TeX point - определение. Что такое TeX point
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  • этимология

Что (кто) такое TeX point - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
TEX; Tex.; Tex (disambiguation)
Найдено результатов: 3685
TeX point      
<unit, text> The variant of the point used by TeX, equal to 0.3514598035 mm, or 1/72.27 inch. [Why yet another variant?] (2002-03-11)
plain TeX         
  • Mathematical text typeset using TeX and the [[AMS Euler]] font
  • A sample page produced using TeX with the [[LaTeX]] macros
  • TeX Users Group's logo
  • The TeX logo
TYPESETTING SYSTEM
TeX markup; TeX Macro; TeX Primitive; TeX Users Group; Teχ; .tex; Tau Epsilon Chi; ΤΕΧ; Τεχ; TeΧ; TeKh; Tex (typesetting system); Plain TeX; Tex (typesetting); TEX (typesetting system); Math mode; TeX license; TeX primitive; TeX macro; TeX82
<publication> Donald Knuth's original set of user-level macros for interaction with his TeX formatter. Dedicated TeX fans still prefer these over the more user-friendly LaTeX macros used by the majority of the TeX community. (1997-11-20)
Tex-Mex         
  • monterey jack]] on top.
  • Chili with garnishes and tortilla chips
  • [[Nachos]] with [[guacamole]]
  • Original Ninfa's ''tacos al carbón/[[fajita]]s''
  • A seller of [[baked beans]] and [[tortilla]]s in [[San Antonio]], c.&nbsp;1939
  • Zarillo Western & Tex Mex restaurant in [[Tampere]], [[Finland]]
CUISINE IN THE UNITED STATES AND NORTHERN MEXICO
Tex Mex; Tex-mex; Texmex; Tex-mex cuisine; Tex-Mex cuisine; American Mexican cuisine; Tex-Mex foods; Tex-Mex Foods; Tex Mex Foods; Tex Mex foods; Tex Mex cuisine; Tex Mex Cuisine; Chacho's; Tex-Mex food; Mix-Mex; Tex–Mex
Tex-Mex cuisine (from the words Texan and Mexican) is an American cuisine that derives from the culinary creations of the Tejano people of Texas. It has spread from border states such as Texas and others in the Southwestern United States to the rest of the country.
Tex-Mex         
  • monterey jack]] on top.
  • Chili with garnishes and tortilla chips
  • [[Nachos]] with [[guacamole]]
  • Original Ninfa's ''tacos al carbón/[[fajita]]s''
  • A seller of [[baked beans]] and [[tortilla]]s in [[San Antonio]], c.&nbsp;1939
  • Zarillo Western & Tex Mex restaurant in [[Tampere]], [[Finland]]
CUISINE IN THE UNITED STATES AND NORTHERN MEXICO
Tex Mex; Tex-mex; Texmex; Tex-mex cuisine; Tex-Mex cuisine; American Mexican cuisine; Tex-Mex foods; Tex-Mex Foods; Tex Mex Foods; Tex Mex foods; Tex Mex cuisine; Tex Mex Cuisine; Chacho's; Tex-Mex food; Mix-Mex; Tex–Mex
You use Tex-Mex to describe things such as food or music that combine typical elements from Mexico and the south-western United States. (AM INFORMAL)
...Tex-Mex restaurants.
ADJ: usu ADJ n
Tex-Mex         
  • monterey jack]] on top.
  • Chili with garnishes and tortilla chips
  • [[Nachos]] with [[guacamole]]
  • Original Ninfa's ''tacos al carbón/[[fajita]]s''
  • A seller of [[baked beans]] and [[tortilla]]s in [[San Antonio]], c.&nbsp;1939
  • Zarillo Western & Tex Mex restaurant in [[Tampere]], [[Finland]]
CUISINE IN THE UNITED STATES AND NORTHERN MEXICO
Tex Mex; Tex-mex; Texmex; Tex-mex cuisine; Tex-Mex cuisine; American Mexican cuisine; Tex-Mex foods; Tex-Mex Foods; Tex Mex Foods; Tex Mex foods; Tex Mex cuisine; Tex Mex Cuisine; Chacho's; Tex-Mex food; Mix-Mex; Tex–Mex
¦ adjective (especially of food and music) having a blend of Mexican and southern American features.
¦ noun
1. Tex-Mex music or food.
2. a variety of Mexican Spanish spoken in Texas.
Origin
1940s: blend of Texan and Mexican.
Tex.         
¦ abbreviation Texas.
