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The LaTeX Web Companion: Integrating TeX, HTML, and XML

The LaTeX Web Companion: Integrating TeX, HTML, and XMLAuthors: Michel Goossens, Sebastian Rahtz, Eitan M. Gurari, Ross Moore, Robert S. Sutor
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
Category: Book

List Price: $49.99
Buy New: $17.41
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New (16) Used (16) from $9.25

Seller: thebookgrove
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 910262

Media: Paperback
Edition: annotated edition
Pages: 560
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.4 x 1

ISBN: 0201433117
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.72
UPC: 785342433111
EAN: 9780201433111
ASIN: 0201433117

Publication Date: June 20, 1999
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This book shows how you can publish LaTeX documents on the Web. LaTeX was born of the scientist's need to prepare well-formatted information, particularly with pictures and mathematics included; the Web was born of the scientist's need to communicate information electronically. Until now, it has been difficult to find solutions that address both needs. HTML and today's Web browsers deal inadequately with the nontextual components of scientific documents. This book, at last, describes tools and techniques for transforming LaTeX sources into Web formats for electronic publication, and for transforming Web sources into LaTeX documents for optimal printing. You will learn how to: *Make full use of Acrobat with LaTeX *Convert existing documents to HTML or XML *Use mathematics in Web applications *Use LaTeX to prepare Web pages *Read and write simple XML/SGML *Produce high-quality printed pages from Web-hosted XML or HTML pages You will find practical descriptions of: *LaTeX2HTML, which uses Perl to interpret LaTeX source and generate HTML *TeX4ht, which redefines LaTeX's macros to generate HTML or XML *Browser plugins, such as techexplorer, that are able to interpret mathematical markup directly *Tools for authoring and interpreting XML *Tools for translating XML into various output formats, using Cascading Style Sheets, DSSSL, or XSL *Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) In addition to giving the Internet location of the software described in this book, the authors also provide a full, annotated catalogue of URLs for the standards and documentation relating to this fast-moving area. Many of the packages and programs described in this book are freely available in public software archives, and the source code for examples has been placed on CTAN, the TeX archives. 0201433117B04062001


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Almost definitely recommended   June 6, 2000
Jakub Vosahlo
19 out of 22 found this review helpful

I have found this book almost as useful and interesting as the LaTeX Companion. I think that it gives enough information about sharing TeX and LaTeX texts on the web, but the chapters covering pdfTeX and SGML/XML applications could be more detailed.
I have found that there is another big problem - with every day coming the information tends to get older and older. I can fully recommend buying this book today, but I am not sure if I would do it once more after half a year has passed.

If you were interested in transforming TeX into PDF, I would recommend also the LaTeX Graphics Companion, or some other book introducing the problematic of PostScript and PDF.


5 out of 5 stars very handy   January 20, 2002
W. W. Van Broek (Rotterdam Netherlands)
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

I am an user of latex on linux for sometime now. The possibillities are uncountable with this excellent software. This book touches on the use of tex and latex for the web. Being not that experienced with all the possibillities this book is very usefull. It is a good introduction for converting latex and tex files to documents for the web. If you can grasp all the stuff in this book you will be able to easily prepare all kinds of documents for the web and in the end save a lot of time lost with programming html yourself.
Don't expect to much examples and user details, it has an excellent index and reference list to get you started.
There is a lot of math stuff in this book, so trying to get a lot of formula's on the web this will certainly be of help. I am not into math so a couple pages could be skipped.
Concluding: want to get started with latex and the web, want to make good documents for the web on a fast and good way, this is the book for you.



1 out of 5 stars out of date, not very useful   June 9, 2006
Ben Crowell
21 out of 21 found this review helpful

This book dates back to 1999, and since I'm writing this in 2006, that's seven years ago. Seven years is a long time for computer documentation. Virtually everything in the book is so far out of date that it's useless. The authors also didn't do a very good job of staying on topic; there are many long digressions that are neither interesting nor useful. In many cases, the authors merely give a broad-strokes outline of how to accomplish a particular task, or talk about several different approaches that have been taken by different people, without concluding with anything very helpful about how to actually accomplish the task.


1 out of 5 stars wasted paper.   December 19, 2009
Peeter Joot (Markham, Ontario, Canada)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'd put this on my amazon wishlist since I saw it listed used for ~$2. Unfortunately, somebody spent the money to buy it for me new. As mentioned by another reviewer, this book is dated, and much of it stale and not worth reading. This is especially true if your interest is mathematics presentation content.

You'll find gross detail on:
- latex2html, a processor system that produces output that looks awful
- mathml from latex, a system that has little good browser support, and only primitive mathematics tooling.
- a big chapter on xml, something that has little interest to somebody producing document content.
- ...

Parts of the pdf chapter I found worthwhile, but a printed copy of that text doesn't justify the dead trees. Perhaps I'll hack that bit out of the book with a knife and recycle the rest.



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