Colin Baxter writes:
> \(g=\lim_{\delta m\to 0}(\delta F/\delta m)\)
>
> Backslash city! I know which one I'd prefer to read.
Further, in-text single-letter variables that permeate mathematical
writing, and I think everyone would agree that $k$ reads well. Alas, as
soon as one needs to write
Colin,
> > Colin Baxter writes:
> >> Ah, LaTeX3 - whatever happened to that?
...
> Yes, I know. My remark was tongue in cheek.
which leaves open whether your tongue was already in your cheek at:
> Indeed. Compare something like
>
> $g=\lim_{\delta m\to 0}(\delta F/\delta m)$
>
> with
> Juan Manuel Macías writes:
> Colin Baxter writes:
>> Ah, LaTeX3 - whatever happened to that?
> If you're a LaTeX user, you're already using LaTeX3 to a very high
> extent, even if you don't see it. The current idea is not to
> replace LaTeX2e with LaTeX3 as a new
> On Jan 16, 2022, at 7:13 AM, Eric S Fraga wrote:
>
> On Sunday, 16 Jan 2022 at 00:36, Timothy wrote:
>>Hmm. Not sure about this. Keystroke wise we’re comparing $$
>>to \(. The latter can be completed by smartparens, but since
>>single dollars are reasonable Org
Colin Baxter writes:
> Ah, LaTeX3 - whatever happened to that?
If you're a LaTeX user, you're already using LaTeX3 to a very high
extent, even if you don't see it. The current idea is not to replace
LaTeX2e with LaTeX3 as a new version, but to gradually incorporate
elements of LaTeX3 into the
On Sunday, 16 Jan 2022 at 00:36, Timothy wrote:
> Hmm. Not sure about this. Keystroke wise we’re comparing $$
> to \(. The latter can be completed by smartparens, but since
> single dollars are reasonable Org content the former can’t.
> At this point the only
Colin Baxter writes:
>> Sébastien Miquel writes:
>
> > Hi, With respect to readability, I only mean to point out that the
> > $…$ syntax is one less character, and that the \(\) characters are
> > quite overloaded.
>
> Indeed. Compare something like
>
> $g=\lim_{\delta m\to
> Sébastien Miquel writes:
> Hi, With respect to readability, I only mean to point out that the
> $…$ syntax is one less character, and that the \(\) characters are
> quite overloaded.
Indeed. Compare something like
$g=\lim_{\delta m\to 0}(\delta F/\delta m)$
with
Hi
to add my two cents. I am latex user of _many_ years (as user of emacs +
org), and I use it often for math-loaded texts.
I do use $ (I actually did not even know that \( \) is (supposed to be)
the new way until I saw it generated by org.
As for $$ (or \[), I basically don't use it. I use
Hi,
With respect to readability, I only mean to point out that the $…$
syntax is one less character, and that the \(\) characters are quite
overloaded.
this is a good opportunity to point out that $/$$ are very much second
class citizens in LaTeX now, no matter what you may see in old
Hi Sebastien,
Thanks for your comments, and your thoughts on the proposed deprecation.
It’s worth explicitly considering why we wouldn’t want to steer people away from
the TeX-syntax LaTeX fragments, so I am glad you have brought up some reasons.
I do not find myself agreeing with them however,
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