Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!uunet!ogicse!ucsd!hub.ucsb.edu!henri!doner From: doner@henri.ucsb.edu (John Doner) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.apps Subject: Re: Mathematical & scientific characters. Message-ID: <10981@hub.ucsb.edu> Date: 2 May 91 16:36:20 GMT References: <19851@slice.ooc.uva.nl> Sender: news@hub.ucsb.edu Reply-To: doner@henri.UUCP (John Doner) Organization: University of California, Santa Barbara Lines: 41 In article <19851@slice.ooc.uva.nl> morgan@ooc.uva.nl (Chris Morgan/RIKS) writes: >Hi all, > >I'm currently doing battle with one of the UNIX buffs here who insists >that he can produce higher quality output for his technical journal >papers using his UNIX box and TROFF/NROFF etc,. than with my Macs. > >I have seen his output which is indeed of a high quality - credit >where credit is due (#$@*&%#@$). He insists that he cannot produce >output of similar quality on the Mac because - to use his words - there >is no way to control accurate line, character paragraph spacing etc., and >you cannot control accurately the thickness of the characters etc. Well, >I have to agree with him where MS-Word is concerened. BUT I have recently >'discovered' the wonderes of PageMaker 4.0. With PagaMaker, it took me about >an hour of trial and error before I could ACCURATELY reproduce his style >of output - BUT I did it. > >My only problem now (and its too late for me to back out AND save face >at this time) is reproducing all the mathematical and scientific characters >which he requires. I know there are tricks to do this is MS-Word and I know He's right; troff will do much better than MS Word or some such when it comes to formatting a technical document. He's wrong if he thinks you can't do it on a Mac. The premier system for these purposes is not troff, but TeX. That is available on both Unix systems, Macs, PC's, even Ataris. The Mac has a particularly nice version called Textures, costing about $300, and an almost-as-good public domain (i.e., FREE) version called OzTeX, which you can get via anonymous ftp from midway.uchicago.edu (in pub/OzTeX) My "almost-as-good" refers not to the quality of the output, which is exactly the same, but to user interface features where the commercial product appears to have a slight edge. TeX itself is a freely available typesetting language and system designed by Professor Donald Knuth of the Computer Science Department at Stanford. It is widely used; we use it for all our technical typing here in the UCSB Math. Dept.; a company I consult for uses it for all their technical reports, and so on. Forget about troff. John E. Doner doner@henri.ucsb.edu (805)893-3941 Dept. Mathematics, UCSB, Santa Barbara, CA 93106