The LATEX companion: Part 2
Gespeichert in:
Beteiligte Personen: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston
Addison-Wesley
[2023]
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Ausgabe: | Third edition - Part II |
Schriftenreihe: | Addison-Wesley series on tools and techniques for computer typesetting
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Schlagwörter: | |
Links: | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033842568&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
Umfang: | xxxviii, 970 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9780201363005 0201363003 |
Internformat
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240 | 1 | 0 | |a The LATEX companion (1994) |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The LATEX companion |n Part 2 |c Frank Mittelbach (LATEX Project, Mainz, Germany), Ulrike Fischer (LATEX Project, Bonn, Germany) |
250 | |a Third edition - Part II | ||
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adam_text | Contents Part I List of Figures — 1 xviii List of Tables —1 xix Foreword -1 xxi ֊4 xxiii Preface Chapter 1 Introduction 4 1 Chapter 2 The Structure of a ԼՕըճ Document 121 Chapter 3 Basic Formatting Tools — Paragraph Level ■I 1 19 Chapter 4 Basic Formatting Tools — Larger Structures •I 253 Chapter 5 The Layout of the Page -1 365 Chapter 6 Tabular Material -I 431 Chapter 7 Mastering Floats -1 505 Chapter 8 Graphics Generation and Manipulation -1 575 Chapter 9 Font Selection and Encodings -I 647
CONTENTS OF PART II Bibliography -1777 Index of Commands and Concepts Վ 793 People -1943 Part II List of Figures xxii List of Tables xxiv Foreword, Part II xxix Preface, Part II xxxi Chapter 10 Text and Symbol Fonts 1 10.1 Overview................................................................................................... 10.1.1 Notes on the font samples...................................................... 10.1.2 Notes on the font family tables................................................ 10.1.3 Font support packages............................................................. 10.1.4 Direct use of the fonts (withouta package)............................. 2 4 5 7 10 10.2 Samples of larger font families.................................................................. 10.2.1 Alegreya................................................................................... 10.2.2 CM Bright —A design based onComputer Modern Sans ... 10.2.3 DejaVu— A fork of Bitstream Vera......................................... 10.2.4 Fira fonts.................................................................................. 10.2.5 Gandhi fonts............................................................................ 10.2.6 Go fonts..................................................................................... 10.2.7 Inria fonts.................................................................................. 10.2.8 Kp (Johannes Kepler) fonts...................................................... 10.2.9 Libertinus — A fork of Linux Libertine and Biolinum............... 10.2.10
Lucida fonts............................................................................... 10.2.11 Merriweather fonts.................................................................. 10.2.12 Google’s Noto and Droid fonts............................................... 10.2.13 IBM Plex..................................................................................... 10.2.14 PT fonts..................................................................................... 10.2.15 Quattrocento............................................................................ 10.2.16 Google Roboto families............................................................ 10.2.17 Adobe Source Pro..................................................................... 11 11 12 12 14 15 15 16 17 19 21 25 26 30 31 33 34 35 10.3 Humanist (Oldstyle) serif fonts.................................................................. 10.3.1 Alegreya.................................................................................. 10.3.2 Coelacanth............................................................................... 10.3.3 fbb —A version of Cardo......................................................... 36 37 37 37
