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More Math Into LaTeX

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For over two decades, this comprehensive manual has been the standard introduction and complete reference for writing articles and books containing mathematical formulas. If the reader requires a streamlined approach to learning LaTeX for composing everyday documents, Grätzer’s © 2014 Practical LaTeX may also be a good choice. In this carefully revised fifth edition, the Short Course has been brought up to date and reflects a modern and practical approach to LaTeX usage. New chapters have been added on illustrations and how to use LaTeX on an iPad. Key features : From earlier Grätzer’s book is a solution. ― European Mathematical Society Newsletter There are several LaTeX guides, but this one wins hands down for the elegance of its approach and breadth of coverage. ―Amazon.com, Best of 2000, Editor’s choice A novice reader will be able to learn the most essential features of LaTeX sufficient to begin typesetting papers within a few hours of time… An experienced TeX user, on the other hand, will find a systematic and detailed discussion of LaTeX fea tures. ― Report on Mathematical Physics A very helpful and useful tool for all scientists and engineers.    ― Review of Astronomical Tools

639 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1993

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
1 review
May 8, 2017
required reading for math majors.
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300 reviews
October 1, 2013
Quite comprehensive review up to 2007 of the evolving LaTeX system. I would have liked better to distinguish all the various packages instead of lumping them all together into "LaTeX", but it is certainly true that most distributions simply install them all, so the difference is for the control freaks who want to know where everything is coming from. I do hope that LaTeX3 finally arrives to organize the new 'core' LaTeX so that we don't have to think in terms of packages any more, nor in terms of different implementations achieving the same effect.

There was no ention of the microtype package in this book... perhaps it was too new when it was written (6 years ago now). There was also very little mention of XeTeX or LuaTeX, both of which projects seem to have some steam behind them. In particular, XeTeX could finally solve the problem that TeX has always had: mainstream fonts. Of course, if one is typesetting math, one might need specialized (and not mainstream) fonts. Still, it would be quite convenient to install fonts in the operating system, and without doing anything further, having those fonts readily available to TeX.
120 reviews19 followers
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March 20, 2021
This book is published in the US under the name More Math Into LaTeX, 4th Ed. This is by far the most comprehensive book I have seen for showing how to create mathematical expressions in LaTeX.
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