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LaTeX Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   LaTeX Beginner's Guide When there‚Äôs a scientific or technical paper to write, the versatility of LaTeX is very attractive. But where can you learn about the software? The answer is this superb beginner‚Äôs guide, packed with examples and explanations.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2011
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781847199867
Length 336 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

LaTeX
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with LaTeX FREE CHAPTER 2. Formatting Words, Lines, and Paragraphs 3. Designing Pages 4. Creating Lists 5. Creating Tables and Inserting Pictures 6. Cross-Referencing 7. Listing Content and References 8. Typing Math Formulas 9. Using Fonts 10. Developing Large Documents 11. Enhancing Your Documents Further 12. Troubleshooting 13. Using Online Resources Pop Quiz Answers Index

Time for action – using accents directly


We will modify the previous example daring to enter accented letters directly in the editor.

  1. Create a new document:

    \documentclass{article}
    \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    \begin{document}
    Não compreendo. Há aqui alguém que fale inglês?
    
    Comment çava? Où se trouve l'aéroport?
    \end{document}
  2. Typeset and compare to the previous output:

What just happened?

We loaded the inputenc package. The option utf8 tells the package to use Unicode input encoding, which provides many more symbols than just the ASCII code. Now we just need to find the symbol on the keyboard and to type it.

TeXworks supports Unicode/UTF-8. Depending on operating system and editor, you might need to use another option when loading inputenc. A rule of thumb: utf8 works on most Linux and Unix systems, like Mac OS X, and latin1 works with most Windows editors.

Note

Today, many Windows editors move to UTF-8. This is seemingly becoming the cross-platform standard.

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