LaTeX

LaTeX programming Compiler, Source code and Tutorial

LaTeX programming is is an artificial language designed to express computations that can be performed by a machine, particularly a computer.

Compiler

Download LaTeX programming compiler.

Source code

LaTeX programming Hello world sample source code.

Tutorial

LaTeX programming tutorial.

This is the result of doing running Perl to munge some text to produce Beamer code that can be used to help review vocabulary.

Click on “more info” for lyrics! The UWCSE Band is a computer science parody rock band composed of grad students (and a postdoc!) from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington, Seattle. We perform mostly at department events, and our music makes fun of anything and everything relating to computer science, programming, and life as a grad student. This performance took place during the 2009 Visit Days for prospective students. As of spring 2009, the band consists of: Alex Colburn (lead guitar) Laura Effinger-Dean (vocals) Andrew Guillory (bass guitar and vocals) Chloé Kiddon (sax) Natalie Linnell (keyboard) Kristi Morton (drums) Pradeep Shenoy (vocals) Huge thanks go to Jon Hsieh for recording this video and to Peter Henry for being our sound guy. Write It Up in LaTeX (to the tune of “Dancing with Myself” by Billy Idol): Well, my paper’s due at midnight And I can’t get the layout just right With an underfull h-box And an emergency stop And I write it up in LaTex Well my labels may have changed So I’ll run my code again Well I wait so long for my recompile And I write it up in Latex Oh oh oh write it up in LaTex Oh oh oh write it up in LaTex Well I’m cursing Knuth As I typeset my proof And I write it up in LaTex oh oh oh oh So I looked all over the page And I couldn’t find my image The placement’s peculiar Where the hell is my figure And I write it up in LaTex I’ll spell-check star dot tex To make sure that it’s correct If I had my
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Programming tutorial for complete and utter beginners. Lesson 1 covers entering mathematical expressions. Features: opening a terminal, starting up bc, entering basic arithmetic, Fermat near-miss, pi approximations, real vs integer math, modulo operator, Fermat’s Little Theorem, prime testing. Related links: bc for Windows (get the complete package): gnuwin32.sourceforge.net Fermat’s Last Theorem: mathforum.org Fermat near-misses: www.math.harvard.edu pi approximations: mathworld.wolfram.com Fermat’s Little Theorem: en.wikipedia.org Sophie Germain: www.agnesscott.edu Srinivasa Ramanujan: www.nadn.navy.mil This video was made using the programs recordmydesktop, Lives, Audacity, Gimp, Latex, and of course bc.

Almost completed lipsynch recording of Nute Gunray Mask worn by actor Silas Carson for StarWars epIII Revenge of the Sith. Gilderfluke software and Interface designed by Greg allows performance to be edited with graphical motion curves and refined in the same manner as 3D animation. A few words still needed refinement at this stage. Conversion to youtube format drops frames and synch. Mechs built be Sonny Tilders. Skin is painted foam latex rubber for lightness, but heavier silicone rubber would be equally effective. As often happens in animatronics, performances programmed to a specific voice track are regularly overdubbed with completely different dialogue, resulting in the character looking like a chinese actor speaking in Cantonese with English plastered over the top. This is a common reason for animatronic lip synch looking poor on film. If you take a scene from “the incredibles” and overdub with dialogue from “A bug’s life” you will get a similar result
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Full video: river-valley.tv BibTeX is the most used bibliography processor in conjunction with LaTeX. To put bibliography styles in action, it uses a stack–based language written with postfixed notations. Recently, other approaches have been proposed: some use a programming language for designing bibliography styles, eg, Perl in Bibulus; some are based on converters to xml TeXts and use xslt for bibliography styles; a recent proposal—the biblaTeX package—consists of using LaTeX command to control the layout of generated references… We propose a comparative study of these approaches and show which programming styles are encouraged, from a point of view related to methodology. Finally, we explain how this study has influenced the design of MlBibTeX, our multi–lingual reimplementation of BibTeX. — Jean–Michel Hufflen University of Franche–Comté, France
Video Rating: 0 / 5

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Google Tech Talk January 19, 2010 ABSTRACT Presented by Samuel Tesla. Gospecify is a behavior-driven development (BDD) framework for Go. Rather than focus on testing every nook and cranny of some code, it helps a programmer produce an executable specification of that code’s behavior. Go’s syntax allowed gospecify to be almost as expressive as Ruby’s rpsec; however, a few tricks had to be used to achieve the best readability. This talk will introduce BDD concepts and demonstrate how to implement them in Go using gospecify. Samuel Tesla has had a computer at his fingertips his entire life. He started coding at age six as a maintenance programmer: tweaking a BASIC program his father wrote. Since then, he has always had a passion for telling computers what to do, and especially for programming languages. From niche languages like LaTeX and Inform to general purpose languages like C and Perl; static languages like OCaml and Java to dynamic languages like Smalltalk and Lisp; he loves to learn different ways to program. Currently he works for Engine Yard slinging Ruby at the cloud. In his spare time he likes to code, play guitar, and write fiction.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

The UWCSE Band is a computer science parody rock band composed of grad students from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington, Seattle. We perform mostly at department events, and our music makes fun of anything and everything relating to computer science, programming, and life as a grad student. This video is of us at an open mic night in West Seattle doing cover versions of our repertoire. As of spring 2009, the band consists of: Alex Colburn (lead guitar) Laura Effinger-Dean (vocals) Andrew Guillory (bass guitar and vocals) Chloé Kiddon (sax) Natalie Linnell (keyboard) Kristi Morton (drums) Pradeep Shenoy (vocals) Thanks to Robert Morton for recording the video! Sorry to be so late posting this!!

By programming on October 16, 2010 | LaTeX | A comment?
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