LaTeX-Old-Version/C2/Letter-Writing/English-timed

From Script | Spoken-Tutorial
Revision as of 22:16, 22 October 2019 by Nancyvarkey (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Time Narration
00:00 Welcome to this tutorial on how to write letters using latex.
00:06 You can see three windows.
00:08 These correspond to the three distinct phases in typesetting through latex:
00:13 creation of source file, compilation to produce the pdf file and viewing it through a pdf reader.
00:22 I am using the free pdf reader “Skim” in Mac OSX because it automatically loads the latest pdf file after every compilation.
00:34 There are pdf browsers in Linux and also in Windows that have this capability.
00:42 Let us go through the source file and see what each command does.
00:47 The first line says that this belongs to 'letter document' class.
00:54 12 point is the text size.
00:57 The first component of the letter is the ‘from address’. It appears between the braces here.
01:07 The result of this is seen in the top right hand corner of the output file.
01:14 Two consecutive slashes start a new line.
01:19 If I remove the double slashes from here –
01:25 save, compile using pdflatex –
01:37 you can see that these two lines get merged in one line.
01:43 Previously with a double slash we asked latex to split the line.
01:49 Now these reverse slashes are no longer there, so latex does not know that it has to break the line there.
01:56 Let me put the slashes back.
02:04 Save, Compile.
02:08 It is to be understood that after every change we need to save before compilation.
02:15 Let us see what happens when we give an empty address.
02:21 Let me just come here,
02:24 mark it,
02:27 go to the end of the line, delete it, save it, compile it.
02:37 You can see that the from address has disappeared from here.
02:44 Note that today’s date appears automatically in American style: month, date and then year.
02:54 This is obtained through the command slash date slash today.
03:02 We can prevent the automatic appearance of the date with an empty list, as we do now.
03:12 Save.
03:17 Compile,The date has gone.
03:20 Suppose that we want to put our own date, let us enter it with date first as follows.
03:30 9th July 2007, Save, Compile.
03:40 Got the date.
03:43 This is the date on which this tutorial was created the first time.
03:47 On compiling it, we see this Indian format appearing in the output file.
03:53 Let us put the address back.
04:02 And the document is back to the previous state by recompiling.
04:08 The signature command's argument appears at the bottom of the letter.
04:17 We begin the document and then the letter.
04:22 The ‘to address’ comes first. It appears in the top left hand corner of the output.
04:30 I have addressed this to Mr. N. K. Sinha.
04:34 The command ‘slash opening’ is used to address the recipient.
04:40 You may have already noticed that all latex commands begin with a reverse slash.
04:48 The text of the letter comes next.
04:53 One starts a new paragraph in latex through a blank line as we show now.
05:00 Let me come here. Right now this sentence starting at ‘we are’ is here.
05:07 Let’s open. Let's take this to the next line.
05:12 I have left a blank line. Let me save this.
05:17 Compile this.
05:19 You can see that this has gone to a new paragraph.
05:25 With a new paragraph, the letter has gone to two pages.
05:29 Let us see if the font size is reduced to 10, we can bring the letter back to one page.
05:37 Let me do that now.
05:42 Save.
05:48 Compile,You can see that the whole letter has come into one page.
05:54 Let me put this back to 12 pt.
06:00 And let me also remove this paragraph bit.
06:06 And let me compile this.
06:12 Okay.
06:14 I now want to explain the itemize environment which is created with a pair of 'begin' and 'end itemize' commands.
06:29 Every piece of text that starts with a ‘slash item’ appears in a bulleted form.
06:37 Can I get numbers in the place of bullets here?
06:41 You just have to change the "itemize" into "enumerate" as I do now.
06:46 Let me just change this to "enumerate".
06:53 Save it.
07:00 Of course! It is always a good idea to save as often as possible.
07:05 Let me compile this again.
07:09 You can see that the bullets have become numbers now.
07:15 In closing, I have included, ‘Yours sincerely’ which comes here.
07:22 We have already talked about the signature.
07:26 Finally, the command 'cc' helps mark this letter to other recipients.
07:35 I end the letter with ‘end letter’ command and then the document is completed with the ‘end document’ command.
07:44 Feel free to modify the content and try them out.
07:48 Until you become confident, change only one thing at a time and make sure by immediate compilation that whatever you have done is correct.
07:58 Although I talked about the letter writing process in a Mac, the same source file will work in all Latex systems including those in Linux and Windows operating systems.
08:10 This brings us to the end of this tutorial.
08:13 Thanks for listening,This is Kannan Moudgalya from CDEEP, IIT Bombay, signing off. Good bye.

Contributors and Content Editors

Nancyvarkey