A Complete Tugboat Bibliography

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Complete Tugboat Bibliography A Complete TUGboat Bibliography Nelson H. F. Beebe University of Utah Department of Mathematics, 110 LCB 155 S 1400 E RM 233 Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0090 USA Tel: +1 801 581 5254 FAX: +1 801 585 1640, +1 801 581 4148 E-mail: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] (Internet) WWW URL: http://www.math.utah.edu/˜beebe/ 21 August 2021 Version 4.05 Abstract This bibliography summarizes the contents of the TEX User Group journal, TUGboat. It is produced semiautomatically by an awk program from the tables- of-contents files (tb*.cnt) released periodically by the journal editors, or since 2017 (volume 38), from journal HTML pages. Hand editing then supplies final tweaks. Title word cross-reference #10 [1422]. #12 [1459]. #13 [1534]. #15 [1588]. #7 [1335]. #8 [1335]. #9 [1422]. 3 [4501, 2831, 3022]. 6 [3219]. @ [2862]. ,! [1421]. Λ [2732]. Ω [1757, 1879, 1933, 1939]. Ω2 [3070, 3071]. " [1758, 2016]. *.bib [4140]. -.02emCAD [3304]. -.03em [3361]. -.03emenbergg [3778, 3997]. -.15em [470]. -.1em [4176, 2800]. -.1emAMS [2704]. -.1emVDU [583]. -1pt [3848, 2658]. -Babel [1879]. -based [2826]. -TEX [1758, 2016]. 1 2 .02emCAD [3304]. .03em [3361]. .03emenbergg [3778, 3997]. .05em [2704]. .05em- [2704]. .05em`ı [2959]. .06em [4215]. .06em-foundry [4215]. .15em [470]. .1em [4176, 2800, 2782]. .1em-TEX [2782]. .1emAMS [2704]. .1emVDU [583]. .dtx [3297]. .dvi [941, 1962]. .ins [3297]. 0.4 [3601]. 0.60 [3520]. 0.8 — Prologue [4279]. 0.90 [4135, 4138]. 0.999 [1876]. 000 [1000]. 1 [4260, 4476, 944, 3108, 3182, 3307, 3310, 3565, 3605, 3644, 3683, 3719, 3780, 3812, 3928, 4149, 1851, 3167, 3239, 1811, 4621, 2824, 2696, 3167]. 1.0 [1744]. 1.1 [583]. 1.3 [2738]. 1.3 — the [1932]. 1.40 [3257]. 1.750 [3622]. 1/2011 [3605, 3644]. 1/2012 [3719]. 1/2013 [3812]. 1/2014 [3928]. 1/2015 [4031]. 1/2016 [4149]. 1/2017 [4260]. 1/2018 [4380]. 1/2019 [4476]. 1/2021 [4697]. 10 [3606]. 10/20 [72]. 100 [37]. 1000 [198]. 101 [2168]. 11 [1422]. 11#4 [1407]. 11.8MB [4009]. 11/12th [1778]. 1100 [76]. 12 [3681, 1420]. 1200 [219]. 12th [1778]. 13 [3744]. 130 [196]. 14 [2591, 3001, 3779, 1671]. 1400-page [1110]. 15 [1184, 3001, 3856]. 158 [2126]. 15th [593, 655, 700]. 17 [1714]. 19 [1789, 4576, 4594]. 1980 [6, 20]. 1981 [59, 74]. 1982 [185, 61, 163]. 1983 [226]. 1985 [312, 351, 352, 368, 390]. 1986 [442, 389, 433, 443, 556, 834, 555]. 1987 [552, 663, 665, 666, 522, 593, 655, 700]. 1988 [709, 705, 825, 744, 786]. 1989 [879, 881, 830, 840, 874, 908, 953, 925, 882]. 1990 [1151, 1033, 1146]. 1991 [1192, 1182, 1183, 1193, 1337, 1338, 1401, 1507, 1262, 1184]. 1992 [1339, 1391, 1424, 1460, 1464]. 1993 [1494, 1631]. 1994 [1790, 2098, 1685, 1702, 1778]. 1995 [1768, 1883]. 1996 [1886, 1887, 1918]. 1996 — [1990]. 1996 — Knuth [1989, 2015]. 1997 [1957]. 1998 [2157, 2256]. 1999 [2291, 2375, 2499]. 