On Tue, 28 Oct 2008, Mohamed Bana wrote:
Hi Aditya,
I've tried compiling your thesis. It failed with;
There were a few modules which were missings from the zip file. I have created a new zip file with these files. I hope that everything should compile now. http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~adityam/publications/thesis/thesis.tar.gz
texmfstart texexec "thesis.tex"
system : module abr-aditya not found
I have added this
system : module ctags not found
This is harmless. A module that I wrote to write tag files for vim, but it does not work with MKIV.
system : module mathsets not found
I have added this. You can also download it from modules.contextgarden.net/mathsets. Aditya
Aditya Mahajan wrote:
On Tue, 21 Oct 2008, Piotr wrote:
Hello,
I have spent some time with google in order to find an answer to the following questions. Unfortunatly, I was not satisfied with the answers, which I now hope to find here.
It is my plan not to use the MS Office suite for the production of my PhD thesis (in chemistry). I have used Miktex some years ago during my studies for some project reports, and I remember beeing quite satisfied with the results. My Master thesis, on the other hand, I wrote in word.. and although I remember not having too many difficulties, there were some nasty obstacles to be overcome. Obstacles which I simply do not want to risk having repeated a second time on a much bigger scale. I this mailing list I read several reports of people who either had written their thesis in Latex or ConTeXt. There was a mention of Latex beeing designed for mathematic purposes, while ConTeXt was said to be better suited for the intergration of graphics or larger/more complex layout changes.
1) Finding the right context For now I had quite some difficulties to find that proper Latex distribution - a problem that actually led me to the existence of ConTeXt. I am wondering which latex distribution I should choose in order to work with ConTeXt? I am running Windows Vista (64-bit). Or is there a ConTeXt stand alone package that will absolutely satisfy my me in my needs? In principle, all I need is
2) The right editor What is the preferred editor for ConTeXt? for such a project? Is there any loss in functionality when using Texniccenter with ConTeXt than with MikTex instead?
Depends on what functions you need. There are a few editors which have basic support for ConTeXt (compile document, view pdf, jump to error, etc.). Hans uses Scite and includes a context enabled scite in the windows distribution available on prama-ade.com. Irdis has written support for Notepad++. Vim and emacs have some basic support. I do not know what features texniccenter and winedit provide for context.
3) I have seen some thesis templates/examples in this mailinglist. Can anyone point me to additional sources regarding the creation of a PhD Thesis with ConTeXt?
Each institute has different requirements for phd thesis, so one template is not going to fit the bill. I did my thesis in context, and you can have a look at the sources and the output:
http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~adityam/publications/thesis/thesis.pdf http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~adityam/publications/thesis/thesis.tar.gz
The easier way to go about this will be to look at the formatting specifications of the thesis, and try to understand how to implement them in context one by one.
What is the advantage over Latex, what are the disadvantages? Is there a win-win distribution somewhere on the table?
Advantage: In most cases, others have written a style for what you want, so you don't have to create a style on your own.
Disadvantage: When you do have to create a style on your own, it can be difficult, even in packages which are supposed to be easy to configure
4) Has anyone used a typesetting suite like ContTeXt with CVS?
As others have said, the source files are simply text files. So you can use any version control that you want.
5) Is the ConTeXt reference system compatible with Endnote?
I have no experience with endnote. I have seen endnote to bibtex converters. If you can convert to bibtex, then using the references with context is relatively easy.
Is there any point to have latex installed, when context can do the trick?
As Mojca said, you may want to submit something to a journal which accepts latex files.
Or lets ask the devils advocate the other way around: What is the point of installing context, when latex could do the trick?
Again I agree with what Mojca said. If latex can do the job, use it. If you are happy with one of the defaul latex styles, do not use too many figures in your document, do not want text wrapping around figures, use latex.
Apart that I have to re-learn latex anyway.. what is better with Context?
Context has a more consistent interface to all the commands. This makes it easier to remember how to configure things.
Aditya ___________________________________________________________________________________ If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the Wiki!
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___________________________________________________________________________________ If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the Wiki!
maillist : ntg-context@ntg.nl / http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context webpage : http://www.pragma-ade.nl / http://tex.aanhet.net archive : https://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/contextrev/ wiki : http://contextgarden.net ___________________________________________________________________________________