Date: Fri, 05 Oct 2007 23:34:58 +0200 From: michaelgrunewald@yahoo.fr To: jahnke@sonatabio.com Cc: michaelgrunewald@yahoo.fr, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Equations Message-ID: <86k5q1gs8t.fsf@Llea.celt.neu> In-Reply-To: <1191604254.2944.12.camel@pinot.fmjassoc.com> (Frank Jahnke's message of "Fri\, 05 Oct 2007 10\:10\:54 -0700") References: <1191604254.2944.12.camel@pinot.fmjassoc.com>
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Frank Jahnke <jahnke@sonatabio.com> writes: >> Since you seem to use the equation feature quite intensively, maybe >> you have any clue on making the equation editor perform better. > > Sorry I can't really be of much help with OO.o equations.=20=20 > > What I do personally is a kludge, but it works well enough. For > ... Thank you for your nice answer. It seems there is no reason to be optimistic about the existence of an ``office-like'' program that deals smartly with equations. I am always a bit surprised that TeX was released in 78 (before my birth!) and---despite its algorithms are published---its output quality remains unmatched [1] by common programs. Why these programs do not apply TeX's strategies to solve their problems? This makes me wonder. [1] Lyx was mentioned elsethread, on the project's website I found a text example processed by TeX and Word. The text is four pages long, the columns ist not especially narrow. To prepare this text, Word needs 8 word hyphenations in the first page, with three of them in a row (which is very bad). In the TeX processed version, theres is only two word hyphenations in the whole document. WWW: http://wiki.lyx.org/Examples/ComparingLyXAndWord This is not a definite proof that TeX's output quality remains unmatched, but just an example. --=20 Cheers, Micha=EBl
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