19th [786]. 1pt [3848, 2658]. 2 [950, 1713, 2866, 2945, 3183, 3383, 3492, 3604, 3855, 586, 2726, 3459, 2530, 630]. 2-dimensional [2066]. 2.0 [1118]. 2.09 [424, 1455]. 2.0—an[1368]. 2.0 — New [4244]. 2.10 [968, 1120]. 2.7.0 [4462]. 2/2013 [3855]. 2/2017 [4306]. 20 [1254, 1912, 3308, 72]. ’2000 [2447, 2472, 2446, 2254, 2430]. 2000 — LATEX [2348]. 2000 — The [2384]. ’2001 [2481, 2435]. ’2002 [2588, 2675]. ’2003 [2590, 2265, 2676, 2903, 2733, 2753, 2723, 2682]. ’2003 — The [2591]. 2004 [2642, 2717, 2719, 2850, 2848]. 2005 [2845, 2712, 3023, 3017, 3018, 2955]. 2005-1 [3004]. 2005-4 [3004]. 2006 [3048, 3010, 3012, 3013, 3052, 3051, 3087]. 2006-1 [3183]. 2006/1 [3182]. 2007 [3193, 3226, 3228, 3074, 3111, 3147, 3182, 3183, 3186, 3194, 3162, 3149, 3331]. 2007-2 [3183]. 2007-3 [3310]. 2007/1 [3182]. 2007/2 [3307]. 2008 [3187, 3216, 3307, 3310, 3315, 3386, 3323]. 2008-1 [3310]. 2008-2 [3386]. 2008-3 [3386]. 2008/1 [3307]. 2008/2 [3383]. 2009 [3349, 3351, 3383, 3428, 3491, 3440]. 2009/2 [3383]. 2009/3 [3428]. 2009/4 [3492]. 2010 [3492, 3563, 3565, 3567, 3602, 3604, 3606, 3519, 3590]. 2010-1 [3565]. 2010-2 [3604]. 2010/2 [3492]. 2010/3 [3567]. 2011 [3605, 3644, 3649, 3682, 3683, 3611]. 2011-1 [3683]. 2012 [3719, 3779, 3780, 3813, 3818]. 2012-1 [3780]. 2013 [3866, 3812, 3855, 3890]. 2014 [3928, 3996, 4030, 4072, 4018]. 2015 [4043, 4044, 4151, 4092, 4093]. 2015/3 [4261]. 2016 3 [4163, 4164, 4149, 4222, 4190, 4166, 4250, 4123, 4124]. 2016/1 [4261]. 2017 [4260, 4273, 4264, 4274, 4305, 4272, 4249, 4295]. 2017/1 [4381]. 2018 [4349, 4385, 4404, 4391, 4374, 4468, 4566, 4393]. 2018/1 [4477]. 2019 [4515, 4488, 4489, 4476, 4490, 4550, 4415, 4447, 4497, 4529, 4482, 4538]. 2019/1 [4580]. 2020 [4592, 4629, 4622, 4563, 4595, 4644, 4567, 4568, 4594, 4586]. 2020/1 [4624]. 2020/3 [4698]. 2021 [4627, 4701]. 20 — TOPS [1254]. 20th [4240, 4307, 4327]. 21 [2307, 2384, 2393, 2436, 3384]. 22nd [2528]. 23 [2601, 3495]. 24 [1998, 749]. 25 [2048, 3602, 2851]. 268 [1513]. 27 [2099, 3718]. 276 [1414]. 29 [2171, 3813]. 290 [1420]. 2nd [2711, 1702]. 3 [1026, 1038, 2053, 3180, 3386, 3428, 3567, 3682, 3996, 4222, 4540, 4649, 4494, 2100]. 3-across [1381]. 3-disk [2443]. 3.0 [1209, 809]. 3/2011 [3682]. 3/2012 [3743]. 3/2014 [3996]. 3/2015 [4071]. 3/2016 [4222]. 3/2017 [4346]. 3/2018 [4406]. 3/2019 [4545]. 3/2020 [4623]. 30 [2233, 3323]. 3033 [31]. 3090 [863]. 31 [3927, 2021]. 31/XI [2021]. 33/34 [2379]. 35/36 [2515]. 355 [2015]. 35mm [430, 1085]. 36 [4009]. 37/38 [2515]. 370 [31, 115]. 370/3033 [31]. 37th [4271]. 386-based [695]. 38th [4271, 4390]. 39/40 [2587]. 39th [4390]. 3D [2895, 2095, 3527]. 3dplot [2577]. 3rd [2125, 3112, 4365]. 3 [1310]. 4 [4261, 1561, 1715, 2049, 2903, 3309, 3442, 3890, 2253, 2742]. 4-volume [1110]. 4/2003 [2903]. 4/2010 [3605, 3644]. 4/2011 [3719, 3778]. 4/2012 [3812]. 4/2013 [3890]. 4/2014 [4031]. 4/2015 [4106]. 4/2016 [4260]. 4/2017 [4380]. 4/2018 [4445]. 4/2019 [4581]. 4/2020 [4697]. 41st [4594]. 425-433 [1686]. 