The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

  • My badges

  • Twitter Updates

  • My Flickr Stream

  • Pages

  • All categories

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 1,860 other subscribers

Archive for the ‘pandoc document converter’ Category

infinite loop in “LaTeX: A Document Preparation System” by Leslie Lamport, printed in 1994.

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/09/10

Cover of "LaTeX: A Document Preparation System, 2nd edition", Published by Addison-Wesley Professional (June 30, 1994) © 1994, authored by Leslie Lamport

Cover of “LaTeX: A Document Preparation System, 2nd edition”, Published by Addison-Wesley Professional (June 30, 1994) © 1994, authored by Leslie Lamport

LaTeX was slightly later than the 1992 Turbo Pascal 7.0 Language Guide having both entry in the manual about Recursion (“recursive loop, see recursive loop”) which of course is similar to “infinite loop” and entries for “infinite loop See loop, infinite” and “loop, infinite See infinite loop”.

So what is LaTeX?

Where Donald Knuth created the typesetting program TeX (visually TeX), Leslie created a set of macros for it, later named LaTeX (visually LaTeX) and wrote the first (still famous) book – cover on the right – on it: [Wayback/Archive] LaTeX: A Document Preparation System by Leslie Lamport, second edition, printed in 1994 back then by Addison-Wesley (now Pearson Education, subsidiary of Pearson plc) with ISBN 9780201529838.

It’s gimmick was at page 252, inside the index referring “infinite loop” to page 252 itself.

Many people keep posting screenshots of the page without referencing where it is from. That’s a bit sad, as these gimmicks are an important part of history where programming books were as much about explaining features of computing environment, as well as explaining underlying concepts like recursion.

So this 2024 post finally made me write this blog post: [Wayback/Archive] vx-underground on X: “HELP!”

[Wayback/Archive] GTv89dwWsAM05wM.jpg (552×639)

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, ffmpeg, History, ImageMagick, LaTeX, pandoc document converter, Power User, Typesetting | Leave a Comment »

Some Markdown links on phrasing more difficult markdown for correct rendering

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/20

After blogging on Markdown notes in 2014, Markdown support has come a long way. It also means that the documents written in Markdown has become more complex, and that more tools can render it.

Given the vague aspects of many Markdown dialects, rendering can be troublesome (see my post Babelmark 2 online Markdown checker), so below are some links on some aspects I had trouble with getting right.

Note that there are two markdown linters:

Sometimes, issues are present in one, but not in the other; see:

The command line interface to the Ruby version is easier to install than the JavaScript version as everything is in one gemmdl, unlike the npm, where the cli is in markdown-cli and the library in markdownlint.

–jeroen

Related:

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, Development, Lightweight markup language, MarkDown, pandoc document converter, Power User, Ruby, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Online markup conversion from markdown to mediawiki: pandoc

Posted by jpluimers on 2018/07/06

Since Mediawiki needs an extension to display Markdown, and many MediaWiki installations do not have that extension, I was looking for an online conversion from markdown to MediaWiki markup.

Luckily the Pandoc try has this conversion: [WayBack] Try pandoc! Markdown(pandoc) -> MediaWiki

These links helped me get there:

–jeroen

Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, Development, Lightweight markup language, MarkDown, MediaWiki, pandoc document converter, Power User, Software Development | Leave a Comment »