LaTeX/C3/Feedback-diagram-with-Maths/English-timed
From Script | Spoken-Tutorial
Revision as of 15:44, 30 April 2015 by Pratik kamble (Talk | contribs)
Time | Narration |
00:00 | Welcome to the spoken tutorial on embedding mathematics in Xfig |
00:05 | In this tutorial, I shall explain how to Create this Figure |
00:11 | Observe the mathematical expression in the second block |
00:16 | You can embed any mathematical expression after learning this tutorial |
00:23 | We shall create the figure in the previous slide, starting from this figure which was created in the spoken tutorial on “Feedback Diagrams through Xfig” |
00:36 | You should learn this tutorial before starting the current one |
00:42 | Let me now explain what all you need to learn the material taught in this tutorial |
00:48 | I am using Xfig, Version 3.2, patch level 5 |
00:52 | You also need LaTeX, and a familiarity with it |
00:56 | You also need image cropping software |
01:01 | pdfcrop works on Linux and Mac OS X .We will cover it in this tutorial |
01:09 | Briss is said to work on Windows also, but not covered in this tutorial |
01:15 | Let us go to Xfig |
01:19 | Let us choose file, then open. |
01:26 | If we scroll through the list, we will see the file “feedback.fig”, created in the spoken tutorial on “Feedback Diagrams through Xfig” .Let us click it |
01:42 | We will see the figure inside this box |
01:45 | Let us open it. |
01:53 | Let us bring it inside. |
02:01 | Let us also zoom it. |
02:05 | Using the “save as” option on “file”, we will save this figure as maths. |
02:20 | Let us save it. |
02:24 | We now have the file maths.fig |
02:27 | Let us select “Edit” and click the text “Plant” |
02:34 | Let me take the mouse here. Let me delete this and enter
$G(z) = \frac z{z-1}$ |
02:50 | Make sure that the mouse stays within the box while typing |
02:56 | The default value for “Flag” is “normal” - change it to “special” |
03:01 | Click “done” |
03:07 | As the text is long, it overlaps with other entries |
03:12 | Let us move the text outside the box and work with it. |
03:23 | Let me click here. |
03:26 | Let me choose grid mode. |
03:31 | Once we are satisfied with any changes that we may want here, we can put it back inside the box. |
03:39 | Let us save the file. |
03:44 | Let us export using combined pdf and latex files. |
03:51 | File. Export. Combined pdf and LaTeX. .Let us export. |
04:03 | There is an error message I get. But let us not worry about this. |
04:11 | Let me go to the terminal. |
04:13 | Let me type “ls -lrt” |
04:21 | We get a list of files, with the last one being the most recent |
04:26 | The last two files are maths.pdf_t and maths.pdf |
04:33 | Let us give the command “open maths.pdf” |
04:42 | Let us bring it inside. |
04:45 | We can see the block diagram without the mathematical expression |
04:50 | Let me close this |
04:52 | Let us see maths.pdf_t in emacs editor that I have already opened |
05:01 | It is here. Let me open it. |
05:14 | Please note that you do NOT have to use emacs |
05:17 | You can use WHATEVER editor that you are comfortable with |
05:22 | You can see that the “picture” environment is used |
05:26 | It also makes use of “includegraphics” and “color” packages – we need to tell LaTeX to take care of this requirement |
05:41 | Let me now open the file maths-bp.tex,I have already created for this tutorial |
05:59 | I have used article class |
06:02 | I have used color and graphicx packages as these are used in the file pdf_t, the one we saw earlier. |
06:15 | I want empty pagestyle, as I do not want the page number |
06:20 | Finally, I want to include the file maths.pdf_t |
06: 27 | Let us invoke the command “pdflatex maths-bp” in the terminal |
06:42 | We get the message that the maths-bp.pdf is created. |
06:48 | Let us open it with the command “open maths-bp.pdf” |
06:58 | We have the file we want. Let me zoom it. |
07:07 | Now that we know that the mathematical expression is working, let us move the text inside the block |
07:30 | Let us save and export. It is already in the required language. Export. |
07:38 | Let us dismiss this warning. |
07:41 | Let me compile it again. |
07:44 | Let us click the pdf browser that has the file |
07: 49 | Now you see the mathematical expression inside the box, the way we want |
