Having only just appreciated the fundamental difference between a "skip" (bottom to bottom spacing) and a "separation" (bottom to top spacing) I wondered if there was a TeX/LaTeX dictionary that told one what terms meant?
I think it would save me a lot of hair-loss...
Thanks
General ⇒ Is there a TeX/LaTeX dictionary?
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Is there a TeX/LaTeX dictionary?
Hi,
The following books contain a good descrption of the main commands:
For TeX:
TeX by Topic, by Victor Eijkhout
The TeXbook, by Donald E. Knuth
For LaTeX:
The LaTeX Companion (2nd Edition), by Frank Mittelbach, Michel Goossens, Johannes Braams, and David Carlisle.
You can also get some online information on basic commands, here:
Hypertext Help with LaTeX
The following books contain a good descrption of the main commands:
For TeX:
TeX by Topic, by Victor Eijkhout
The TeXbook, by Donald E. Knuth
For LaTeX:
The LaTeX Companion (2nd Edition), by Frank Mittelbach, Michel Goossens, Johannes Braams, and David Carlisle.
You can also get some online information on basic commands, here:
Hypertext Help with LaTeX
1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34,55,89,144,233,...
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Re: Is there a TeX/LaTeX dictionary?
Thanks for gmedina - I've already got The TeXBook, and now I've also got TeX by topic... will take a look at it soon... contents look promising.
Is there a TeX/LaTeX dictionary?
Well, there are a few attempts, e.g., http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/ ... atex-termsShayneThill wrote:Hahaha. there is no that dictionary, so wear hair wigs for your hair loss.
Best
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