Hi,
I have googled, looked in the pragma site etc for a template (style)
of an a0 poster. Doing this with latex is a bit of a nightmare and the
result is not very appealing.
I am looking for something in the size of a0 with embedded boxes with
plots, equations etc. If such a file existed and was
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 1:03 PM, Pau [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I have googled, looked in the pragma site etc for a template (style)
of an a0 poster. Doing this with latex is a bit of a nightmare and the
result is not very appealing.
I am looking for something in the size of a0 with
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 12:42 PM, Alan Stone
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
( Oops, pushed inadvertedly some key on my keyboard and the
message was away while in GMail - here's the sequel... )
Having heard Linux is, amongst other things, far more stable
I might be tempted to play with it and
Le vendredi 13 juin 2008 à 12:42 +0200, Alan Stone a écrit :
( Oops, pushed inadvertedly some key on my keyboard and the
message was away while in GMail - here's the sequel... )
Having heard Linux is, amongst other things, far more stable
I might be tempted to play with it and progressively
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 12:42 PM, Alan Stone
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
( Oops, pushed inadvertedly some key on my keyboard and the
message was away while in GMail - here's the sequel... )
Having heard Linux is, amongst other things, far more stable
I might be tempted to play with it and
(originally bounced)-a-Begin forwarded message:From: Andrea Valle [EMAIL PROTECTED]>Date: 13 June 2008 14:59:19 GMT+02:00To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], mailing list for ConTeXt users ntg-context@ntg.nl>Subject: Re: [NTG-context] (scientific) poster Hi Pau, I have made a couple of posters with
2008/6/13 Michael Hallgren [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
As I presently don't know a thing about Linux, which distribution
do you recommend ?
Hello :)
Over the years, I've been using mainly FreeBSD. But recently I gave the
Ubuntu distribution a chance. It's a really nice, and easier to manage,
I had a poor experience with commercial design software on Windows (by
Serif, a company based out of the UK.) That pushed me to Linux.
I started with Debian woody and right away I had to fetch and compile
kernel modules from an Intel code base. I actually got Debian working
well under the 2.4
I have to say that for poster stuff where you have to control
visually the layout a GUI is not that bad.
So now I'm using ConTeXt for text-based projects (documents, books)
and Nodebox for visual related things (posters, presentations).
I am extremely happy using ConTeXt and TikZ/pgf
both
Charles P. Schaum [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
I'm torn between a TeX packaged distro and independent construction
either via TeX Live itself or DIY'ing it from CTAN. OTOH it's nice not
to have to build your own texmf tree; but it can be done and I've done
it by following the specs.
Concerning posters (at least that graphic category of posters):
If you have to move a graphic element by hand in search of fine
tuning (which is optical in design, helas, not computational) the
only way in batch-processing based sw is to re-compile, many and many
times.
Such a process can
Aditya Mahajan a écrit :
On Thu, 12 Jun 2008, Hans Hagen wrote:
Maurício wrote:
used ‘ϕ’ in a math formula for one of his papers and Context
it showing up depends on what you use (mkii or mkiv), if the character
is defined, if the font has it (in text mode) etc etc
For mkii you simply
Am 2008-06-12 um 11:00 schrieb Andrea Valle:
The fact IMHO is that there's a potentially large base of ConTeXt
users which are willing to learn the syntax but are scared about
terminals, setting paths etc
(well, me too: knowing substantially nothing of unix I'm never
comfortable with
If if you got it installed, you next will need a GUI for running
ConTeXt, and if some problem arises, you are further away from the
solution than ever.
:-(
Sorry, you can't use TeX in a decent way if you can't use a shell (AKA
command line AKA Terminal AKA DOS box).
That's not true.
Am 2008-06-12 um 20:26 schrieb Maurí cio:
The reason for a standard tag language is that the main engine
should be able to do some operations on data, like breaking it in
pieces like words, paragraphs or staffs on music scores, sometimes
without fully understanding what exactly those are.
On Jun 13, 2008, at 6:40 PM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 2008-06-12 um 11:00 schrieb Andrea Valle:
The fact IMHO is that there's a potentially large base of ConTeXt
users which are willing to learn the syntax but are scared about
terminals, setting paths etc
(well, me too: knowing
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 7:08 PM, Andrea Valle wrote:
Note also that from the previous posts I still have not exactly understood
what I have to do to install Luatex (the famous minimals),
cd /path/to/some/folder
rsync -ptv rsync://contextgarden.net/minimals/setup/first-setup.sh .
Am 2008-06-13 um 19:08 schrieb Andrea Valle:
Sorry, you can't use TeX in a decent way if you can't use a shell
(AKA
command line AKA Terminal AKA DOS box).
That's not true.
Installing mactex doesn't require you to use terminal.
It comes with TeXShop. Works out of the box. That was my first
On Jun 13, 2008, at 2:20 PM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Even with GUI layout projects I normally have a Terminal open - e.g.
for quick (batch) renaming (renaming is one of the few really annoying
mis-features of MacOS X - YES I REALLY WANT TO CHANGE THE EXTENSION
AND I KNOW WHAT I DO,
The reason for a standard tag language is that the main engine
should be able to do some operations on data, like breaking it
in pieces like words, paragraphs or staffs on music scores,
sometimes without fully understanding what exactly those are.
Possible outcomes: with a proper
Am 2008-06-13 um 20:26 schrieb Matthias Weber:
Even with GUI layout projects I normally have a Terminal open - e.g.
for quick (batch) renaming (renaming is one of the few really
annoying
mis-features of MacOS X - YES I REALLY WANT TO CHANGE THE EXTENSION
AND I KNOW WHAT I DO, DAMNED!).
Hi,
Possibly the attached file might helpo you getting going. I prepared
this for a short presentation at the CnTeXt meeting in Epen last year.
kind regards
Willi
Postertutorial.tex
Description: Binary data
On Jun 13, 2008, at 1:03 PM, Pau wrote:
Hi,
I have googled, looked in the
There is your unified system. XML rulez - for better or for
worse. It's really no fun to write XML by hand.
But, as you said, TeX and Lilypond have a similar syntax. I belive
they could share some kind of common language.
What you are thinking about is probably a master document
On Mon, Jun 09, 2008 at 11:08:09PM +0200, Hans Hagen wrote:
Khaled Hosny wrote:
Luatex does not mirror characters that has a Bidi_Mirrored property when
the text direction is set to RTL (TRT in Aleph), according to
http://unicode.org/reports/tr9/#Mirroring, the different types of
After updating my system with rsync to get the latest binaries of
context I got this message:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~ texexec --xtx greek_exp.tex
system : cont-new loaded
(/home/adsm/texmf/tex/context/base/cont-new.tex
FatalError : Your format does not match the base files!
Hi.
Packaging ruby: you only unzip it and set the path.
A stripped-down ruby: probably parsing (even if manually) ruby scripts
from ConTeXt to determine which packages are needed, and delete the
rest of the tree/ruby libraries :)
I'm sure that not the whole 70 MB of ruby are needed to run
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