CONTENTS OF PART II 10.4 Garalde (Oldstyle) serif fonts..................................................................... 10.4.1 Accanthis.................................................................................. 10.4.2 GFS Artemisia............................................................................ 10.4.3 Crimson, Crimson Pro, and Cochineal..................................... 10.4.4 Cormorant Garamond............................................................... 10.4.5 EB Garamond............................................................................ 10.4.6 Garamond Libre........................................................................ 10.4.7 URW Garamond No. 8............................................................... 10.4.8 Gentium Plus............................................................................ 10.4.9 Kp (Johannes Kepler) Roman.................................................. 10.4.10 Palatino (TeX Gyre Pagella)..................................................... 38 39 39 40 41 41 42 43 45 45 46 10.5 Transitional/Neoclassical serif fonts......................................................... 10.5.1 Antykwa Poltawskiego........................................................... 10.5.2 BaskervilleF and Libre Baskerville............................................ 10.5.3 Baskervald (Baskervaldx)......................................................... 10.5.4 ITC Bookman (TeX Gyre Bonum)............................................... 10.5.5
Cambria..................................................................................... 10.5.6 Bitstream Charter..................................................................... 10.5.7 Charis SIL —A design based on Bitstream Charter.................. 10.5.8 Casion —Reinterpreted as Libre Casion.................................. 10.5.9 Gandhi Serif............................................................................... 10.5.10 Inria Serif.................................................................................. 10.5.11 Libertinus Serif........................................................................ 10.5.12 Literaturnaya —A favorite in the days of the USSR.................. 10.5.13 Lucida Bright........................................................................... 10.5.14 Lucida Fax............................................................................... 10.5.15 Merriweather........................................................................... 10.5.16 New Century Schoolbook (TeX Gyre Schola)............................ 10.5.1 7 Plex Serif.................................................................................. 10.5.18 PT Serif..................................................................................... 10.5.19 Quattrocento........................................................................... 10.5.20 Times Roman (TeX Gyre Termes and Tempora)..................... 10.5.21 Tinos........................................................................................ 10.5.22 STIX
2........................................................................................ 10.5.23 Utopia (Heurística, Erewhon, and Linguistics Pro).................. 46 46 47 48 48 49 50 51 51 52 52 52 53 53 54 54 54 55 55 55 55 57 57 58 10.6 Didone (Modern) serif fonts........................................................................ 10.6.1 Computer Modern Roman / Latin Modern Roman.................. 10.6.2 GFS Bodoni............................................................................... 10.6.3 Libre Bodoni........................................................................... 10.6.4 GFS Didot.................................................................................. 10.6.5 Theano Didot........................................................................... 10.6.6 Noto Serif.................................................................................. 10.6.7 Old Standard........................................................................... 10.6.8 Playfair Display........................................................................ 60 60 61 61 62 62 63 63 64 xi
CONTENTS OF PART II xii 10.7 Slab serif (Egyptian) fonts.......................................................................... 10.7.1 Bitter........................................................................................ 10.7.2 Concrete Roman..................................................................... 10.7.3 DejaVu Serif............................................................................... 10.7.4 Roboto Slab Serif..................................................................... 10.7.5 Source Serif Pro......................................................................... 64 65 65 67 67 67 10.8 Sans serif fonts........................................................................................... 10.8.1 Alegreya Sans............................................................................ 10.8.2 Arimo........................................................................................ 1 0.8.3 ITC Avant Garde Gothic (TeX Gyre Adventor)......................... 10.8.4 Cabin........................................................................................ 10.8.5 Chivo........................................................................................ 10.8.6 Classico —A design based on Optima...................................... 10.8.7 Clear Sans.................................................................................. 10.8.8 CM Bright.................................................................................. 10.8.9 Cuprum.....................................................................................
