m (→Formatting) |
m (→{{TeX}} and $\mathrm{\LaTeX}$) |
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At some point in the early 2000, I switched to $\mathrm{\LaTeX}$ for convenience, and almost exclusively use the latter now. | At some point in the early 2000, I switched to $\mathrm{\LaTeX}$ for convenience, and almost exclusively use the latter now. | ||
+ | == Equations == | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Alignment === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Splitting equations within an aligned set can be done as followed~[http://goo.gl/Z8leFI]: | ||
+ | |||
+ | \begin{align} | ||
+ | a &= \begin{aligned}[t] | ||
+ | &b + c + d +\\ | ||
+ | &c + e + f + g + h + i | ||
+ | \end{aligned}\\ | ||
+ | k &= \begin{aligned}[t] | ||
+ | &l + m + n\\ | ||
+ | &+ o + p + q | ||
+ | \end{aligned} | ||
+ | \end{align} | ||
== Fonts == | == Fonts == | ||
{{{1}}}
Contents |
$\mathrm{\TeX}$ is one of the masterpieces of Don Knuth.
It is the uppercase version of $\tau\epsilon\chi$, a Greek word for Tech, which is how $\mathrm{\TeX}$ should be pronounced.
At some point in the early 2000, I switched to $\mathrm{\LaTeX}$ for convenience, and almost exclusively use the latter now.
Splitting equations within an aligned set can be done as followed~[1]:
\begin{align} a &= \begin{aligned}[t] &b + c + d +\\ &c + e + f + g + h + i \end{aligned}\\ k &= \begin{aligned}[t] &l + m + n\\ &+ o + p + q \end{aligned} \end{align}
See Will Robertson preambles to use different fontsets.
\addtolength{\itemsep}{-0.5\baselineskip}
\begin{enumerate}
\setcounter{enumi}{4}
\item fifth element
\end{enumerate}
\usepackage{enumitem}% http://ctan.org/pkg/enumitem
\begin{document}
\begin{enumerate}[label={[\arabic*]}]
\item First item
\item Second item
\item \ldots
\item Last item
\end{enumerate}
\end{document}
There is a $\mathrm{\LaTeX}$ package, footmisc, that is useful for manipulating footnote formatting.
%\footnotesep is the space between footnotes:
\setlength{\footnotesep}{-0.5\baselineskip}
%\footins is the space between the text body and the footnotes:
\setlength{\skip\footins}{1cm}
\makeatletter
\renewcommand{\@makefnmark}
%{\@textsuperscript{\textit{\tiny{\@thefnmark}}}}
{[\@thefnmark]}
\renewcommand\@makefntext[1]{%
\parindent 1em \noindent [\@thefnmark]\enspace #1}
\makeatother
(I left, commented, the original definition of the footnote).