6096
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