10.8.10 Cyklop..................................................................................... 10.8.11 DejaVu Sans............................................................................... 10.8.12 Fira Sans.................................................................................. 10.8.1 3 Gandhi Sans............................................................................... 10.8.14 GFS Neo-Hellenic..................................................................... 10.8.15 Gillius........................................................................................ 10.8.16 Helvetica (TeX Gyre Heros)......................................................... 1 0.8.1 7 Inria Sans.................................................................................. 1 0.8.1 8 Iwona......................................................................................... 10.8.19 Kp Johannes Kepler) Sans......................................................... 10.8.20 Kurier........................................................................................ 10.8.21 Latin Modern Sans.................................................................. 10.8.22 Lato............................................................................................ 10.8.23 Libertinus Sans......................................................................... 10.8.24 Libre Franklin............................................................................ 10.8.25 Lucida Sans............................................................................... 10.8.26
Merriweather Sans.................................................................. 10.8.27 Mint Spirit.................................................................................. 10.8.28 Montserrat............................................................................... 10.8.29 NotoSans.................................................................................. 10.8.30 Overlock.................................................................................. 1 0.8.31 Plex Sans.................................................................................. 10.8.32 PTSans..................................................................................... 10.8.33 QuattrocentoSans.................................................................. 10.8.34 Raleway..................................................................................... 10.8.35 Roboto Sans............................................................................... 10.8.36 Rosario..................................................................................... 67 68 68 69 70 70 71 72 72 73 73 74 74 74 75 75 76 77 77 79 79 80 80 81 81 82 82 82 83 84 84 85 85 85 86 86 86
CONTENTS OF PART II 10.8.37 10.8.38 Source Sans Pro........................................................................ Universalis.............................................................................. 87 87 Monospaced (typewriter) fonts................................................................... 10.9.1 Algol........................................................................................ 10.9.2 Anonymous Pro........................................................................ 10.9.3 CM Bright TypewriterLight...................................................... 10.9.4 Courier..................................................................................... 10.9.5 DejaVu Sans Mono.................................................................. 10.9.6 Fira Mono.................................................................................. 10.9.7 Co Mono.................................................................................. 10.9.8 Sconsolata.............................................................................. 10.9.9 Kp (Johannes Kepler)Typewriter............................................ 10.9.10 Latin Modern Typewriter........................................................ 10.9.11 Libertinus Mono........................................................................ 10.9.12 Lucida s monospacedfamilies................................................ 10.9.13 Luximono................................................................................. 10.9.14 Noto Sans
Mono........................................................................ 1 0.9.1 5 Plex Mono.................................................................................. 10.9.16 PT Mono.................................................................................. 10.9.17 Roboto Mono........................................................................... 10.9.18 Source Code Pro..................................................................... 88 89 90 90 91 91 92 92 92 93 93 94 94 95 96 96 96 97 97 and other fonts.......................................................................... Cinzel........................................................................................ Marcellus.................................................................................. The Fell Types........................................................................... Almendra................................................................................. Antykwa Toruńska................................................................. Lucida Casual, Calligraphy, and Handwriting........................ Zapf Chancery (TeXGyre Chorus)............................................. Miama Nueva........................................................................... Lucida Blackletter..................................................................... Blackletter —Yannis Gothic, Schwabacher, and Fraktur. ... 97 98 99 99 100 100 102 102 103 104 104 10.11 Fonts supporting Latin and polytonie Greek............................................. 10.11.1 Serif
