Professor Norm Matloff
Dept. of Computer Science
University of California at Davis
Davis, CA 95616
matloff@cs.ucdavis.edu
LATEX
is a typesetting system which is very popular with computer scientists, engineers, mathematicians, physicists etc. It is especially good for mathematical work, but is also used by many nonscientists. It offers far more flexibility than you get in something like MS Word. In fact, Prof. Donald Knuth of Stanford University reportedly once came close to convincing Newsweek magazine to use LATEX (actually, TeX, the foundation of LATEX ) for its typesetting operations. Another advantage of LATEX is that you can easily convert your LATEX documents to slide presentation format, rather than retyping the former material for the latter.LATEX
is available both in free, public-domain versions, as well as in commercial products, and is available for most platforms (Unix/Linux, Windows, Macs).
There are many LATEX
tutorials on the Web. Here are just a few of them:
Books that I like (though I primarily use the Web):
LATEX
can be used to produce slide shows, complete with overlays, animations and so on. One big advantage that it has over Powerpoint is that you can reuse your material in your LATEX document for use in a presentation. In other words, suppose you've written a report, and now want to make a slide presentation from it. You can simply copy your report's .tex file to a new one, then edit the latter according to what you want to retain for your slides. Why type in the same stuff twice? And again, if you do any math, Powerpoint just isn't very effective.I have tutorials on my Web page for the two most popular presentation packages for LATEX
today:
Here is a partial list:
ACM and IEEE require a certain format, for which they have made available sets of LATEX
macros.For ACM, go to http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/~matloff/LaTeX/FTP/ to see an actual example (a paper of mine) in which you can see how the macros are used. You'll need to copy all of the files in that directory.
Similarly, for an IEEE example, go to http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/~matloff/LaTeX/SimSym/.