[texhax] Style
PR Stanley
prstanley at ntlworld.com
Sat Jul 19 11:41:07 CEST 2008
Hi Philip,
Thanks for the offer but this is more about presenting mathematics
than a general question of style. I do make extensive use of both
XHTML and CSS and have a reasonably clear mental picture of what a
presentable document should look like. Of course, one of the biggest
strengths of LaTeX is that you only need to concern yourself with the
logical layout; the style files and the compiler will take care of
that for you though it also means that I have no solid notion of what
the document looks like in the PDF or DVI format. Where general text
is concerned I don't really care that much. However, for maths I
would like to develop a consistent style, preferably one adhering to
a recognised set of standards. For example, is there a mathematics
equivalent of the Harvard system for typesetting essays? It's that
sort of thing I'm after.
Cheers, Paul
At 09:38 19/07/2008, you wrote:
>Dear Paul -- This is a fascinating query ! May I refer
>it to a group of friends, many of whom suffer from visual
>disabilities, but who are more involved in HTML & CSS than
>in TeX ? They may well have something useful to contribute.
>
>Philip Taylor
>--------
>PR Stanley wrote:
>>Hi folks
>>Having learned enough to typeset reasonably elaborate mathematical
>>documents I'd like to know if there are stylistic standards that
>>one can use for maintaining consistency. I've looked at many
>>documents and it would appear that peopl are more inclined to
>>exercise creativity than adhere to a universal stylistic paradigm.
>>As someone unable to see the outcome of a LaTeX document in PDF or
>>DVI (because of my visual impairment) it is hard for me to know
>>which one of the many stylistic decisions results in something
>>decent and presentable.
>>Any advice on the subject, perhaps tips on style would be
>>gratefully appreciated.
>>Thanks,
>>Paul
>>_______________________________________________
>>TeX FAQ: http://www.tex.ac.uk/faq
>>Mailing list archives: http://tug.org/pipermail/texhax/
>>More links: http://tug.org/begin.html
>>Automated subscription management: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/texhax
>>Human mailing list managers: postmaster at tug.org
More information about the texhax
mailing list