designs........................................................................... 10.11.2 Sans Serif designs..................................................................... 10.11.3 Monospaced fonts.................................................................. 10.11.4 Handwriting fonts..................................................................... 106 107 109 109 110 1 0.1 2 Fonts supporting Latin and Cyrillic............................................................ 10.12.1 Serif designs........................................................................... 10.12.2 Sans Serif designs..................................................................... 10.12.3 Monospaced fonts................................................................. 10.12.4 Handwriting fonts..................................................................... 110 110 Ill 112 113 10.9 1 0.1 0 Historical 10.10.1 10.10.2 10.10.3 10.10.4 10.10.5 10.10.6 10.10.7 10.10.8 10.10.9 10.10.10 xiii
CONTENTS OF PART II 1 0.1 3 The lATgX 10.13.1 10.13.2 10.13.3 10.13.4 10.13.5 10.13.6 10.13.7 10.13.8 Chapter 11 Higher Mathematics 113 113 116 117 118 119 119 120 125 127 Introduction to amsmath and mathtools.................................................. Display and alignment structures for equations...................................... 11.2.1 Comparison of amsmath/mathtools with standard lATgX. ... 11.2.2 A single equation on one line.................................................... 11.2.3 A single equation on several lines: no alignment.................... 11.2.4 A single equation on several lines: with alignment................. 11.2.5 Equation groups without alignment.......................................... 11.2.6 Equation groups with simple alignment.................................... 11.2.7 Multiple alignments: align and flalign............................ 11.2.8 Display environments as mini-pages..................................... 11.2.9 Interrupting displays with short text..................................... 11.2.10 Vertical space in and around displays..................................... 11.2.11 Page breaks in and around displays......................................... 11.2.12 breqn— Automatic line breaking in math displays............... 11.2.13 Equation numbering and tags.................................................. 11.2.14 Fine-tuning tag placement...................................................... 11.2.15 Subordinate numbering sequences.......................................... 11.2.16 Resetting the equation
counter................................................ 128 131 132 133 134 135 137 138 138 140 143 143 145 146 149 150 152 153 11.3 Matrix-like environments........................................................................... 11.3.1 amsmath, mathtools —The matrix environments.................... 11.3.2 amsmath, mathtools, cases —Some case environments. . . . 11.3.3 delarray—Delimiters surrounding an array.............................. 11.3.4 bigdelim — Delimiters around and inside arrays....................... 11.3.5 Commutative diagrams with standard ІАГрХ.............................. 11.3.6 amsed —Commutative diagrams a là AMS.............................. 11.3.7 tikz-cd— Commutative diagrams based on tikz....................... 153 154 156 157 158 159 160 161 11.4 Compound structures and decorations..................................................... 11.4.1 amsmath, mathtools, extarrows —Decorated arrows............. 11.4.2 Fractions and their generalizations.......................................... 11.4.3 Continued fractions.................................................................... 11.4.4 Limiting positions....................................................................... 11.4.5 Stacking in subscripts and superscripts.................................... 11.4.6 amsmath, esint, wasysym — Multiple integral signs................. 163 163 164 166 166 167 168 11.1 11.2 xiv world of symbols........................................................................ pifont —Accessing Pi and Symbol fonts................................... wasysym—Waldi’s
symbol font................................................ marvosym — Interface to the MarVoSym font.......................... adforn—Adding ornaments to your document...................... fourier-orns —GUTenberg-Fourier’s ornaments...................... Web-0-Mints — Another collection of ornaments and borders . fontawesome5— Accessing Font Awesome icons................... tipa —International Phonetic Alphabet symbols......................
CONTENTS OF PART II 11.4.7 11.4.8 11.4.9 11.4.10 11.4.11 11.4.12 11.4.13 11.4.14 diffcoeff—Handling derivatives of arbitrary order................... Modular relations...................................................................... mathtools, interval — Properly spaced intervals...................... braket —Dirac bra-ket and set notation................................... amsmath, mathtools, empheq — Boxed formulas................... amsmath, accents, mathdots— Various accents...................... mattens —Commands to typeset tensors................................ Extra decorations for symbols................................................ 170 171 171 173 174 176 178 179 11.5 Variable 11.5.1 11.5.2 11.5.3 11.5.4 11.5.5 11.5.6 symbol commands....................................................................... Ellipsis and other kinds of......................................................... Horizontal extensions in standard !MįX................................ Further horizontal extensions................................................... abraces —Customizable over andunder braces........................ underoverlap — Partly overlappinghorizontal braces............... Vertical extensions................................................................... 180 180 182 183 185 189 191 11.6 Words in mathematics............................................................................... 11.6.1 The text command................................................................ 11.6.2 Operator and function names...................................................
