On 21 Dec 2011, at 11:22, Andrew Coppin wrote:

> On 21/12/2011 10:09 AM, Jesse Schalken wrote:
>> IIRC, Scite's default configuration is with non-monospace font. I
>> actually found it quite appealing, and in fact forgot about it entirely
>> after some usage. It is much easier on the eyes to read. The difference
>> is really whether you care about aligning things mid-line or not, not to
>> mention editor support (i.e. not Vim or other terminal-based editor).
> 
> SciTE's default binding /is/ proportional, not mono-space. I find it ever so 
> irritating. Then again, I'm sure this one comes squarely down to personal 
> preference, so it seems pointless to debate it.
> 
> LaTeX offers the possibility of mid-line alignment even if you don't use 
> monospace - a feature which I haven't seen in any other text processing 
> system. It's a pitty this isn't more widespread...

Monospace isn't used in math (except in the days when one used typewriters), 
but alignments are of course used in matrices and multiline formulas, for 
example, which may correspond to uses in computer code.

A problem is that LaTeX is used for rendering typeset pages, and not really 
suitable for writing direct computer code, though Unicode characters can 
improve the readability of LaTeX source code. The link below shows an example.

Hans


http://www.charlietanksley.net/philtex/the-unicode-math-package-for-xelatex-and-the-stix-fonts/



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