[OS X TeX] Writing an abstract book and custom index
Kip Bishofberger
kipster at physics.ucla.edu
Thu Mar 25 15:04:03 CET 2004
On Thu, 25 Mar 2004, Ross Moore wrote:
> > I'm currently helping my Mother (if nothing else, I'm at least a good
> > son...) writing an abstract book for a conference she's arranging.
>
> Have a look at this example:
> find the "Book of Abstracts" link at http://www.iciam.org/
>
> That was done with pdflatex in a way similar to what you have described
> --- indeed there is quite a bit more structure to it.
> See whether it, and its two indexes, match the kind of thing that you
> want.
>
> If so, and you want to learn more about how it was done, then we can
> discuss the structure in more detail, off-list.
Wow!
That's a very impressive book of abstracts (and, frankly, a pretty
fun conference... some cool talks). I have wanted array variables
(in tex) for my thesis figures. I want to just type:
"...If you look at \fig\quadratic, you can see a
quadratic.\plot\quadratic"
Then I'd have some other database file that has entries like
(warning: fake, array-like tex ahead. proceed with caution):
quadratic={3.12,quad.png,4in,This is a quadratic function.}
cubic ={3.13,qbic.png,4in,This is a cubic function.}
And a couple general definitions (note #1[1] refers to the first
item in the above list (3.12), #1[2] the second, etc):
\def\fig#1{Figure~#1[1]}
\def\plot#1{\topinsert{\includegraphics[width=#1[3]]
{figures/#1[2]}}\caption#1}
\def\caption#1{Figure #1[1]: #1[4]}
Basically, it's the #1[1] part that I can't do. I know about
case statements, but they don't scale well to nearly 100 figures.
If you, Ross, or anyone else can show me an example of a
"friendly" database system, I'd be oh so grateful.
kipster
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