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by jimmyvalmer
1963 days ago
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> It is massively easier and better in TeX. Obviously depends on where along the learning curve, and preformed command
line literacy, which on a venue like HN is always assumed to be native. As a hypothetical, consider a Rip Van Winkle situation in which a
mathematician wakes from a coma he's been in since the 1970s. Now force him
to typeset one of his monographs. He'll do it in MS Word. |
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Actually not.
As a hypothetical, consider a Rip Van Winkle situation in which a mathematician wakes from a coma he's been in since the 1970s. Now force him to typeset one of his monographs. He'll do it in MS Word.
I have personal experience pertaining to this.
Before I was a programmer, I was a graduate student in mathematics. I wound up in the early 90s having never used Word or TeX and in a position where I needed to type up a paper. I began with Word, and before long I complained about how hard it was. A fellow grad student said I should learn how to do it in TeX.
It was literally faster, *on the very first paper that I tried to type*, to learn TeX and then type my paper in TeX than it was to try to do it in Word. The visual result was also massively better with TeX. Typesetting math formulas in Word is simply that bad.
I've tried to typeset some simple mathematics in Word since. The experience has not materially improved when it comes to typing real mathematics.
Based on this personal experience, I am quite confident that in the Rip Van Winkle situation that you describe, the mathematician will wind up doing it in TeX. And do it the same way that I did. Try Word because that seems easier. Ask a fellow mathematician when that proves to be a terrible experience. Be pointed at TeX and given a few tips. Discover that it is easier.