On Wed, Sep 26, 2007 at 10:21:04AM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
One has to change the tool so if one is advocating LaTeX because of the
merits of LaTeX over WYSIWYG one cannot offer up WYSIWYG as a front end for
LaTeX without invalidating the argument that it is superior.
Humbug! It allows
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
[snip]
To my mind the fact that I said it would be nice to have versioning that
worked with OOo, Freemind and Writer's Cafe/Storylines implied that OOo,
Freemind and Writer's Cafe/Storylines were not on the table for
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Benjamin A'Lee wrote:
On Wed, Sep 26, 2007 at 04:16:06PM +0200, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
(Unfortunately the way from word to LaTeX is not nearly that efficient
if not impossible.)
Not at all. IIRC, Abiword can both import DOC and export LaTeX.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/27/07 01:58, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Steve Lamb wrote:
[snip]
To my mind the fact that I said it would be nice to have versioning that
worked with OOo, Freemind and Writer's Cafe/Storylines implied that OOo,
Freemind and Writer's
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/26/07 15:33, Steve Lamb wrote:
David Brodbeck wrote:
Maybe I'm confusing threads. I thought one of his requirements was
searchability and version control. Version control tools don't work
well with OOo because, by design, it produces
On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 06:03:27AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
- From the original post, 08/22/07 15:26 UTC:
o handle non-text data as well as some textual data. The main
file that is going to change most often is an OOo document (odt).
Here we have the source of some of the confusion.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 09/27/07 01:58, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Steve Lamb wrote:
[snip]
To my mind the fact that I said it would be nice to have versioning that
worked with OOo, Freemind and Writer's Cafe/Storylines implied that OOo,
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 06:03:27AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
- From the original post, 08/22/07 15:26 UTC:
o handle non-text data as well as some textual data. The main
file that is going to change most often is an OOo document (odt).
Here we have the
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Sorry for this lapse of mine. I searched the thread for the terms
Freemind and Storylines as they appear in the later mail. In the
first mail they were called Mindmap and Writer's Cafe instead.
To explain I mistakenly called Freemind Mindmap as it is mindmapping
Ron Johnson wrote:
In my case it's because it's because I have no idea what format
Freemind and Storylines are in.
Oh, I understand why. The amusement came from the perception, correct or
not, that people would trust/respect my decision on two pieces and not the
third. I can assure you
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Steve Lamb wrote:
[snip]
To my mind the fact that I said it would be nice to have versioning that
worked with OOo, Freemind and Writer's Cafe/Storylines implied that OOo,
Freemind and Writer's Cafe/Storylines were not on the table for replacement.
You are
On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 08:50:06AM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
I was quickly disabused of that misconception and was perfectly fine to
not have versioning via normal textual means. In fact I then switched my
thinking to how to get OOo to save uncompressed or have the versioning
software to
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 04:55:36PM -0500, Russell L. Harris wrote:
Occasionally while writing, I save the document, switch to the
command-line window and execute LaTeX, then look over the xdvi
displays (which are updated automatically whenever LaTeX is run).
I can avoid the switch to the cl
On 25 Sep 2007, David Brodbeck wrote:
On Sep 25, 2007, at 8:01 AM, Steve Lamb wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
PDF?
Haven't seen it as an acceptable format for submission, no.
Some on-demand publishers use it. For example, Lulu.com.
I've just published a book via Lulu. If anyone is
On 26 Sep, Peter Robinson wrote:
...
If you write in latex you can always convert to RTF via latex2rtf,
which in my experience works excellently. If needed, it is no big
deal to convert this to word format. It is definitely worth the
effort to learn latex.
cheers, peter
I
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
David Brodbeck wrote:
As long as you realize it probably won't look the same to the other
person, unless they have the same Word version, the same operating
system, and the same fonts.
It will look similar enough.
... or
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Russell L. Harris wrote:
So now the problem becomes how to convert the HTML produced by HeVeA
into RTF or another format which M$ Word can read -- preferably within
the Debian environment, and preferably with open-source software.
In another hour
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Of course you are free to use whatever seems suitable to you. But don't
take it personal, when people advise you to do otherwise.
It is personal when I state quite emphatically that I do not feel it is
the best tool for me, personally. At that point any reply
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 10:11:31PM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
Furthermore I fail to see this supposed don't think about the formatting
simplicity when I can't even write a simple financial value without resorting
to escapes!
Hardly any different from resorting to mouse clicks. However, you
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Of course you are free to use whatever seems suitable to you. But don't
take it personal, when people advise you to do otherwise.
It is personal when I state quite emphatically that I do not feel
Neil Watson wrote:
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 10:11:31PM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
Furthermore I fail to see this supposed don't think about the
formatting simplicity when I can't even write a simple financial value
without resorting to escapes!
Hardly any different from resorting to mouse
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
I hope I didn't state that you are wrong, that's not my intention.
By refuting my personal opinion so emphatically even if you haven't said
the word the sentiment is clear.