191 192 192 11.7 Fine-tuning the mathematical layout......................................................... 11.7.1 Controlling the automatic sizing and spacing.......................... 11.7.2 Subformulas............................................................................. 11.7.3 Line breaking in inline formulas................................................ 11.7.4 Big-g delimiters.......................................................................... 11.7.5 Radical movements................................................................... 11.7.6 Ghostbusters™......................................................................... 11.7.7 Horizontal spaces....................................................................... 11.7.8 resizegather—Downscaling an equation................................ 11.7.9 subdepth — Normalizing subscript positions........................... 11.7.10 Color in formulas...................................................................... 194 195 197 197 199 199 200 204 206 206 207 11.8 Symbols 11.8.1 11.8.2 11.8.3 11.8.4 11.8.5 11.8.6 11.8.7 11.8.8 208 209 211 214 214 216 222 222 223 Chapter 12 in formulas................................................................................... Mathematical symbol classes................................................... Letters, numerals, and other Ordinary symbols....................... Mathematical accents................................................................ Binary operator symbols.......................................................... Relation
symbols...................................................................... Operator symbols...................................................................... Punctuation................................................................................ Opening and Closing symbols................................................ Fonts in formulas 225 12.1 The world of (Latin) math alphabets......................................................... 12.1.1 mathalpha —Simplified setup for math alphabets................... 226 230 1 2.2 Making it bold............................................................................................. 12.2.1 bm —Making bold................................................................... 235 235 XV
CONTENTS OF PART II 12.3 Traditional math font setup through packages......................................... 12.3.1 ccfonts — The Concrete fonts for text and math........................ 12.3.2 cmbright —֊The Computer Modern Bright fonts....................... 12.3.3 euler, eulervm —Accessing Zapf’s Euler fonts........................... 12.3.4 newtxmath—A Swiss knife for math font support................. 12.3.5 newpxmath —Using the PX fonts for math.............................. 12.3.6 mathpazo — Another Palatino-based approach for math . . . 12.3.7 notomath— Setting up Noto fonts for math and text.............. 238 238 239 240 243 248 251 252 unicode-math —Using Unicode math fonts.............................................. 12.4.1 Math alphabets revisited........................................................... 12.4.2 Adjusting the formula style....................................................... 12.4.3 Setting up Unicode math fonts................................................. 12.5 A visual comparison of different math setups........................................... 12.5.1 Caralde (Oldstyle) serif fonts with mathsupport...................... 12.5.2 Transitional serif fonts with math support.............................. 12.5.3 Didone serif fonts with math support........................................ 12.5.4 Slab serif fonts with math support........................................... 12.5.5 Sans serif fonts with math support........................................... 12.5.6 Historical fonts with math support........................................... 253
254 257 259 261 263 271 284 288 290 295 12.4 Chapter 13 Localizing documents 297 non-English languages................................................................. Language-related aspects of typesetting................................. Culture-related aspects of typesetting....................................... babel — lAT^X speaks multiple languages................................. 297 299 300 300 1 3.2 The babel user interface............................................................................. 13.2.1 Setting or getting the current language.................................... 13.2.2 Handling shorthands................................................................. 13.2.3 Language attributes.................................................................... 13.2.4 BCP47tags................................................................................. 301 302 304 307 308 User commands provided by language options......................................... 13.3.1 Translations of fixed texts....................................................... 13.3.2 Available shorthands................................................................. 13.3.3 Language-specific commands.................................................... 13.3.4 Layout considerations................................................................. 13.3.5 Languages and font encoding.................................................... 308 309 310 315 320 322 13.4 Support for Cyrillic and Creek................................................................... 13.4.1 The Cyrillic
alphabet................................................................. 13.4.2 The Creek alphabet.................................................................... 13.5 Complex scripts......................................................................................... 324 324 328 330 1 3.6 Tailoring babel............................................................................................ 13.6.1 User level.................................................................................... 13.6.2 Package level............................................................................. 332 333 336 13.1 13.3 xvi T[;X and 13.1.1 13.1.2 13.1.3
