LaTeX
This is a guide to the LaTeX typesetting system. It is intended as a useful resource for everybody, from new users who wish to learn, to old hands who need a quick reference.
TeX and LaTeX
TeX is a typesetting computer program created by Donald Knuth, originally for his magnum opus, The Art of Computer Programming . It takes a "plain" text file and converts it into a high-quality document for printing or on-screen viewing. LaTeX is a macro system built on top of TeX that aims to simplify its use and automate many common formatting tasks. It is the de-facto standard for academic journals and books in several fields, such as mathematics and physics, and provides some of the best typography free software has to offer.
This book is organized into different parts:
- Getting Started will provide you with the very first steps to print your first document, from installing the needed software to basic concepts and syntax.
- Common Elements discusses common features you would expect from a document processor, including fonts, layout, colors, lists, and figures.
- Mechanics are some topics that are not really necessary to write a basic document, but could help you understand how some parts of the system work. These topics are required for fine-tuning documents. Use them as support for various chapters, as they are often being referred to.
- Technical Text focuses on different specialized matters, mostly for scientific work.
- Special Pages is for the structured pages usually put in appendices.
- Special Documents: this part tackles other kind of documents different from the classic article style.
- Creating Graphics is for the process of writing graphics from a LaTeX document.
- Programming or how to create your own macros and packages.
- Miscellaneous contains everything that does not fit in the previous parts, like project management and other subjects related to LaTeX but not inherent to LaTeX itself.
- Help and Recommendations : the FAQ encompasses very common pitfalls and important recommendations for everyone, we urge you to read it; the Tips and Tricks are much more specific matters.
- Appendices.
Contents
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- Getting Started
- Common Elements
- Document Structure 100% developed as of Aug 24, 2007
- Text Formatting 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Paragraph Formatting 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Colors 100% developed as of Sep 7, 2008
- Fonts 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- List Structures 100% developed as of March 13, 2011
- Special Characters 100% developed as of Apr 24, 2012
- Internationalization 100% developed as of Oct 21, 2010
- Rotations 100% developed as of Dec 20, 2012
- Tables 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Title creation 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Page Layout 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Customizing Page Headers and Footers 50% developed as of Mar 7, 2020
- Importing Graphics 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Floats, Figures and Captions 100% developed as of Oct 3, 2006
- Footnotes and Margin Notes 100% developed as of Apr 24, 2012
- Hyperlinks 100% developed as of Sep 7, 2008
- Labels and Cross-referencing 100% developed as of Oct 9, 2006
- Initials 100% developed as of Jun 25, 2018
- Mechanics
- Technical Text
- Mathematics 100% developed as of Oct 13, 2006
- Advanced Mathematics 75% developed as of Jun 29, 2010
- Theorems 75% developed as of Oct 9, 2006
- Chemical Graphics 75% developed as of Jul 3, 2007
- Algorithms 75% developed as of Dec 3, 2007
- Source Code Listings 100% developed as of Dec 20, 2012
- Linguistics 75% developed as of Sep 8, 2011
- Special Pages
- Special Documents
- Scientific Reports (Bachelor Report, Master Thesis, Dissertation) 25% developed as of Aug 28, 2016
- Letters 75% developed as of Apr 24, 2007
- Presentations 75% developed as of Sep 7, 2008
- Teacher's Corner 50% developed as of Apr 24, 2012
- Curriculum Vitae 50% developed as of Nov 21, 2012
- Academic Journals (MLA, APA, etc.) 25% developed as of Jul 16, 2022
- Creating Graphics
- Programming
- Miscellaneous
- Help and Recommendations
- Appendices