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Re: RTF for emacs


From: James Freer
Subject: Re: RTF for emacs
Date: Sun, 25 May 2014 21:38:13 +0100 (BST)
User-agent: Alpine 2.10 (DEB 1266 2009-07-14)

On Sun, 25 May 2014, Robert Thorpe wrote:

I appreciate everyone's replies.

Emanuel Berg distinguishes between different types of documents.
Firstly, there are very simple documents that just contain text, those
can be written as text files.  There are webpages which can be
written in HTML.  Large documents can be written using LaTeX.  ToDo
lists and organization can be written using Org mode.

There's another type of document though, those that are simple, but too
complex to make using plain text.  I was talking about writing letters
earlier.  Even that case is tricky.  Have you tried printing a letter
containing Unicode characters?  On my Xubuntu 12.04 system that doesn't
work, they appear as escape codes.  Unfortunately, lots of programs
still don't treat UTF-8 correctly.

For someone who knows LaTeX writing small documents isn't a problem.  I
have only done a few simple things with LaTeX.  I haven't used AucTex,
only Emac's LaTeX mode.  In my job I write reports in Microsoft Word,
I've never had a opportunity to write a long document in LaTeX.  In the
future, if I have the time I'd like to learn LaTeX.  I understand though
that it's a large and complex system, until I read this discussion I
didn't know there were so many different dialects withe different
capabilities.  It would take me months to learn it properly.  Similarly,
Org mode is complex.  I intend to learn that sometime in the future too,
but I haven't the time at present.  I spend quite a lot of time
organizing things, so I expect that'll be time well spent.

James Freer asked about this first, I think his situation is similar to
mine.  I can't justify the time I'd need to learn LaTeX since I'd use it
so infrequently.  That's why I'll continue using LibreOffice until
something better comes along that won't take too long to learn.

BR,
Robert Thorpe

It's not that I haven't the time to learn Latex - i just wanted to know if emacs was going to produce a word processor plugin or whatever. I'm not an IT grad and I don't find emacs easy to learn. I use it for editing prose text as features I love namely; mid cursor positioning (very useful when typing pages and pages... irritating in other editors to constantly type at the bottom of the screen), wordstar keybindings (still the most efficient and still popular with writers), visual line mode (softwrap or whatever you want to call the equivalent) which few editors do effectively... even vim - my other favourite editor is gedit. Only editor I know of that does mid cursor positioning is Pico but doesn't do wordwrap.

I am going to give Latex a go. Had a look earlier today at some of the small apps like Gimme and Texstudio - using those as an intro was worthwhile. I take on board the comments folk have made. You can use Latex for simple docs as well as the more sophisticated maths/scientific manual... and it's fantastic.

As for word processing, LO-writer and Abiword have had their day - both buggy I've found. Online Zoho and google docs for me have replaced them. Of course there are online latex apps which I'm going to have a look at. Then I'll try emacs.

My gripe with emacs is that it takes a lot of learning. Natural app for the IT graduate. I'd love to have a LUG group where I could sit down for an hour with someone and go through a few things to reduce the learning curve. I'd love to customise the menus to remove the coders stuff so I am left with a basic UI with just what I want.

yours
james



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