4A [3642]. 4th [2844, 744]. 5 [4577]. 5.0 [870]. 500 [379]. 5th [4255]. 6 [237, 2098]. 6.0 [3205]. 64 [765]. 64-bit [765]. 640 [107]. 690 [4299]. 6th [3888, 666, 694]. 7 [3381, 1384, 2613, 2049]. 7500 [266]. 8 [4657, 4695, 2049, 2130]. 8-bit [1517, 4652]. 80th [4361]. 810 [513]. ’89 [879]. 9 [3563, 2258]. 9#3 [875]. 9211 [584]. ’94 [1689]. ’94 — Announcement [1688]. ’95 [1899, 1883]. ’95—St[1725]. ’96 [1914, 1882]. ’97 [1896]. ’97 — Soliciting [1880]. ’98 [2187, 2145]. ’99 [2309, 2345, 2380]. = [2725, 4028]. A&M [1133, 375]. A-compliant [4065]. A-in-LATEX [1577]. A-R [3433]. A-series [588]. A. [50]. a.k.a [4439]. A/S [37]. a2ac — Font [1810]. A4 [1047]. abaci [3371]. ABC [720]. Abort [4020]. Abrahams [1653, 1333]. abroad [4609]. Absolute [2665]. abstract [1992, 1613]. Abstracts [2686, 2937, 3072, 3106, 3145, 3210, 3274, 3346, 3462, 4515, 4304, 3430, 3534, 4070, 4404, 4622, 4305, 1790, 2702, 2705, 2709, 2688, 2693, 2698, 2966, 3669, 3742, 3887, 3960, 4189, 2325]. academics 4 [3142]. accents [3238, 2694, 2694]. acceptable [2086]. acceptance [624]. accepted [3247]. access [4425, 2691, 640, 4060]. Accessibility [4506]. accessible [4436, 4565]. accidentals [4281]. accommodate [4511]. according [2021]. account [4457]. Accountant [834]. accurate [2894]. Acknowledgement [432, 567, 329]. Acknowledgements [1727]. Acknowledgment [447]. ACM [456, 4179]. Acorn [1250]. Acrobat [2330, 2315, 1829]. AcroDVI [2330]. across [1381, 4465]. AcroTEX [2315]. action [1830]. Active [1536, 1879, 2327]. activities [1150, 3163]. activity [303, 376, 375]. actuarial [4336]. actuarialangle [4336]. actuarialsymbol [4336]. Ada [873]. Adams [2698, 3145]. adapt [1047]. adaptable [534]. adapted [1440, 527, 767, 575]. Adapting [3739, 2797]. Adaptive [1731, 1580]. Addenda [493, 454, 1686]. Addendum [775, 1518]. addicts [2198]. adding [915, 2199]. Addison [3218, 3535, 355, 394, 435, 511, 517]. Addison-Wesley [3218, 3535]. Addison-Wesley — Computers [511]. Addison-Wesley — MicroTEX [355, 394, 435]. Addison-Wesley — TEX [517]. addition [546]. additional [2160, 4378, 1028, 3983]. additions [3944]. Address [3083, 2851, 2852]. Addresses [1697, 842, 890, 932, 1020, 1062, 1140, 1299, 1397, 1435, 1504, 1546, 1573, 1642, 1666, 1698, 1773, 1799, 1823, 1865, 1895, 1956, 1985, 2011, 2036, 2085, 2118, 2144, 2219, 16, 52, 99, 2247, 2276, 2359, 2392, 2417, 2495, 2564, 2644, 137, 160, 187, 223, 255, 287, 401, 445, 484, 519, 566, 622, 675, 712, 758, 797, 325, 366]. adequately [3959]. adjunct [1406]. Administrative [4144]. Adobe [4550, 2690, 1843, 1757, 2544]. Adrian [4084]. Advanced [1967, 3343, 2986, 1735, 1675, 2786, 4131, 1113]. Advances [4180]. Advantages [3529]. adventure [4302, 4604, 629]. Adventures [2163, 4058]. Advertisements [616, 928, 979]. advertisers [617, 672, 1059, 888, 980, 1017, 1057, 1097, 1137, 1190, 1230, 1347, 1376, 1394, 1429, 1466, 1500, 1540, 1566, 1590, 1634, 1662, 1696, 1723, 1772, 1837, 1890, 1923, 1980, 2006, 2025, 