A powerful text formatting program initially written by Donald Knuth Widely used by computer scientists, mathematicians, and physicists
A powerful macro-based text formatter written by Donald Knuth, popular in the scientific community Knuth began work on TeX because of problems he experienced with traditional typesetting in volumes I--III of his monumental Art of Computer Programming The language was effectively frozen in 1985 Well-known extensions to TeX include: BibTeX for bibliographies (distributed with LaTeX), LaTeX: Lamport TeX - incorporates document styles, MuTeX for typesetting music, PiCTeX for pictures, and SliTeX for slides (distributed with LaTeX) TeX can be obtained from the labrea stanford edu archive at Stanford University
A typesetting system which is used to create highly structured documents which may contain alot of mathematics A number of popular TeX macro packages exist but the most notable is LaTeX
TeX is a sophisticated program designed to produce high-quality documents including mathematical text, arrays, figures, etc It is used as an engine by LaTeX in order to produce DVI output files You need a TeX compiler to display and print the Reporter's reports See appendix for contact information
A term used to express the fineness of man-made fiber yarns Defined as the weight in gms of 1000 meters of the yarn If 1000 meters of a yarn weigh 10 g then yarn is said to be of 10 tex
The unit of linear density equal to the mass in grams per 1000 m of fiber, yarn, or other textile strand
A text formatting package: TeX is a typesetting package developed by Donald Knuth which is particularly well suited for scientific, mathematical or other technical writings See TeX and LaTeX See also LaTeX
TeX is a typesetting language developed by Donald Knuth We provide an emulation of certain parts of TeX's mathematics mode in SM's label commands
Computer language designed for use in typesetting, in particular for typesetting math and other technical material (According to Knuth, TeX rhymes with the word blecchhh )