EditorsWebPicks
From PCTeXWiki
Contents |
Editor's Choice LaTeX Web Sites
Paul Blaga
Lance Carnes
- Andrew Roberts's online tutorial for LaTeX beginners has been a favorite of mine since I discovered it a few years ago.
- Juergen Fenn maintains a topical list of LaTeX packages that links to Graham Williams's TeX Catalogue. A great resource if you are looking to add some style to your LaTeX documents. (See also Juergen's list of LaTeX guides).
- Robin Fairbairns maintains an excellent set of articles on all aspects of TeX and LaTeX. Whenever I google a LaTeX topic this site is usually within the top five hits.
- Lance's other LaTeX web sites
Francisco (Rei) Reinaldo
- These two sites are optimal candidates to help readers break the ice with TeX.
- If PDF is a standardised pattern file that mixes (tex)t and images, so how is it work? Are you curious to know? Thom Parker answered it at:
- In this is concise site, Guilherme P. de Freitas shows how easy is to write a TeX document.
- This site contains the A-Z of LaTeX Writing.
- Paul A Jolly shares in his site some of the LaTeX Tips and Tricks for intermediate LaTeX users.
- This site contains a huge repository of answered Latex questions.
- Sometimes, free tools for converting documents into other formats may help users to optimise their time. So, this site is for.
Yuri Robbers
- Didier Verna's blog on — among other things — LaTeX. This blog offers many a gem of LaTeX coding.
- The documentation for XeTeX and XeLaTeX is still rather rudimentary at best, but the XeTeX mailing list is a veritable gold mine of information. Subscribe to ask your questions or just search the archives.
- The LaTeX Font Catalogue gives a good overview of fonts that are well supported by LaTeX. It includes free fonts as well as commercial fonts for which good LaTeX support exists.
- And one more blog — this time Stefan Kottwitz's TeXblog — with some very nice pieces of code and some useful solutions for (in)famous TeX and LaTeX puzzles.