- From my personal experience LaTeX *is the tool* when it comes to
You personal
Please approach this subject in a more subjective manner. I was
suggesting that until you gain experience with both manners of
document creation you can hardly form an accurate conclusion as to what
best suits your needs.
--
Neil Watson | Debian Linux
System Administrator|
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
The ultimate irony is that the end result of all this evangelical blather
for LaTeX has resulted in people suggesting extremely convoluted methods of
achieving a simple requirement in OOo. Convert LaTeX to HTML and then from
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
I hope I didn't state that you are wrong, that's not my intention.
By refuting my personal opinion so emphatically even if you haven't said
the word the sentiment is clear.
- From my personal
Neil Watson wrote:
Please approach this subject in a more subjective manner. I was
suggesting that until you gain experience with both manners of
document creation you can hardly form an accurate conclusion as to what
best suits your needs.
Until you've tried a vacuum you can't say you
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Steve Lamb wrote:
The ultimate irony is that the end result of all this evangelical blather
for LaTeX has resulted in people suggesting extremely convoluted methods of
achieving a simple requirement in OOo. Convert LaTeX to HTML and then from
HTML to Word!
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
True. But my personal experience includes quite a bit of work with word,
OOo *and* LaTeX.
Happy for you. Let me know when you turn into me so your personal
experience matches mine. I'll be happy to let you write the book for me. :P
LaTeX, especially without
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
OOo - Save As .doc
LaTex - Export to HTML, find an HTML to .doc converter, hope all the
formatting goes through (which it won't).
No: LaTeX - Export to HTML; open html in OOo - Save as .doc.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
True. But my personal experience includes quite a bit of work with word,
OOo *and* LaTeX.
Happy for you. Let me know when you turn into me so your personal
experience matches mine. I'll be
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
It does not retain the formatting in the sense that it retains page and
line breaks. But it does retain the structure and italics, etc. ie. all
that appears to be important in your case.
Or margins. That is not inconsiderable.
I didn't want to do hair
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Steve Lamb wrote:
Yeah, and vim is a WYSIWYG editor. Now you're arguing just to be a prick.
No, it's you who is arguing just to be a prick. I told you before, that
from your previous e-mail I got the impression that you don't like to
type
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Steve Lamb wrote:
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
OOo - Save As .doc
LaTex - Export to HTML, find an HTML to .doc converter, hope all the
formatting goes through (which it won't).
No: LaTeX - Export to HTML; open html in OOo - Save as .doc.
One additional
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/26/07 09:00, Steve Lamb wrote:
[snip]
But does not fit the requirement of easily converted to an acceptable
format or being able to work visually with it. No, I am not counting LyX and
the like because to suggest a WYSIWYG editor for
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 26 Sep, Peter Robinson wrote:
...
If you write in latex you can always convert to RTF via latex2rtf,
which in my experience works excellently. If needed, it is no big
deal to convert this to word format. It is definitely worth the
effort to learn
Ron Johnson wrote:
You're saying that only stringent proponents get to define the usage
parameters of a system.
No. But their usage parameters are the only one that change significantly
from what I'm working with now. It's a matter of drop the WYSIWYG and do the
work in LaTeX vs. Save in
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/26/07 12:21, Steve Lamb wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
You're saying that only stringent proponents get to define the usage
parameters of a system.
No. But their usage parameters are the only one that change significantly
from what I'm
On Sep 26, 2007, at 6:10 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I disagree. I use latex for some articles which are submitted to
scientific journals, but for the type of writing which Steve has
described, Oo.org is fine, with no learning curve, and he can
output it
to .doc or.rtf as necessary.
Ron Johnson wrote:
Since I don't think we will change each other's mind regarding this,
I think it should be dropped.
This is D-U, you can't do that!
--
Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream?
PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | And dream I do...
David Brodbeck wrote:
Maybe I'm confusing threads. I thought one of his requirements was
searchability and version control. Version control tools don't work
well with OOo because, by design, it produces opaque binary files.
You're not confusing the two. Yes, it was listed as a
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 10:11:31PM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
Rob Mahurin wrote:
I know you've settled on OOo, but it's worth pointing out that TeX is
a simple language if you're writing a simple document. In particular
you are already writing valid plain TeX in your email. Copy the above
On Sep 26, 2007, at 2:11 PM, Rob Mahurin wrote:
You're concerned (I think) about not being able to merge changes in
OpenOffice's data files using revision control, because those files
aren't straightforward text. Someone else mentioned Abiword, which
saves uncompressed XML; but there's
* Johannes Wiedersich [EMAIL PROTECTED] [070926 08:28]:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Russell L. Harris wrote:
So now the problem becomes how to convert the HTML produced by HeVeA
into RTF or another format which M$ Word can read -- preferably within
the Debian
On Wed, Sep 26, 2007 at 04:16:06PM +0200, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
(Unfortunately the way from word to LaTeX is not nearly that efficient
if not impossible.)
Not at all. IIRC, Abiword can both import DOC and export LaTeX.