CONTENTS OF PART II 13.6.3 The package file....................................................................... 339 13.7 Other approaches...................................................................................... 13.7.1 Complex languages with 8-bit engines................................... 13.7.2 Polyglossia................................................................................. 341 341 342 Chapter 14 Index Generation 14.1 Syntax of the index entries........................................................................ 14.1.1 Simple index entries................................................................. 14.1.2 Generating subentries................................................................. 14.1.3 Page ranges and cross-references............................................. 14.1.4 Controlling the presentation form.............................................. 14.1.5 Printing special characters....................................................... 14.1.6 Creating a glossary.................................................................... 14.1.7 Defining your own index commands...................................... 14.1.8 Special considerations............................................................. 343 345 346 347 347 347 348 349 349 350 14.2 Makeindex — A program to sort and format indexes............................... 14.2.1 Generating the formatted index................................................. 14.2.2 Detailed options of the Makeindex program........................... 14.2.3 Error and warning
messages.................................................... 14.2.4 Customizing the index............................................................. 14.2.5 Pitfalls to watch out for.............................................................. 350 351 351 355 356 362 14.3 upmendex— A Unicode-aware indexing program.................................... 14.3.1 Options, warnings, and errors of the program....................... 14.3.2 Customizing the index with upmendex.................................... 364 364 366 14.4 xindy, xindex — Two other indexing programs......................................... 14.5 Enhancing the index with DTpX features..................................................... 14.5.1 Modifying the layout................................................................. 14.5.2 showidx, repeatindex, tocbibind, indxcite — Little helpers . . 14.5.3 index —Producing multiple indexes........................................... 370 371 371 372 372 Chapter 1 5 Bibliography Generation 15.1 The standard DTeX bibliography environment........................................... 375 376 15.2 The biber and BibTeX programs................................................................... 15.2.1 bibtex8 —An 8-bit reimplementation of BibTeX....................... 15.2.2 biber —A Unicode-aware bibliography processor.................... 378 379 379 1 5.3 The BibTeX database format....................................................................... 15.3.1 Entry types and fields................................................................. 15.3.2 Additional
fields....................................................................... 15.3.3 The text part of a field explained............................................. 15.3.4 Abbreviations in BibTeX............................................................. 15.3.5 Extended data references with biber: the xdata entry type . . 15.3.6 The BiBTEXdatabase preamble command.................................... 15.3.7 Cross-referencing entries.......................................................... 15.3.8 Managing the BibTeX and biber differences.............................. 380 384 390 393 401 403 405 406 408 xvii
CONTENTS OF PART II 15.4 Using ВівТеХ or biber to produce the bibliography.................................... 409 15.5 On-line bibliographies............................................................................... 15.6 Bibliography database management tools................................................ 15.6.1 checkcites — Which citations are used, unused, or missing?. . 15.6.2 biblist —Printing BibTeX database files........................................ 15.6.3 bibclean, etc.—A set of command-line tools........................... 15.6.4 Using biber as a tool................................................................. 413 414 414 415 415 417 15.7 Formatting the bibliography with styles..................................................... 15.7.1 A collection of BibT^X style files................................................. 15.7.2 custom-bib —Generate BibTeX styles with ease....................... 15.7.3 An overview of biblatex styles.................................................... 15.7.4 Generic styles.............................................................................. 15.7.5 Implementations of style guides.............................................. 15.7.6 Implementations of university and institution styles.............. 15.7.7 Implementations of journal styles.............................................. 15.7.8 Styles that extend the data model.............................................. 1 5.7.9 Styles not fitting in the other categories................................. 418 419 426 432 435 439 445 455 461 464 Chapter 16 xviii
Managing Citations 469 16.1 Introduction............................................................................................... 16.1.1 Bibliographical reference schemes.......................................... 469 470 16.2 The number-only system........................................................................... 16.2.1 Standard ΙΔΤεΧ —Reference by number.................................... 16.2.2 cite —Enhanced references bynumber..................................... 16.2.3 notoccite —Solving a problem with unsorted citations .... 16.2.4 natbib’s approach to number-only references........................... 16.2.5 biblatex’s approach to number-only references........................ 473 475 478 483 484 484 16.3 The author-date system........................................................................... 16.3.1 Early attempts............................................................................. 16.3.2 natbib —Customizable author-date references........................ 16.3.3 biblatex’s approach to author-date references....................... 487 489 490 500 16.4 The author-number system....................................................................... 16.4.1 natbib —Revisited...................................................................... 16.4.2 biblatex’s approach to author-number references.................... 502 503 506 16.5 The author-title system.............................................................................. 16.5.1 jurabib —Customizable short-title references.......................... 16.5.2 biblatex’s approach to
