In the IT world, the WYSIWYG-based Virtual Office Jakarta Murah package (What You See Is What You Get) has become the industry standard in office, secretarial, and administrative use. Microsoft Office, iWork, Libre Office and Open Office are some of the standard applications for that purpose.
However, in scientific writing, it turns out that WYSIWYG office is not the only option in writing scientific articles. There is also LaTeX for that purpose.
By definition here, LaTeX is a markup language or document setup system for TeX software. Then, what is LaTeX for? What's the difference with Office apps? Let's see!
Use of LaTeX
This is a programming language, not a WYSIWYG app. The code must be compiled to produce the document. This is no different from other languages like C ++ and Java.
Commonly used formats are Portable Document Format (PDF) and Postscript. If you are familiar with markup language like HTML, it will be very easy to understand LaTeX.
A simple example of using LaTeX is like this:
\ footnotesize The genomic inventory of protein domains is an important indicator of an organism's regulatory and metabolic capabilities. Existing gene annotations, however, can be plagued by substantial ascertainment biases that make it
The explanation, the tag '\ begin {abstract}' signifies the start of abstract writing, which is terminated by the '\ end {abstract}' tag. Meanwhile, '\ footnotesize' and '\ small' are tags that indicate the size of the letter in the sentence.
The '\ footnote' tag serves to provide footnotes to the post. Thus a brief explanation of LaTeX.
Well, so LaTeX is no different from other programming languages because it has to do the coding? It is difficult to use dong? Apparently not so, because LaTeX can be compiled using GUI-based front end. For example MacTex, commonly used on MacOSX. - sewa kantor murah
Meanwhile, MiKTeX can be used on the Windows platform. On Linux, there are also TeXmacs GNU packages for similar purposes. And if we do a little googling, there are many tutorials available that can help us understand LaTeX.