On the other hand, if you want *nice* LaTeX, you'll have to try a bit
Neil Watson wrote:
With TeX and LaTeX and its ilk the templates actually work. I can use
the same template for all of my reports and they always look the same.
There are no annoying format inconsistencies that are so common with
Word and OpenOffice.
To be fair I am operating out a large
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 07:30:35AM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
To be fair I am operating out a large measure of ignorance. One of my
main concerns is that the typesetting languages are languages. I'm sure
they're robust but I have always seen their use tied to another editor. Since
an
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/25/07 09:30, Steve Lamb wrote:
Neil Watson wrote:
With TeX and LaTeX and its ilk the templates actually work. I can use
the same template for all of my reports and they always look the same.
There are no annoying format inconsistencies that
Neil Watson wrote:
I have seen many publishers take submissions in Word, plain text or printed
out. I've yet to see one accept LaTeX.
Publishers of scientific journals accept LaTeX, most even provide a
style file so that the document is formatted according to the specific
journals
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 07:30:35AM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
Also the end result of my labor will be to send this out to be published.
I have seen many publishers take submissions in Word, plain text or printed
out.
This is another good thing about TeX. You can publish your document in
Ron Johnson wrote:
PDF?
Haven't seen it as an acceptable format for submission, no.
--
Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream?
PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | And dream I do...
---+-
Kumar Appaiah wrote:
I am actually a bit surprised. Numerous scientific books are written
in TeX. In fact, Dr. Knuth's own books are typeset in TeX, which is
what eh created TeX for. Besides, I am really surprised publishers
won't want TeX, since a lot of books I've read have acklowledged that
Steve Lamb:
To be fair I am operating out a large measure of ignorance.
:)
One of my
main concerns is that the typesetting languages are languages. I'm sure
they're robust but I have always seen their use tied to another editor. Since
an outside editor is required it is my
* Jochen Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] [070925 16:07]:
Steve Lamb:
they're robust but I have always seen their use tied to another
editor. Since an outside editor is required it is my impression
that there is no WYSIWYG, no way to get a basic view of how it
might look printed outside of actually
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 07:30:35AM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
Neil Watson wrote:
With TeX and LaTeX and its ilk the templates actually work. I can use
the same template for all of my reports and they always look the same.
There are no annoying format inconsistencies that are so common with
On Sep 25, 2007, at 8:01 AM, Steve Lamb wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
PDF?
Haven't seen it as an acceptable format for submission, no.
Some on-demand publishers use it. For example, Lulu.com.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble?
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
The output is PostScript
so I kept a copy of GhostView (gv) running (watching the file) and
whenever I wanted to see how things looked, just ran lout on my file to
the same output file name.
Yeahhh, no thanks. I don't like coding HTML with the produce and peek
On Sep 25, 2007, at 4:31 PM, Steve Lamb wrote:
No, my issue is that I have some formatting I want to be there
and I
need to be able to express that formatting in a way that will be
accepted by the broadest scope of submission requirements. Working in
ODT and then either printing it and
On Sep 25, 2007, at 5:11 PM, David Brodbeck wrote:
On Sep 25, 2007, at 4:31 PM, Steve Lamb wrote:
No, my issue is that I have some formatting I want to be there
and I
need to be able to express that formatting in a way that will be
accepted by the broadest scope of submission
David Brodbeck wrote:
As long as you realize it probably won't look the same to the other
person, unless they have the same Word version, the same operating
system, and the same fonts.
It will look similar enough.
It's rare that someone sends me a complicated Word file and I'm able
to
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/25/07 19:11, David Brodbeck wrote:
[snip]
changes. About the time we hit the 650 page mark, Word started
corrupting the file and it became impossible to go through more than a
few edit/save cycles before the file became unreadable and we had
On Tue, Sep 25, 2007 at 05:27:02PM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote:
Good thing that what I'm writing is not at all complex. The two most
complex things are italics and indent-first-line.
[...]
Am I writing a book? Yes.
Am I writing a technical book? No!
I am writing fiction. I
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 09/25/07 19:27, Steve Lamb wrote:
[snip]
Am I writing a book? Yes.
Am I writing a technical book? No!
I am writing fiction. I have no in-line graphics, complex font changes
for examples, silly little icons to denote special
Rob Mahurin wrote:
I know you've settled on OOo, but it's worth pointing out that TeX is
a simple language if you're writing a simple document. In particular
you are already writing valid plain TeX in your email. Copy the above
(without the 's) into file.txt; change /'thinking'/ to {\it
Steve Lamb wrote:
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
The output is PostScript
so I kept a copy of GhostView (gv) running (watching the file) and
whenever I wanted to see how things looked, just ran lout on my file to
the same output file name.
Yeahhh, no thanks. I don't like coding HTML
* Peter Robinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] [070926 00:35]:
If you write in latex you can always convert to RTF via latex2rtf, which in
my experience works excellently. If needed, it is no big deal to convert
this to word format. It is definitely worth the effort to learn latex.
This afternoon, out
65 matches
Mail list logo