author-title references........................... 507 507 534 16.6 The verbose system................................................................................... 16.6.1 bibentry — Full bibliographic entries inrunning text.............. 16.6.2 biblatex’s approach toverbose citations.................................. 537 537 538 16.7 biblatex —One ring to rule them all......................................................... 16.7.1 Basic biblatex setup.................................................................... 16.7.2 Package options.......................................................................... 16.7.3 Citing with biblatex.................................................................... 541 543 543 544
CONTENTS OF PART II 16.8 16.7.4 16.7.5 16.7.6 16.7.7 16.7.8 16.7.9 16.7.10 16.7.11 16.7.12 16.7.13 16.7.14 16.7.15 16.7.16 Indexing citations automatically............................................ Back references and links......................................................... Bibliography entries with multiple authors............................ Unambiguous citations............................................................ Printing the bibliography......................................................... The sorting of the bibliography............................................... Document divisions.................................................................. Annotated bibliographies........................................................ Bibliography lists..................................................................... Language support..................................................................... Distinguishing the author’s gender......................................... Sentence casing........................................................................ Customizing............................................................................ 546 547 547 548 550 554 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 Multiple 16.8.1 16.8.2 16.8.3 16.8.4 bibliographies in one document.................................................. chapterbib —Bibliographies per included hie......................... bibunits — Bibliographies for arbitrary units............................ bibtopic —Combining references by topic............................ multibib—Separate global
bibliographies............................... 569 571 574 578 580 IrTgX Package Documentation Tools 583 Chapter 17 doc —Documenting IATeX and other code.................................................. 17.1.1 General conventions for the source hie.................................... 17.1.2 Describing new macros and environments.............................. 17.1.3 Cross-referencing all macros used.......................................... 17.1.4 The documentation driver.......................................................... 17.1.5 Conditional code in the source................................................. 17.1.6 Providing additional documentation elements........................ 17.1.7 Producing the actual index entries........................................... 17.1.8 Overview about all doc commands.......................................... 17.1.9 Itxdoc —A simple IATeX documentation class........................... 17.2 docstrip.tex — Producing ready-to-run code............................................. 17.2.1 Invocation of the docstrip utility.............................................. 17.2.2 docstrip script commands....................................................... 17.2.3 Using docstrip with L3 programming layercode...................... 17.2.4 Using docstrip with other languages....................................... 584 585 585 588 589 590 592 593 594 597 599 600 601 605 605 I3build— A versatile development environment...................................... 17.3.1 The basic interface....................................................................
1 7.3.2 Creating tests............................................................................. 17.3.3 Releasing to CTAN.................................................................... 17.3.4 Common configurations.......................................................... 606 607 608 611 613 use of version control tools......................................................... gitinfo2—Accessing metadata from Cit.................................... svn-multi— Accessing Subversion keywords........................... filemod — Printing or checking file modification dates .... 615 616 617 619 17.1 17.3 17.4 Making 17.4.1 17.4.2 17.4.3 xix
CONTENTS OF PART II іаТеХ A.l Linking A.1.1 A.1.2 A.1.3 A.1.4 A.1.5 markup and formatting................................................................. 622 Command and environment names..................................... 622 Defining simple commands.................................................. 624 Defining simple environments............................................ 629 Defining more complex commands and environments.... 632 Changing arguments to command names............................ 644 A.2 Counters and length expressions.............................................................. 646 A.2.1 Defining and changing counters......................................... 646 A.2.2 fmtcount — Specially formatted counters and numbers.... 650 A.2.3 sillypage —Page and other counting à la Monty Python . . . . 651 A.2.4 Defining and changing space parameters............................ 651 A.2.5 The L3 programming layer —Computation support............ 657 A.3 Page markup —Boxes and rules................................................................. A.3.1 LR boxes.................................................................................... A.3.2 Paragraph boxes........................................................................ A.3.3 Rule boxes................................................................................. A.3.4 Manipulating boxed material.................................................... A.3.5 Box commands and color........................................................... 660 661 663 667 669 670 A.4 lMįX’s hook
