Hi,
I wouldn't recommend anything other than kile for linux users. for me it
offers the fastest way of texing.
I tried emacs when we got the task of learning and testing a bit of lisp
in university, but I didn't get the feeling "I'm becoming better and
using this program seems to be an improvement." soon enough. That's why
it should be mentioned but not recommenend for beginners: It's a
paedagogical rule: don't change content and form simultaneously. (German
speakers can read: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proaktive_Hemmung )
Toscho
Am 28.09.2010 22:44, schrieb Philipp Stephani:
Am 28.09.2010 um 21:16 schrieb Peter Dyballa:
Am 28.09.2010 um 16:20 schrieb Tobias Schoel:
Can we now come back to the beginning problem:
Which way of creating unicode-encoded .tex-documents to propose in lshort?
Using GNU Emacs 23.x – the Unicode Emacs (and any of its variants) – with its
AUCTeX extension.
I use the same technology, but I would never recommend it to beginners. It
doesn't help if you have to learn LaTeX/ConTeXt *and* Emacs at the same time.
TeXworks seems to be a modern, Unicode-capable solution, and AFAIK it is
included in TeX Live. Thus the recommendation should be TeX Shop on OS X and
TeXworks on Windows and Linux. AFAIK TeXworks has been modelled after TeX Shop,
which should simplify the explanations.
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