Date: Fri, 13 Apr 2001 16:59:52 +0200 From: Rahul Siddharthan <rsidd@physics.iisc.ernet.in> To: Dan Langille <dan@langille.org> Cc: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Just an observation - MUA's seen in the lists Message-ID: <20010413165952.K82834@lpt.ens.fr> In-Reply-To: <200104131436.f3DEa3e07944@ns1.unixathome.org>; from dan@langille.org on Fri, Apr 13, 2001 at 10:35:56AM -0400 References: <SAK.2001.04.13.fqqdcoqq@support10> <200104131436.f3DEa3e07944@ns1.unixathome.org>
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> > Or many of us are at work in a Windows only shop as the desktops, > > and our webservers are nix. [Flame War --- As M$ office is just about the > > best office product out there ]. > > [What's this white spirits sitting by my desk? /me throws it away] > > Agree. There is no other office suite worth the same. To all ye office users: I have some questions about MS Word. I never use it myself, but I know people who do, and it seems to me that they have a hard time doing some very basic things which TeX/LaTeX have done since the 1980s. Or maybe Word does do all this but users don't know it? (1) Does it do automatic section numbering / equation numbering / figure numbering, etc? (2) Can you attach labels to the section/equation/etc so that you can refer to these using the label, and in the final printed document the correct reference number is automatically used? (For example, if I refer to figure 8 and I insert another figure earlier, the reference will automatically change to figure 9.) (3) Can you have an "unbreakable space"? For instance, in referring to Mr. Bush, you don't want the line to be broken like this: Mr. Bush -- so you put an unbreakable space there rather than a normal space. (4) Does it treat section headings intelligently at page breaks? I have seen word documents where the section heading was at the bottom of one page and the section started at the top of the next page. These are the things I'm doubtful about. There are plenty of things I'm not doubtful about: Word doesn't do them, at least not in any word document I've seen. (1) Math: Word's support for equations is rudimentary at best. (2) Ligatures: Traditionally, certain letter combinations (fi, fl, ff, ffi, ffl) are printed as single units. TeX does this when using its native font family (computer modern) and other fonts which support it (eg most postscript fonts support the fl and fi ligatures). (3) Paragraph-level formatting: TeX formats text a paragraph at a time, to avoid ugly effects like "ladders" that could happen when you do things a line at a time. Adobe introduced that in some of their DTP software much later. Word doesn't do it. (4) Spacing after full stops: in English language text, traditionally one leaves a bit of extra space after a full stop. TeX does this, using some simple rules to recognise a full stop. On the rare occasions it gets this wrong, you can overrule it. End result: TeX/LaTeX documents are consistently beautiful to look at: you have to try rather hard to screw them up. MS Word documents are almost always hideous. You can argue that Word is not meant to be publication-quality stuff, but unfortunately that's what many people do use it for. Besides, I prefer even an ordinary letter to be nicely typeset, and LaTeX lets me do that without compromising on ease of use. (For those who must have their point&click, there's LyX.) R To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-chat" in the body of the message
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