a word-processor for UNIX

Peter da Silva peter at ficc.uu.net
Thu Jul 27 00:10:09 AEST 1989


In article <1555 at garcon.cso.uiuc.edu>, mcclaren at herodotus.cs.uiuc.edu (Tim McClarren) writes:
> I mean that you are essentially getting on the printed page whatever keys
> you hit on the keyboard), they are much more comfortable with.  And, perhaps
> my eye isn't trained enough, but I can't see much difference in the end
> product.  

I can. The big giveaway that a book has been typeset with a page-layout
program or a word processor rather than with a text processor is sneaky
inconsistancy. Footnotes that don't quite look the same from chapter to
chapter. Occasional changes in layout. Lists that aren't always indented
the same amount. Figure titles centered in one place and left-aligned in
another. With a WYSIWYG program the *user* is responsible for making sure
all the bits look the same. With a text processor that boring job is left
to the computer. There are usually *some* presets, but they're limited.
-- 
Peter da Silva, Xenix Support, Ferranti International Controls Corporation.
Business: peter at ficc.uu.net, +1 713 274 5180. | "...helping make the world
Personal: peter at sugar.hackercorp.com.   `-_-' |  a quote-free zone..."
Quote: Have you hugged your wolf today?  'U`  |    -- hjm at cernvax.cern.ch



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