You know mathematics. You know how to write mathematics. But do you know how to produce clean, clear, well-formatted manuscripts for publication? Do you speak the language of publishers, typesetters, graphics designers, and copy editors? Your page design-the style and format of theorems and equations, running heads and section headings, page breaks, fonts, and spacing-makes the difference between, awkward, hard-to-read publications and coherent, professional ones. The Handbook of Typography for the Mathematical Sciences is your key to exercising control over how your books and articles look, read, and ultimately communicate your ideas. Focusing on TeX, today's medium of choice for producing mathematical documents, the author illuminates all of the issues associated with page design and seeing your manuscript smoothly and accurately through each step of its publication.
Learn how to format, edit, and layout a page Examine a variety of graphics options: Postscript®, bitmaps, *.jpg, *.gif, and *.pdf files Discover powerful tools available for indexing, bibliographies, tables, and diagrams Access a compendium of all TeX commands commonly used in mathematical writing Explore ways to include diskettes, source code, or software available on the Internet with you publications Becoming acquainted with this material will make you a well-informed author equipped to deal with publishers, compositors, editors, and typesetters, with TeX consultants, copy editors, and graphics designers-an author who has a better understanding of the publishing process and is able to create better mathematics books.
Author(s): Steven G. Krantz
Edition: 1
Publisher: Chapman and Hall/CRC
Year: 2000
Language: English
Pages: 193
Table of Contents......Page 8
PREFACE......Page 12
1 Basic Principles......Page 18
2 Typesetting Mathematics......Page 30
3 TEX and the Typesetting of Text......Page 68
4 Front Matter and Back Matter......Page 80
5 Copy Editing......Page 88
6 The Production Process......Page 96
7 Publishing on the Web......Page 104
Appendix I: Copy Editor's/Proofreader's Marks......Page 114
Appendix II: Use of Copy Editor's Marks......Page 118
Appendix III: Specialized Mathematics Symbols......Page 120
Appendix IV: Standard Alphabets......Page 126
Appendix V: Alternative Mathematical Notations......Page 128
Appendix VI: Tex, Postscript, Acrobat and Related Internet Sites......Page 130
Appendix VII: Basic Tex Commands......Page 134
Appendix VIII: A Sample of Latex......Page 140
Glossary......Page 150
References......Page 176
Index......Page 184