2055, 2133, 480, 559, 618, 673, 708, 754, 794, 838]. Advertising [4325]. æsthetically [3847]. aesthetics [208, 1203]. affecting [648]. Africa [1578]. after [3233]. afternoon [598]. again [1879]. against [3470]. age [3526, 3759, 3327]. agendas [3671, 1556]. Agfa [2554]. Agfa/Eaglefeather [2554]. agony [3525]. ahead [1170]. aid [1474]. Aided [1403, 2545]. Akhmadeeva [3346]. al [2705, 3072, 3346, 1675]. al. [2711, 2866, 2945]. Alamos [1830, 761]. Alan [2152]. Alban [2336]. Aldus [3053]. Aleph [2862, 3034]. Alexander [1705]. algebra [2893, 4023]. algorithm [2463, 4569]. Algorithmic [4028]. algorithms [4288]. ALI [2791]. ALI-BABA [2791]. alia [133]. Aligning [3561]. alignment [2578]. Allen [2937, 3210, 4544]. allocation [88]. Allographic [2768]. Almost [3760]. alone [2690, 1840]. along [3125, 4096]. alphabet [2839, 1219, 945, 1218, 2985, 2365, 603, 1116, 1515]. Alphabetgeschichten [3165]. alphabets [4601, 1928, 3628, 2804, 3747]. AlQalam [3091, 3246, 3337]. also [1328, 1420]. alternative [1960, 1945].
Recommended publications
  • Developments in Technical Typesetting: Tex at the End of the Th Century
    A Century of Science Publishing E.H. Fredriksson (Ed.) IOS Press, Chapter Developments in Technical Typesetting: TeX at the End of the th Century Barbara Beeton Editor, TUGboat, the Communications of the TeX Users Group Introduction The composition of mathematical and technical material has traditionally been considered “penalty copy”, because of both the large number of special sym- bols required, and the complicated arrangement of these symbols on the page. While careful exposition has always been a valued skill for the mathematician or scientist, the tools were not available to allow authors to complete the presentation until relatively recently. The machinery has now come together: a desktop or portable computer; a text editor; an input language that is reasonably intuitive to a scientific author; a composition program that “understands” what mathematical notation is supposed to look like; a laser printer with a resolution high enough to print even very small symbols clearly. The composition engine is TeX, by Donald Knuth of Stanford University. This tool, originally developed specifically to pro- duce the second edition of Knuth’s The Art of Computer Programming, Volume , has been adopted by mathematicians, physicists, and other scientists for their own use. A number of scientific and technical publishers accept electronic manuscripts prepared with TeX and insert them directly into their production flow, while other publishers use TeX as a back end, continuing to accept and process copy in the tra- ditional manner. TeX manuscripts are circulated in electronic form by their authors in e-mail and posted into preprint archives on the World Wide Web; they are portable and durable — a new edition of a work need not be typed from scratch, but can be modified from the file of the previous edition.