management.......................................................................... A.4.1 Working with existing hooks.................................................... A.4.2 Declaring hooks and using them in code................................. 671 671 681 A.5 Control structure extensions...................................................................... A.5.1 iftex — On which TeX engine are werunning on?...................... A.5.2 calc —Arithmetic calculations.................................................... A.5.3 ifthen— Advanced control structures........................................ Package and class file structure................................................................. A.6.1 The rollback part....................................................................... A.6.2 The identification part.............................................................. A.6.3 The initial code part.................................................................... A.6.4 The declaration of options....................................................... A.6.5 The execution of options.......................................................... A.6.6 Declaring and using options with akey/value syntax............... A.6.7 The package loading part.......................................................... A.6.8 The main code part.................................................................... A.6.9 Special commands for package andclass files......................... A.6.10 Special commands for class files.............................................. A.6.11 A minimal
class file.................................................................... 685 685 687 689 693 693 696 697 697 699 700 703 704 704 708 710 A.6 AppendixB XX Overview for Preamble, Package, and Class Writers Appendix A Tracing and Resolving Problems 621 711 B.l Error messages............................................................................................ 712 B.2 Dying with memory exceeded................................................................... 744 B.3 Warnings and informational messages..................................................... 749
CONTENTS OF PART II В.4 TeX and IATeX commands for tracing.......................................................... B.4.1 B.4.2 B.4.3 B.4.4 B.4.5 Appendix C Displaying command definitions and register values.............. Diagnosing page-breaking problems....................................... Diagnosing and solving paragraph-breaking problems .... Other low-level tracing tools.................................................... trace — Selectively tracing command execution...................... Going beyond 765 766 769 773 779 781 783 C.l Learn IATeX —A IATEX online course for beginners....................................... 784 C.2 Finding information available on your computer........................................ C.2.1 kpsewhich —Find files the way TeX does................................. C.2.2 texdoc— A command-line interface to local TeX information . 785 785 786 C.3 Accessing online information and getting help......................................... C.3.1 texdoc . org — searchable documentation on the Web . . . . C.3.2 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) resources......................... C.3.3 Using news groups and forums................................................ C.3.4 The IATeX Project’s web presence............................................ 787 787 787 788 789 C.4 Getting all those TeX files.......................................................................... C.4.1 CTAN The Comprehensive TeX Archive Network................... C.4.2 TeX distributions — past and present...................................... 789 789 790 C.5 Giving back to the
community................................................................... 792 Bibliography 795 Index of Commands and Concepts 805 People 955 Biographies 961 Production Notes 965 xxi
|
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author | Mittelbach, Frank Fischer, Ulrike 1983- |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048464639 |
classification_rvk | ST 351 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1392154783 (DE-599)BVBBV048464639 |
discipline | Informatik |
edition | Third edition - Part II |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV048464639 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-20T19:45:46Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780201363005 0201363003 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033842568 |
oclc_num | 1392154783 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29T DE-739 DE-1050 DE-20 DE-B768 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91G DE-BY-TUM DE-898 DE-BY-UBR DE-M347 |
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physical | xxxviii, 970 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
publishDate | 2023 |
publishDateSearch | 2023 |
publishDateSort | 2023 |
publisher | Addison-Wesley |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Addison-Wesley series on tools and techniques for computer typesetting |
spellingShingle | Mittelbach, Frank Fischer, Ulrike 1983- The LATEX companion LATEX Programm (DE-588)4192618-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4192618-3 |
title | The LATEX companion |
title_alt | The LATEX companion (1994) |
title_auth | The LATEX companion |
title_exact_search | The LATEX companion |
title_full | The LATEX companion Part 2 Frank Mittelbach (LATEX Project, Mainz, Germany), Ulrike Fischer (LATEX Project, Bonn, Germany) |
title_fullStr | The LATEX companion Part 2 Frank Mittelbach (LATEX Project, Mainz, Germany), Ulrike Fischer (LATEX Project, Bonn, Germany) |
title_full_unstemmed | The LATEX companion Part 2 Frank Mittelbach (LATEX Project, Mainz, Germany), Ulrike Fischer (LATEX Project, Bonn, Germany) |
title_short | The LATEX companion |
title_sort | the latex companion |
topic | LATEX Programm (DE-588)4192618-3 gnd |
topic_facet | LATEX Programm |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033842568&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV048464597 |
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
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Paper/Kapitel scannen lassen
Teilbibliothek Mathematik & Informatik
Signatur: |
0102 DAT 795 2001 A 15887-2(3) Lageplan |
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Exemplar 1 | Ausleihbar Am Standort |