Thank you, Tracey

I learnt a lot from your examples too. And I haven't studied them all yet. Your compline booklet looks fantastic. I've done a similar one for Monastic Compline in Opustex which I'd love to translate into Gregorio.

Cheers,
Teresa
Teresa Clark
[email protected]

"I will now appeal to the artist that is within every one of us. Art, as you know, is the right way of making a good thing. There is no right way of making a bad things. Not only something, but make something-a cup of tea, a boiled egg, a hatpeg (from a fallen branch), a chair!" -Vincent McNabb



On 19/05/2009, at 1:39 AM, Tracy Llenos wrote:

On May 16, 2009, at 5:48 AM, Teresa Clark wrote:
Me too,
Where do you learn about Latex? Most of the on-line tutorials are great if you want to typeset Maths!
Cheers
Teresa Clark

My background in TeX actually comes from studying engineering in school (Carnegie Mellon, for anyone who knows), and almost switching to math. Though I did also practice by typesetting breviary texts that our Newman Club/Catholic student organization used. :-) I agree a lot of the online information is more useful for math/technical typesetting. I'll try to look for some links for more general LaTeX info. Maybe others on either list have some good LaTeX learning suggestions?

One good way to learn though is just by looking at other people's available code -- Élie has some examples on the website at http://home.gna.org/gregorio/gregoriotex/example , some of which are just LaTeX and don't use Gregorio at all. The first download on that page (the Divine Praises sheet) has an example of changed staff margins too. When I get back home to Chicago I can add more things to the examples I posted on this list awhile ago (and finish cleaning up some code sloppiness).

Regards,
--
Tracy


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