TeX         
  • Mathematical text typeset using TeX and the [[AMS Euler]] font
  • A sample page produced using TeX with the [[LaTeX]] macros
  • TeX Users Group's logo
  • The TeX logo
<publication> /tekh/ An extremely powerful macro-based text formatter written by Donald Knuth, very popular in academia, especially in the computer-science community (it is good enough to have displaced Unix troff, the other favoured formatter, even at many Unix installations). The first version of TeX was written in the programming language SAIL, to run on a PDP-10 under Stanford's WAITS operating system. Knuth began TeX because he had become annoyed at the declining quality of the typesetting in volumes I-III of his monumental "Art of Computer Programming" (see Knuth, also bible). In a manifestation of the typical hackish urge to solve the problem at hand once and for all, he began to design his own typesetting language. He thought he would finish it on his sabbatical in 1978; he was wrong by only about 8 years. The language was finally frozen around 1985, but volume IV of "The Art of Computer Programming" has yet to appear as of mid-1997. (However, the third edition of volumes I and II have come out). The impact and influence of TeX's design has been such that nobody minds this very much. Many grand hackish projects have started as a bit of toolsmithing on the way to something else; Knuth's diversion was simply on a grander scale than most. Guy Steele happened to be at Stanford during the summer of 1978, when Knuth was developing his first version of TeX. When he returned to MIT that fall, he rewrote TeX's I/O to run under ITS. TeX has also been a noteworthy example of free, shared, but high-quality software. Knuth offers monetary awards to people who find and report a bug in it: for each bug the award is doubled. (This has not made Knuth poor, however, as there have been very few bugs and in any case a cheque proving that the owner found a bug in TeX is rarely cashed). Though well-written, TeX is so large (and so full of cutting edge technique) that it is said to have unearthed at least one bug in every Pascal system it has been compiled with. TeX fans insist on the correct (guttural) pronunciation, and the correct spelling (all caps, squished together, with the E depressed below the baseline; the mixed-case "TeX" is considered an acceptable kluge on ASCII-only devices). Fans like to proliferate names from the word "TeX" - such as TeXnician (TeX user), TeXhacker (TeX programmer), TeXmaster (competent TeX programmer), TeXhax, and TeXnique. Several document processing systems are based on TeX, notably LaTeX Lamport TeX - incorporates document styles for books, letters, slides, etc., jadeTeX uses TeX as a backend for printing from James' DSSSL Engine, and Texinfo, the GNU document processing system. Numerous extensions to TeX exist, among them BibTeX for bibliographies (distributed with LaTeX), PDFTeX modifies TeX to produce PDF and Omega extends TeX to use the Unicode character set. For some reason, TeX uses its own variant of the point, the TeX point. See also Comprehensive TeX Archive Network. tex/">ftp://labrea.stanford.edu/tex/. E-mail: <tug@tug.org> (TeX User's group, Oregon, USA). (2002-03-11)
Point-to-point (telecommunications)         
  • A point-to-point wireless unit with a built-in antenna at [[Huntington Beach, California]]
COMMUNICATIONS CONNECTION BETWEEN TWO NODES OR ENDPOINTS
Point-to-point communication; Point to point communications; Point-to-point link; Point-to-point telecommunications; Point-to-point communication (telecommunications); Point-to-Point Link; Point-to-Point link; Point to point communication; One-to-one (communication); Point-to-point radio link; Point-to-point connection
In telecommunications, a point-to-point connection refers to a communications connection between two communication endpoints or nodes. An example is a telephone call, in which one telephone is connected with one other, and what is said by one caller can only be heard by the other.
Point-to-Point Protocol         
A SIMPLE DATA LINK LAYER PROTOCOL USED BETWEEN TWO DEVICES
Point to point protocol; Point To Point Protocol; Point to Point Protocol; Multilink PPP; MLPPP; PPPOI; Pppoi; P2PP; PPP connection; Multilink Protocol; Point-to-point protocol; Compression Control Protocol; PPP protocol
<communications, protocol> (PPP) The protocol defined in RFC 1661, the Internet standard for transmitting {network layer} datagrams (e.g. IP packets) over serial point-to-point links. PPP has a number of advantages over SLIP; it is designed to operate both over asynchronous connections and bit-oriented synchronous systems, it can configure connections to a remote network dynamically, and test that the link is usable. PPP can be configured to encapsulate different network layer protocols (such as IP, IPX, or AppleTalk) by using the appropriate Network Control Protocol (NCP). RFC 1220 describes how PPP can be used with remote bridging. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.protocols.ppp. {A paper on PPP (ftp://ftp.uu.net/vendor/MorningStar/papers/sug91-cheapIP.ps.Z)}. (1994-12-13)
Point (geometry)         
FUNDAMENTAL OBJECT OF GEOMETRY: LOCUS WITHIN WHICH WE CAN DISTINGUISH NO OTHER LOCUS THAN ITSELF
Point (spatial); Point (topology); Point (mathematics); 0-simplex; Euclidean point; Point in space
In classical Euclidean geometry, a point is a primitive notion that models an exact location in the space, and has no length, width, or thickness. In modern mathematics, a point refers more generally to an element of some set called a space.

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