    [Show full text]
  • DE-Tex-FAQ (Vers. 72
    Fragen und Antworten (FAQ) über das Textsatzsystem TEX und DANTE, Deutschsprachige Anwendervereinigung TEX e.V. Bernd Raichle, Rolf Niepraschk und Thomas Hafner Version 72 vom September 2003 Dieser Text enthält häufig gestellte Fragen und passende Antworten zum Textsatzsy- stem TEX und zu DANTE e.V. Er kann über beliebige Medien frei verteilt werden, solange er unverändert bleibt (in- klusive dieses Hinweises). Die Autoren bitten bei Verteilung über gedruckte Medien, über Datenträger wie CD-ROM u. ä. um Zusendung von mindestens drei Belegexem- plaren. Anregungen, Ergänzungen, Kommentare und Bemerkungen zur FAQ senden Sie bit- te per E-Mail an [email protected] 1 Inhalt Inhalt 1 Allgemeines 5 1.1 Über diese FAQ . 5 1.2 CTAN, das ‚Comprehensive TEX Archive Network‘ . 8 1.3 Newsgroups und Diskussionslisten . 10 2 Anwendervereinigungen, Tagungen, Literatur 17 2.1 DANTE e.V. 17 2.2 Anwendervereinigungen . 19 2.3 Tagungen »geändert« .................................... 21 2.4 Literatur »geändert« .................................... 22 3 Textsatzsystem TEX – Übersicht 32 3.1 Grundlegendes . 32 3.2 Welche TEX-Formate gibt es? Was ist LATEX? . 38 3.3 Welche TEX-Weiterentwicklungen gibt es? . 41 4 Textsatzsystem TEX – Bezugsquellen 45 4.1 Wie bekomme ich ein TEX-System? . 45 4.2 TEX-Implementierungen »geändert« ........................... 48 4.3 Editoren, Frontend-/GUI-Programme »geändert« .................... 54 5 TEX, LATEX, Makros etc. (I) 62 5.1 LATEX – Grundlegendes . 62 5.2 LATEX – Probleme beim Umstieg von LATEX 2.09 . 67 5.3 (Silben-)Trennung, Absatz-, Seitenumbruch . 68 5.4 Seitenlayout, Layout allgemein, Kopf- und Fußzeilen »geändert« . 72 6 TEX, LATEX, Makros etc. (II) 79 6.1 Abbildungen und Tafeln .
    [Show full text]
  • Baskerville Volume 9 Number 2
    Baskerville The Annals of the UK TEX Users Group Guest Editor: Dominik Wujastyk Vol. 9 No. 2 ISSN 1354–5930 August 1999 Baskerville is set in Monotype Baskerville, with Computer Modern Typewriter for literal text. Editing, production and distribution are undertaken by members of the Committee. Contributions and correspondence should be sent to [email protected]. Editorial The Guest Editor of the last issue of Baskerville, James Foster, maintainer of this FAQ, many people have contributed to it, explained in that issue how members of the UK-TUG Com- as is explained in the introduction below. mittee have assumed editorial responsibility for the prepara- The TEX FAQ has been published in Baskerville twice be- tion and formatting of individual numbers of the newsletter. fore, in 1994 and 1995. These are the issues of Baskerville Like James, I am deeply grateful for, and awed by, the amount which I have most often lent or recommended to other TEX of work and expertise which Sebastian Rahtz has put into users. In fact, I currently do not have the 1995 FAQ issue past issues of Baskerville. Thanks, Sebastian! because I gave it away to someone who needed it as a mat- James also mentioned the hard work which Robin ter of urgency! I am confident that this newly updated TEX Fairbairns has done over the years in producing and distrib- FAQ, now expanded to cover 126 questions, will be every bit uting Baskerville. Although Robin is now liberated from these as popular and useful as its predecessors, and will save TEX particular tasks, he is still heavily involved in supporting the users many hours of valuable time.
    [Show full text]
  • The Arabi System — TEX Writes in Arabic and Farsi
    The Arabi system | ] ¨r` [ A\ TEX writes in Arabic and Farsi Youssef Jabri Ecole´ Nationale des Sciences Appliqu´ees, Oujda, Morocco yjabri (at) ensa dot univ-oujda dot ac dot ma Abstract In this paper, we will present a newly arrived package on CTAN that provides Arabic script support for TEX without the need for an external pre-processor. The Arabi package adds one of the last major multilingual typesetting capabilities to Babel by adding support for the Arabic ¨r and Farsi ¨FCA languages. Other languages using the Arabic script should also be more or less easily imple- mentable. Arabi comes with many good quality free fonts, Arabic and Farsi, and may also use commercial fonts. It supports many 8-bit input encodings (namely, CP-1256, ISO-8859-6 and Unicode UTF-8) and can typeset classical Arabic poetry. The package is distributed under the LATEX Project Public License (LPPL), and has the LPPL maintenance status \author-maintained". It can be used freely (including commercially) to produce beautiful texts that mix Arabic, Farsi and Latin (or other) characters. Pl Y ¾Abn Tn ®¤ Tr` ¤r Am`tF TAk t§ A\ ¨r` TEC .¤r fOt TEX > < A\ Am`tFA d¤ dnts ¨ n A\ (¨FCA ¤ ¨r)tl Am`tF TAk S ¨r` TEC , T¤rm rb Cdq tmt§¤ ¯m ¢k zymt§ A\n @h , T§db @n¤ Y At§ ¯ ¢ Y TAR . AARn £EA A \` Am`tF® A ¢± ¾AO ¾AA ¨r` dq§ . Tmlk ¨ ¤r AkJ d§dt ¨CA A` © ¨ ¨t ªW d Am`tF ¢nkm§ Am Am`tF¯ ­r ªW Tmm ¯¤ ¨A ¨r` , A\n TbsnA A w¡ Am .
