A first TeX sample (courtesy of Prof. Laison)
Other TeX links, shamelessly cribbed from Prof. Laison's page:
- To install LaTeX on Windows, first download and install MikTeX - the "'Basic MikTeX 2.8' installer" should be fine - and then download WinEdt (go to downloads; the WinEdt 5.5 download link is a ways down the page)
For Macintosh:
- (MikTeX is the free program that turns your TeX "code" into pretty output; we call it a "compiler." WinEdt is the editor that you use to type your TeX "code" into the computer. It has a free 31-day evaluation period, after that $30.)
Prof. Johnson recommends TexShop, an all-in-one package. It's free.
- Brian recommends Texmaker, saying "It seems far closer to WinEdt than TexShop. Texmaker is also available for Windows and is free! (Linux, too, if you're weird like that ;) I'm sure budget-minded college students would appreciate this program. You can download Texmaker here." He adds, "You might also need MacTeX" as a compiler.
- The Not-So-Short Introduction to LaTeX
Not a handout, but a link: Welcome to the Hotel Infinity!
A slide illustrating the room assignments of all those tour-bus passengers near the end
An old final, part 1 and part 2.
Note questions 6,8,11 involve material not covered this term.
This is not in the usual formatting (no space between the problems) to
make it easier to put on the web.