Hi Sanjoy and all,
On Sat, 23 Dec 2006 09:31:23 -0700, Sanjoy Mahajan
It was designed with the same general-purpose aims as LaTeX,
system. It was designed with the same aims as LaTeX but,
This point is often mentioned in different ways, but it is quite vague, and on the surface it is also untrue. LaTeX was designed to save the writer from typography (Lamport is quite insistent about this), ConTeXt is designed to make typography easier: quite different general-purpose aims. LaTeX's emphasis was primarily articles and reports (memoir etc. notwithstanding), ConTeXt's is more general. Both are designed to make the TeX language more useful but above that their aims are different it appears to me. The different philosophies of the author-typography relationship lie at the heart of the difference between ConTeXt and LaTeX IMHO. For example, in ConTeXt indenting is turned off by default and emphasize is set to slant. That is, ConTeXt starts off as bland as possible and the author has to make typographical decisions and engage in typographical design. In LaTeX everything is decided from the start and typographical flexibility kept to a minimum. Note that Hans for years has resisted passing out "recipes", preferring authors to engage and be original (much to the chagrin of many who migrated from LaTeX...;-) One could write an article on the differences between Hans and Leslie in this regard. All the best and Happy Holidays to the ConTeXt community (and LaTeX too)! Idris -- Professor Idris Samawi Hamid Department of Philosophy Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523 -- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/