    [Show full text]
  • Installation
    APPENDIX A Installation In case you do not already have a LATEX installation, in Sections A.1 and A.2, we describe how to install LATEX on your computer, a PC or a Mac. The installation is much easier if you obtain TEX Live 2007 (or later) from the TEX Users Group, TUG (see Section E.2). It contains both the TEX implementations we discuss. No installation is given for UNIX computers. The attraction of UNIX to its users is the incredibly large number of options, from the UNIX dialect, to the shell, the editor, and so on. A typical UNIX user downloads the code and compiles the system. This is obviously beyond the scope of this book. Nevertheless, TEX Live 2007 (or later) from the TEX Users Group supplies the compiled (binaries) of LATEX for a number of UNIX variants. First read Chapter 1, so that in this Appendix you recognize the terminology we introduce there. I will assume that you become sufficiently familiar with your LATEX distribution to be able to perform the editing cycle with the sample documents. 490 Appendix A Installation A.1 LATEX on a PC On a PC, most mathematicians use MiKTeX and the editor WinEdt. So it seems appro- priate that we start there. A.1.1 Installing MiKTeX If you made a donation to MiKTeX or if you have the TEX Live 2007 (or later) from the TEX Users Group, then you have a CD or DVD with the MiKTeX installer. Installation then is in one step and very fast. In case you do not have this CD or DVD, we show how to install from the Internet.
    [Show full text]
  • Digital Typography in the New Millennium: Flexible Documents by a Flexible Engine
    Digital Typography in the New Millennium: Flexible Documents by a Flexible Engine Christos KK Loverdos Department of Informatics and Telecommunications University of Athens TYPA Buildings, Panepistimioupolis GR-157 84 Athens Greece [email protected] Apostolos Syropoulos Greek TEX Friends Group 366, 28th October Str. GR-671 00 Xanthi Greece [email protected] Abstract The TEX family of electronic typesetters is the primary typesetting tools for the preparation of demanding documents, and have been in use for many years. However, our era is characterized, among others, by Unicode, XML and the in- troduction of interactive documents. In addition, the Open Source movement, which is breaking new ground in the areas of project support and development, enables masses of programmers to work simultaneously. As a direct consequence, it is reasonable to demand the incorporation of certain facilities to a highly mod- ular implementation of a TEX-like system. Facilities such as the ability to extend the engine using common scripting languages (e.g., Perl, Python, Ruby, etc.) will help in reaching a greater level of overall architectural modularity. Obviously, in order to achieve such a goal, it is mandatory to attract a greater programming audience and leverage the Open Source programming community. We argue that the successful TEX-successor should be built around a microkernel/exokernel ar- chitecture. Thus, services such as client-side scripting, font selection and use, out- put routines and the design and implementation of formats can be programmed as extension modules. In order to leverage the huge amount of existing code, and keep document source compatibility, the existing programming interface is demonstrated to be just another service/module.
