@manooooh -- If the author is sloppy, it may be impossible for an editor to make a document accessible. At the very least, it makes the conversion much more expensive, and that affects everybody.
@manooooh -- What you are saying is that the person doesn't need to care about grammar or spelling either, Ignoring that just means that readers may not grasp the intended meaning. Not everything can be left up to the editor. If a paper is sloppily written, a good acquisitions editor will insist that the author remedy the problems before the paper is accepted for publication, I'm not talking about line spacing, but comprehensibility.
@barbarabeeton and I am talking about line spacing, and not comprehensibility. It is clear that a document must be understandable, but do not go too far to take care of everything, because we would go crazy
@manooooh I fully agree with @barbarabeeton that the authors need to make a huge effort to make their papers or books clear and unambiguous. I am not aware of any tool that is better suited for this task than LaTeX.
@DavidCarlisle The mouseover text on this one is also worth a look. (I have colleagues who will print out a pdf, scan the printout, and mail the result. The mind boggles.)
@DavidCarlisle The big "Mathematics Handbook for Science and Engineering", with more than 500 pages, full of tables and formulas was set with Framemaker. Now it is redone with LaTeX, and I've heard it is not trivial to do the conversion.
Quick question: what should I do if I see a question in the review queue that has been flagged as a duplicate of the wrong question? (It is a duplicate, but of another question.)
@Circumscribe I think, if you vote for leaving open, then you can't vote to close. You can simply vote to close as duplicate, choosing the correct duplicate
@DavidCarlisle I don't understand what you mean. I'll reform my question- if within a command you need a value that is used more than once, what do best practices dictate to do- 1) calculate it beforehand and save it in a def, edef, gdef, a count, a counter, idunno; 2) since computers are rather efficient it doesn't matter that it does 2 more arithmetic operations, so don't worry- but I'm asking for the best practice, what one should do
I'm unsure what exactly this is called to search for it- hyperref links between documents are possible, the pgf/tikz ones are an example; what are they called- cross-file? And do they work to specific labels inside the target pdf?
Okay, so cross-file via URL and rel. path; but to a specific label?
@manooooh It was the main topic at the last GuIT meeting. Politecnico di Torino is carrying on a project just to make math books available for blind people
@CarLaTeX you are not answering my question. If you think that mathematicians must worry about writing documents for blind people, they should write it for colorblind people too, do you agree?
Anyone know what the current state on PDFs with forms are these days? We have a specific requirement: The data needs to be saved in the PDF and the user has to upload the filled in PDF. Submitting from the PDF is not allowed due to the systems being used (plus not all PDF viewers supports it).
Related: anyone have any good suggestions on how to get the data out of the PDF?
Background: we're considering this setup for a very large exam. The exam system only allows users to upload, say a PDF file. So it would be nice if we could make a PDF, with boxes the students can just fill in (data is just integers), save the PDF, and upload when they are done.
I have a look at some point. Would prefer something which we have 100% control of. Also we are talking about 700 students, so I need this to just work.
@daleif with a current adobe reader there should be no problem. E.g. I could enter some text in the field and than save it without problem:
\documentclass{scrreprt}
\usepackage[]{hyperref}
\begin{document}
\begin{Form}
enter some text: \TextField[name=test,width=3cm]{}
\end{Form}
\end{document}
@daleif I'd say: stick to the current setup. People here are also talking about "digital exams", but honestly I do not think we are there yet, and perhaps will not be. I don't even see the problem with using pen and paper, it has proven to work well. I understand that my point of view does not help you, though, but good luck!
@yo' -- I hope you were wearing either good lug boots or spikes of some sort. (Yes, wintry trails can be very beautiful, but do be careful. Grown people don't bounce very well.)
@mickep so someone has to type in 42 * 700 numbers to determine the students grades? Why not get the students to do this for us. We are in luck here, it is just numbers, there are no formulas. If there were formulas, I agree paper is better.
@daleif Oh, for some quiz-type questions, we have a system Mozquizto, which happens to have been developed by one of the lecturers here. Works very well, and it also corrects for you. :)
Someone told me "You can configure latexmk in 0.2.3 in texworks". How, please?
(I need it so that compilation is done properly for bibligraphies.)
I'm in Debian 6 and using TexLive.
@JosephWright Ulrike has done the edit, so you don't need to do it anymore!
It does work on my machine now. I can confirm that. If it does not work on other machines, then of course they will need to figure out what further modification needs to be made. Thank you.
@marmot it almost took me an hour to fly the plane along a straight line ;) but but but, u were simply bamboozling it, as it is a kite ;) very nice answer!!
The address texhelp at springer dot de rejects e-mails from me. Is anyone else experiencing the same problem by chance? If so, who if the culprit?
The original message was received at Mon, 18 Feb 2019 15:38:19 GMT
from m0128438.ppops.net [127.0.0.1]
----- The following addresses had permanent fatal errors -----
<[email protected]>
(reason: 550 #5.1.0 Address rejected.)
----- Transcript of session follows -----
... while talking to [195.128.10.23]:
>>> RCPT To:<[email protected]>
@user0 it says <[email protected]>... User unknown. Are you sure you have written the email correctly? If yes, I do not know how to help you, I am sorry
@manooooh [email protected] is what refguide.pdf of one of their class files (svmono version 5.5) says. An E-Mail to Frank Holzwarth also fails with
550 5.1.1 <[email protected]>: Recipient address rejected: address does not exist in this domain
Does anyone know what's going on?
@manooooh I thought that folks here might communicate with Springer more often than me, so...
... and the certificate of texwelt.de has just ran out. In case some admins from there are reading here, they might wish to correct the issue.
@CarLaTeX if you believe that, all people who write documents should worry about writing a document that meets all the characteristics to satisfy all types of diseases in the world. Does it seem reasonable for a mathematician to look for methods to make a document with these characteristics accessible?
@CarLaTeX I would not be surprised if their level of mathematics is high
@CarLaTeX a mathematician does not take care of that, that is what someone else deals with. The mathematician knows that people with disabilities can read his document, but that is not the most important thing for him
@CarLaTeX "I would not be surprised if their level of mathematics is high" I mean "I would not be surprised if their level of mathematics is not high"
1 Animated SVG (animate [2018/11/20])
suitable for inclusion in Web pages (or viewed standalone, also on mobile devices)
freely scalable (vectorial graphics)
relies on M. Gieseking's dvisvgm output driver/utility (available in TeXLive and MikTeX)
compile with
latex myAnim.tex % or lualate...
@marmot no no, in the morn @JosephWright suggested me to use SWs like imagemagick, irfanview to render a gif. However, I could not get to install it in my work pc. Hence, I decided to wait until I reach home to use my uni pc ;)
Now, what can I say, I have a TeX based solution instead (yay!!)
@Raaja Yes, the animations work without external software. The only thing is that AFAIK the only animations you may upload here are gifs, which is where the external software comes into play. (I use the beamer built-in animations a lot in my talks.)
@barbarabeeton Wintry trails aren't necessarily icy, so it's often not necessary to take special precautions when hiking them. Speaking of icy, how is your recovery from the broken hip going? Back to your old self yet?
@HaraldHanche-Olsen -- Well, @yo' did say that the trails were icy. As for my hip, I'm still carrying a cane, but it's mostly "insurance". On level surfaces, I don't need it, and I'm taking tai chi classes where I don't need it. But it's there in case I need to clamber over cobblestones or tree roots, or if someone accosts me I can always use it to repel unwanted advances. <grin>
@Raaja Too bad I already upvoted it when I first saw it. ;-) (The starburst node shape may be handy for the frame when the plane hits its destination. ;-)