TeX (software): Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Philip Taylor
(TeX : a computer typesetting system invented by Professor Donald E Knuth)
 
imported>Philip Taylor
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
TeX is a computer typesetting system invented by Professor Donald E Knuth in the late 1970s.  Despite its age, it remains at the forefront of computer typesetting technology today, although by far the majority of its users elect to use [[LaTeX]] rather than TeX itself.  Other so-called "formats" ([[LaTeX]] is a format) exist such as [[ConTeXt_(software)|ConTeXt]], AMSTeX, LamsTeX, Lollipop and so on, although none come near [[LaTeX]] in terms of popularity; [[ConTeXt_(software)|ConTeXt]], however, not only rivals [[LaTeX]] in terms of functionality, it almost certainly exceeds it.
TeX is a computer typesetting system invented by Professor Donald E [[Donald_Knuth|Knuth]] in the late 1970s.  Despite its age, it remains at the forefront of computer typesetting technology today, although by far the majority of its users elect to use [[LaTeX]] rather than TeX itself.  Other so-called "formats" (LaTeX is a format) exist such as [[ConTeXt_(software)|ConTeXt]], AMSTeX, LamsTeX, Lollipop and so on, although none come near LaTeX in terms of popularity; ConTeXt, however, not only rivals LaTeX in terms of functionality, it almost certainly exceeds it.


TeX as defined by Prof. Knuth takes human-readable input, characterised by a proliferation of backslashes and braces, and produces as output a [[DVI]] file, where "DVI" is defined as "DeVice Independent".  More recent systems, derived from TeX, include PdfTeX and XeTeX -- both of these take the same human-readable input as TeX but emit Adobe [[PDF]] rather than DVI (in the case of XeTeX, there is an intermediate XDVI (="eXtended DVI") representation which is then converted to [[PDF]] in a manner that is normally transparent to the end user.   
TeX as defined by Prof. Knuth takes human-readable input, characterised by a proliferation of backslashes and braces, and produces as output a [[DVI]] file, where "DVI" is defined as "DeVice Independent".  More recent systems, derived from TeX, include PdfTeX and XeTeX -- both of these take the same human-readable input as TeX but emit Adobe [[PDF]] rather than DVI (in the case of XeTeX, there is an intermediate XDVI (="eXtended DVI") representation which is then converted to [[PDF]] in a manner that is normally transparent to the end user.  A further branch of the basic TeX code is represented by LuaTeX, which adds an interface to the Lua language accessible directly from the LuaTeX source.


This page is very much a work-in-progress; it will be enhanced whenever the present author or a fellow contributor has time.
This page is very much a work-in-progress; it will be enhanced whenever the present author or a fellow contributor has time.

Revision as of 09:41, 17 June 2016

TeX is a computer typesetting system invented by Professor Donald E Knuth in the late 1970s. Despite its age, it remains at the forefront of computer typesetting technology today, although by far the majority of its users elect to use LaTeX rather than TeX itself. Other so-called "formats" (LaTeX is a format) exist such as ConTeXt, AMSTeX, LamsTeX, Lollipop and so on, although none come near LaTeX in terms of popularity; ConTeXt, however, not only rivals LaTeX in terms of functionality, it almost certainly exceeds it.

TeX as defined by Prof. Knuth takes human-readable input, characterised by a proliferation of backslashes and braces, and produces as output a DVI file, where "DVI" is defined as "DeVice Independent". More recent systems, derived from TeX, include PdfTeX and XeTeX -- both of these take the same human-readable input as TeX but emit Adobe PDF rather than DVI (in the case of XeTeX, there is an intermediate XDVI (="eXtended DVI") representation which is then converted to PDF in a manner that is normally transparent to the end user. A further branch of the basic TeX code is represented by LuaTeX, which adds an interface to the Lua language accessible directly from the LuaTeX source.

This page is very much a work-in-progress; it will be enhanced whenever the present author or a fellow contributor has time.