    [Show full text]
  • TUGBOAT Volume 32, Number 1 / 2011
    TUGBOAT Volume 32, Number 1 / 2011 General Delivery 3 From the president / Karl Berry 4 Editorial comments / Barbara Beeton Opus 100; BBVA award for Don Knuth; Short takes; Mimi 6 Mimi Burbank / Jackie Damrau 7 Missing Mimi / Christina Thiele 9 16 years of ConTEXt / Hans Hagen 17 TUGboat’s 100 issues — Basic statistics and random gleanings / David Walden and Karl Berry 23 TUGboat online / Karl Berry and David Walden 27 TEX consulting for fun and profit / Boris Veytsman Resources 30 Which way to the forum? / Jim Hefferon Electronic Documents 32 LATEX at Distributed Proofreaders and the electronic preservation of mathematical literature at Project Gutenberg / Andrew Hwang Fonts 39 Introducing the PT Sans and PT Serif typefaces / Pavel Far´aˇr 43 Handling math: A retrospective / Hans Hagen Typography 47 The rules for long s / Andrew West Software & Tools 56 Installing TEX Live 2010 on Ubuntu / Enrico Gregorio 62 tlcontrib.metatex.org: A complement to TEX Live / Taco Hoekwater 68 LuaTEX: What it takes to make a paragraph / Paul Isambert 77 Luna — my side of the moon / Paweł Jackowski A L TEX 83 Reflections on the history of the LATEX Project Public License (LPPL)— A software license for LATEX and more / Frank Mittelbach 95 siunitx: A comprehensive (SI) units package / Joseph Wright 99 Glisterings: Framing, new frames / Peter Wilson 104 Some misunderstood or unknown LATEX2ε tricks III / Luca Merciadri A L TEX 3 108 LATEX3 news, issue 5 / LATEX Project Team Book Reviews 109 Book review: Typesetting tables with LATEX / Boris Veytsman Hints & Tricks
    [Show full text]
  • Farsitex and the Iranian TEX Community
    FarsiTEX and the Iranian TEX Community Behdad Esfahbod Computing Center Sharif University of Technology Azadi Avenue Tehran, Iran [email protected] http://behdad.org/ Roozbeh Pournader Computing Center Sharif University of Technology Azadi Avenue Tehran, Iran [email protected] http://sina.sharif.edu/~roozbeh/ Abstract FarsiTEX, a localized version of LATEX, is a bilingual Persian/English typesetting package, meeting the minimum requirements of Persian mathematical and tech- nical typography. This paper will describe FarsiTEX, together with its history, future and technicalities, its user community, and the reasons behind its success in Iran, amid its various usage and interoperability problems. It will also draw a general picture of the TEX community in Iran, and tries to describe why the community is still far from achieving its basic typographical needs. Introduction version 3.2 (Unicode Editorial Committee, 2002), lists a total of 139 letters in the script, which are The Persian language, in its contemporary form, is derivatives of about 28 basic Arabic letters. a language spoken natively in Iran, Afghanistan, The Persian typography, influenced by major and Tajikistan. The local forms are known as calligraphic practices of the pre-printing era, is ac- Farsi, Dari, and Tajiki respectively. They all use tually based on the famous Naskh style, which more the same basic vocabulary and grammar, but there than 99% of contemporary texts published in it. The are differences in both pronunciations and modern alternate style, Nastaliq, a little harder to read but vocabulary. In this paper, we will focus on the form considered very beautiful by the general public, and used in Iran, which is the official language of the widely known as the hardest commonly used script country.
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief History of TEX, Volume II
    A brief history of TEX, volume II Arthur Reutenauer∗ ENST Bretagne Technopôle Brest-Iroise CS 83818 29238 BREST CEDEX 3 arthur dot reutenauer (at) normalesup dot org Rationale for this volume II When I gave this talk in Bachotek I appended the Ööç subtitle Pax T Xnica — the program on which the E Figure 1: The name of a distant galaxy. From the sun never sets — an obvious pun to two historical very beginning, TEX sets out to conquer the universe empires renowned for their considerable geographical (extract from story.tex, in The TEXbook, chapter 6). extent. I wanted to add this subtitle for two reasons: first, I liked A brief history of TEX a lot but I realized after choosing it that there had already been a talk was all in English (with a lot of ‘n’ though) and it with this exact same title more than ten years before1 was meant — at first — for English speakers to use. and I wanted to avoid the risk of confusion, be it only Nevertheless, when created T X, he still for archival purposes; and second, I felt the subtitle E thought of the users speaking other languages. Of made my standpoint clear — the history I wanted course, all the commands were in English, the default to account for was very much a geographical one, settings were chosen for that language, and the fonts namely how T X enabled us to gradually typeset in E used a 7-bit encoding2 supporting only the Latin every language of the world — or almost so.
