(no subject)
Aug. 19th, 2005 03:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Anyone had any experience with LyX? About to write a long and involved technical document for the first time in a while (in a year and a half, really). The thought of once again hand-grinding DocBook tags with Emacs fills me with ennui.
I suppose I could use this here copy of Word, too. But it offends my nostrils for divers reasons, and not (just) the hairy-hooting "free as in speech" ones. Fact is, I very much prefer the DocBooky way of working with a document structurally, rather than layout-wise. There are ways to kinda-sorta do this in Word, and as far as I know they are all shallow and weak hacks.
I'm passing the time now waiting for tetex to install, praying it compiles. Dum de dum.
Update: Pff. Never mind. It compiled, and the application runs, but trying to convert the intro page into HTML results in a baroque error, and trying to covert it into a PDF results in a pageful of garbage. Flussssh
I hate everything.
Update 2: Oh, I didn't have the
I'll start kicking through the tutorial while that program tries to install itself... if I can't easily turn what I write into HTML, it's a deal-breaker.
Update 3: The HTML conversion magically works, post-finking. OK, less hateful now.
Update 4: The HTML conversion command seems to have vanished from my menus in between launches of the application. Um.
I suppose I could use this here copy of Word, too. But it offends my nostrils for divers reasons, and not (just) the hairy-hooting "free as in speech" ones. Fact is, I very much prefer the DocBooky way of working with a document structurally, rather than layout-wise. There are ways to kinda-sorta do this in Word, and as far as I know they are all shallow and weak hacks.
I'm passing the time now waiting for tetex to install, praying it compiles. Dum de dum.
Update: Pff. Never mind. It compiled, and the application runs, but trying to convert the intro page into HTML results in a baroque error, and trying to covert it into a PDF results in a pageful of garbage. Flussssh
I hate everything.
Update 2: Oh, I didn't have the
latex2html
program installed. Trying to fink it now. Also I didn't notice that there's a bunch of PDF converters to choose from, and some seem to actually work OK.I'll start kicking through the tutorial while that program tries to install itself... if I can't easily turn what I write into HTML, it's a deal-breaker.
Update 3: The HTML conversion magically works, post-finking. OK, less hateful now.
Update 4: The HTML conversion command seems to have vanished from my menus in between launches of the application. Um.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-19 08:23 pm (UTC)I dunno how much LaTeX experience you have, but I've gathered quite a bit of experience in the last 3.5 months, and I'd be happy to consult/answer questions/etc.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-19 08:37 pm (UTC)HTML will be my most important target format, but PDF/PS is also important to me. Its PS conversion is very very very slow. It's taking forever to handle a 32-page document (its own tutorial). My printer is looking at it and panicking. Is it full of weird control characters? I don't know.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-19 09:15 pm (UTC)Reference books to recommend are The LaTeX Companion and Guide to LaTeX. Most things I want to know are in one or the other of those books (and I refer to them quite a bit during some work days). I think the TeX Users Group has some good resources, too.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-19 09:16 pm (UTC)Once you've got something into HTML, the easiest way to convert to PDF is often to print it via your favourite browser to a PS or PDF print driver. There is at least a chance of getting the pagination right, which in my experience never happens otherwise. I've used the PDF995 print driver for this to good effect despite it being annoying adware.