To build on your analogy, would Tikz be the Graphics Designer?
Jonathan
Juan Manuel Macías writes:
> Hi Diego,
>
> Thank you very much for your comments.
>
> Diego Zamboni writes:
>
>> I think with Org and a setup like you describe, we are one step closer
>> to separating content (what) from
Hi Bob, thank you for your comment.
Bob Newell writes:
> Aloha,
>
> Thank you for your interesting and useful post.
>
> I must really look into your examples and process. I have
> published quite a number of books with LaTeX but my process
> has been to write in org-mode, then export, and do all
Hi Arne,
Thank you very much for sharing the code of your book. It seems very
interesting, I have to take a closer look at it. I want to upload to
GitLab all the code of those two books of my samples, but I need to
rearrange it before, as most of that code is in Spanish :-)
But, broadly speaking,
Hi Juan,
I’ve been going that route for a few years now, and I setup an autotools
pipeline with all the little tweaks and hacks I needed to make
everything work well together.
I’m using LaTeX (pdflatex), scribus, calibre and imagemagick to publish
a roleplaying book with charactersheet,
Maybe s
Hi Diego,
Thank you very much for your comments.
Diego Zamboni writes:
> I think with Org and a setup like you describe, we are one step closer
> to separating content (what) from form (how) in a document. This was
> one of the original goals of LaTeX, but of course in a LaTeX document
> much o
Hi Quintus:
Thank you very much for your comments.
M. ‘quintus’ Gülker writes:
> [...] Many people seem to use org rather than direct LaTeX because they
> dislike LaTeX's syntax or find LaTeX too complex, which I never really
> understood. But you make some great points for why this combination
> Vikas Rawal writes:
> A few years ago, I had produced this book entirely on orgmode:
> https://cup.columbia.edu/book/ending-malnutrition/9789382381648. The
> source files of the book are here:
> https://github.com/vikasrawal/endingmalnutrition.
> This was some years bac
A few years ago, I had produced this book entirely on orgmode:
https://cup.columbia.edu/book/ending-malnutrition/9789382381648. The source
files of the book are here: https://github.com/vikasrawal/endingmalnutrition.
This was some years back, and there has been some change in the org mode syntax
Hi Juan Manuel,
Thanks for sharing this - the output looks very nice.
I think with Org and a setup like you describe, we are one step closer to
separating content (what) from form (how) in a document. This was one of
the original goals of LaTeX, but of course in a LaTeX document much of the
"how"
Am 06. März 2021 um 20:34 Uhr +0100 schrieb Juan Manuel Macías:
> I would like to share here two samples of one of the most intense
> uses that I give Org Mode: for typesetting, layout and editorial
> design. [...] The samples are from a book on classical philology,
> recently published here in Spa
Hi,
I would like to share here two samples of one of the most intense uses
that I give Org Mode: for typesetting, layout and editorial design. In
other words, I use Org (and Org-Publish) where publishers today use DTP
proprietary software like InDesign or QuarkXpress (a type of software,
on the ot
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