Guest guest Posted February 20, 2002 Report Share Posted February 20, 2002 [i received several letters from different devotees including NA BBT and Gopal Jiu Publishers with a request to tell more about the LaTeX (pronounced as la-te-h) type setting system, thus I decided to post here what I wrote in my reply to them, so that others who might want to know more about LaTeX can learn about it here. I know I run the risk to get flooded by many letters with further inquiries about how LaTeX works, but I hope I will find time to serve all of you, at present I am in the last semester week at university, then I will have 2 months time till the next semester.] Dear Prabhu, please accept my respectful obeisances. All glories to Sri Sri Guru-Gauranga and Sri Sri Radha-Govinda. To begin with, I will give you basic information about LaTeX, so that you can understand what kind of software it is. First of all, LaTeX type setting system is not a WYSIWYG text editor like MS Word. I dont know how good you are with computers and am not aware of how well you know these technical terms, so I will explain you here what this means. In MS Word, when you enter/edit some text, it will look exactly the same way as you can see it on the screen. That's why it is called WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get). LaTeX on the contrary is sort of a programming language, in the sense that you enter a simple ASCII text, and add line commands there where you want the text to look in one or another way. It is very much similar to HTML, you put a <tag> infront of a text if you want to make it look different. By the way, this is the only difficulty that a user has to face when you start learning how to use LaTeX, but it's really worth it, and time spent with learning the commands of LaTeX will fructify in the end with texts with a very professional layout. Many of these commands, as you might have already guessed, allow LaTeX to solve tasks that WYSIWYG text editors cant do at all or require more routine work. So, if you want to use LaTeX, and I do recommend this to everyone who wants to write excellent texts with Indian scripts, then you have to be ready to learn the commands of LaTeX. Now, where can you get the LaTeX software. There are different "distributions" of LaTeX, just like in case with Linux, there is Suse Linux, Mandrake Linux, etc etc. Similarly, there are different LaTeX distributions. I cant say much about in how far they differ from each other, so I will just concentrate myself on the distribution that I use myself, namely, MiKTeX. MiKTeX package can be downloaded at the www.miktex.org site. On the left side of the homepage you will see "DOWNLOAD" and "MiKTeX 2.1" (I wouldnt recommend for you as a beginner to download "MiKTeX 2.2 Beta 1"). On the download page you will find all needed information on how to download and install MiKTeX on your PC. Actually, you will first download a small setup file, you will use it for both the actual download and installation. MiKTeX itself is offered in 3 forms: a "Small" and a "Large" version of 100MB each, and a "Total" version of 500MB. I dont know your computer's hard drive's capacities, but I would strongly recommend you to download the 500MB version, because then you can be sure that you have ALL packages installed on your PC, otherwise you will need to search, download, and install separate packages for Sanskrit or Bengali scripts which only adds more work. After you have installed MiKTeX, you should be able to start writing texts right away. But this is the first step where you have to know what and how to write. For writing texts you can use absolutely any text editor you want, without an exception. But, if you use something like MS Word then you must be sure that you save your texts in ASCII format, because LaTeX works with pure and simple ASCII. That's why simple Notepad is best for this purpose because it saves files in TXT format which is the ASCII format. There is a somewhat more elegant and useful text editor for LaTeX users, namely, WinEdt ("Edt" is not misspelt!). You can download it at the www.winedt.com site. But please note that it's a Shareware product, nevertheless you can still use it even after the 31-day long trial period (I have been using it for almost 2 months now). Even though you can use LaTeX without WinEdt, still I would suggest you to download and install it, too. Well, I think this information should be sufficient for you at first stage. If you have any further questions, feel free to write and ask me about them, I will help as far as I can (I am still a LaTeX beginner myself!). Your humble servant, Sergei. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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