07:56 | Let us now see what happens if we do not choose the special flag. |
08:01 | Let me come here. |
08:04 | Let me edit the text, change the “Special Flag” to “normal”. Done. |
08:25 | File, save. Let me export |
08:37 | Let me compile. Let me come here. |
08:41 | The formula is no longer in the form we want |
08:46 | Let us change the “special flag” back to “special” |
09:03 | Save, export |
09:12 | Recompile. See that the file is in the form we want. |
09:18 | Let us now improve the appearance of this formula |
09:22 | In this case, the use of dfrac will make the fraction look better. |
09:28 | In view of this, let us change frac to dfrac. |
09:38 | Let me click here. Keep the mouse inside the box. |
09:43 | Put d here. Done. Save, export. |
09:52 | Let us compile once again using “pdflatex” |
10:03 | We get the error message “Undefined control sequence” \dfrac |
10:11 | LaTeX complains because the command \dfrac is defined in the package “Amsmath” but we have not included it. |
10:21 | We need to include it in the file maths-bp.tex. |
10:27 | Let us do it. Let us go to emacs. |
10:35 | Enter “\usepackage{amsmath}” |
10:41 | Let us save the file. Let us compile once again. Let me first exit. |
10:49 | Let me now recompile. Now it compiles.Let us click this. |
10:59 | We see that the fraction has now come out nicely. |
11:03 | We have now achieved our objective of learning how to embed mathematical expressions in Xfig |
11:11 | It is important to note that Xfig does not interpret the LaTeX commands at all. |
11:16 | The interpretation is done by the “pdflatex” command |
11:20 | The LaTeX commands have to be correct and consistent at the time of compilation. |
11:25 | We will now explain how to remove the white space around the figure. |
11:31 | Let me go to the terminal. |
11:33 | Let me type the command “pdfcrop maths-bp.pdf” - this is the file we created, into “maths-out.pdf”. |
11:53 | Pdfcrop says one page written on this file. |
11:57 | “pdfcrop” takes an input file, trims the space around the figure and writes out the cropped file in the output file. |
12:09 | “pdfcrop” is already installed in my system. |
12:12 | If you do not have it, you need to install it first. |
12:15 | Let us view this output file by the command, “open maths-out.pdf”. |
12:29 | Let me bring it inside. |
12:31 | The figure has now become extremely compact. |
12:34 | The white space that was here has been completely removed. |
12:38 | We can now insert this into documents. |
12:42 | Let me close this. Let me close this also. Let me close this also. |
12:52 | Let me come back to the slides. |
12:57 | The software “briss” can also be used to crop the white space. |
13:01 | It is supposed to work on Linux, Mac OS X and also on Windows. |
13:08 | I have checked its working on Mac OS X. But we will not demonstrate it here. |
13:17 | We have now come to the end of this tutorial |
13:20 | We have an assignment for you .Make the diagram created in this tutorial more symmetric and beautiful |
13:27 | Try out different mathematical expressions |
13:30 | Try out other options, such as flip and rotate, not covered in the spoken tutorial |
13:36 | Try to build different diagrams .Explore the library |
13:41 | Do an internet search and locate information relevant to Xfig |
13:47 | Useful learning material is available at spoken-tutorial.org. It is here. |
14:02 | The concept of spoken tutorials is explained in "What is a Spoken Tutorial" |
14:09 | You may learn LaTeX using the spoken tutorials available here, which I have downloaded in this tab. |
14:19 | The tutorial on Mathematical Typesetting explains how to create maths in LaTeX |
14:29 | The tutorial on Tables and Figures explains how to place figures, of the type created in this tutorial, into documents |
14:38 | This website has a lot of useful information, including, Xfig tutorials. Come back to the slides. |
14:53 | Spoken Tutorial is a part of the Talk to a Teacher project, supported by the National Mission on Education through ICT (NMEICT), MHRD, Government of India. |
15:03 | More information on this mission is available at spoken-tutorial.org/NMEICT-Intro |
15:12 | We welcome your participation and also feedback. |
15:16 | This is Kannan Moudgalya signing off. Thanks for joining. Goodbye |