    [Show full text]
  • The UK Tex FAQ Your 469 Questions Answered Version 3.28, Date 2014-06-10
    The UK TeX FAQ Your 469 Questions Answered version 3.28, date 2014-06-10 June 10, 2014 NOTE This document is an updated and extended version of the FAQ article that was published as the December 1994 and 1995, and March 1999 editions of the UK TUG magazine Baskerville (which weren’t formatted like this). The article is also available via the World Wide Web. Contents Introduction 10 Licence of the FAQ 10 Finding the Files 10 A The Background 11 1 Getting started.............................. 11 2 What is TeX?.............................. 11 3 What’s “writing in TeX”?....................... 12 4 How should I pronounce “TeX”?................... 12 5 What is Metafont?........................... 12 6 What is Metapost?........................... 12 7 Things with “TeX” in the name.................... 13 8 What is CTAN?............................ 14 9 The (CTAN) catalogue......................... 15 10 How can I be sure it’s really TeX?................... 15 11 What is e-TeX?............................ 15 12 What is PDFTeX?........................... 16 13 What is LaTeX?............................ 16 14 What is LaTeX2e?........................... 16 15 How should I pronounce “LaTeX(2e)”?................. 17 16 Should I use Plain TeX or LaTeX?................... 17 17 How does LaTeX relate to Plain TeX?................. 17 18 What is ConTeXt?............................ 17 19 What are the AMS packages (AMSTeX, etc.)?............ 18 20 What is Eplain?............................ 18 21 What is Texinfo?............................ 19 22 Lollipop................................ 19 23 If TeX is so good, how come it’s free?................ 19 24 What is the future of TeX?....................... 19 25 Reading (La)TeX files......................... 19 26 Why is TeX not a WYSIWYG system?................. 20 27 TeX User Groups............................ 21 B Documentation and Help 21 28 Books relevant to TeX and friends...................
    [Show full text]
  • Complete Issue 25:0 As One
    TEX Users Group PREPRINTS for the 2004 Annual Meeting TEX Users Group Board of Directors These preprints for the 2004 annual meeting are Donald Knuth, Grand Wizard of TEX-arcana † ∗ published by the TEX Users Group. Karl Berry, President Kaja Christiansen∗, Vice President Periodical-class postage paid at Portland, OR, and ∗ Sam Rhoads , Treasurer additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address ∗ Susan DeMeritt , Secretary changes to T X Users Group, 1466 NW Naito E Barbara Beeton Parkway Suite 3141, Portland, OR 97209-2820, Jim Hefferon U.S.A. Ross Moore Memberships Arthur Ogawa 2004 dues for individual members are as follows: Gerree Pecht Ordinary members: $75. Steve Peter Students/Seniors: $45. Cheryl Ponchin The discounted rate of $45 is also available to Michael Sofka citizens of countries with modest economies, as Philip Taylor detailed on our web site. Raymond Goucher, Founding Executive Director † Membership in the TEX Users Group is for the Hermann Zapf, Wizard of Fonts † calendar year, and includes all issues of TUGboat ∗member of executive committee for the year in which membership begins or is †honorary renewed, as well as software distributions and other benefits. Individual membership is open only to Addresses Electronic Mail named individuals, and carries with it such rights General correspondence, (Internet) and responsibilities as voting in TUG elections. For payments, etc. General correspondence, membership information, visit the TUG web site: TEX Users Group membership, subscriptions: http://www.tug.org. P. O. Box 2311 [email protected] Portland, OR 97208-2311 Institutional Membership U.S.A. Submissions to TUGboat, Institutional Membership is a means of showing Delivery services, letters to the Editor: continuing interest in and support for both TEX parcels, visitors [email protected] and the TEX Users Group.
    [Show full text]
  • E-Tex.Web Defining the Ε-TEX Program
    The "-TEX manual Version 2, February 1998 by The Team NTS Peter Breitenlohner, Max-Planck-Institut f¨urPhysik, M¨unchen The preparation of this report was supported in part by Dante, Deutschsprachige Anwendervereinigung TEX e.V. ‘TEX’ is a trademark of the American Mathematical Society. 1 Introduction The project intends to develop an ‘New Typesetting System’ ( ) that will eventuallyNTS replace today’s T X3. The program will includeNTS many E N S features missing in TEX, but there will also existT a mode of operation that is 100% compatible with TEX3. It will, necessarily, require quite some time to develop to maturity and make it widely available. N S MeanwhileT "-TEX intends to fill the gap between TEX3 and the future . 1 N S It consists of a series of features extending the capabilities of TEX3. T Since compatibility between "-TEX and TEX3 has been a main concern, "- TEX has two modes of operation: (1) In TEX compatibility mode it fully deserves the name TEX and there are neither extended features nor additional primitive commands. That means in particular that "-TEX passes the TRIP test [1] without any restriction. There are, however, a few minor modifications that would be legitimate in any imple- mentation of TEX. (2) In extended mode there are additional primitive commands and the extended features of "-TEX are available. We have tried to make "-TEX as compatible with TEX as possible even in extended mode. In a few cases there are, however, some subtle differences described in detail later on. Therefore the "-TEX features available in extended mode are grouped into two categories: (1) Most of them have no semantic effect as long as none of the additional primitives are executed; these ‘extensions’ are permanently enabled.
    [Show full text]