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Re: Tiny web page editors


Subject: Re: Tiny web page editors
From: Dan Allen (danallen46@XXX.XXX)
Date: Thu Oct 24 2002 - 12:14:37 EDT


On Thursday, October 24, 2002, at 08:07 AM, Jared Sherman wrote:

> A tiny graphics editor can be used to allow the insertion of small
> inline GIF images to extend that further if need be.

I am afraid that for a web page to be universally readable that the
best method for equations is to do as you suggest here: render them as
small GIFs. This is what most technical web sites do if they have
their documents as HTML.

The flip side of the coin -- which is at least as popular --
is to put up technical publications as PDF files. People must have
Acrobat Reader but having a single PDF file is a more convenient way to
distribute and carry around a document than many HTML files and their
associated equation (GIF) files.

Search engines now find PDF content as readily as HTML files, so
that is no longer an issue.

The problem with PDFs is that many people embed non-standard
fonts into the file, making the document display poorly on many
other machines, and depending upon how they are created, PDFs
can become very large. However, they can also be made very
small if care is taken.

PDFs can be created from any application with Mac OS X, or if
you buy Adobe's Acrobat Distiller package, or by using other
freeware available for Windows and for older Macs. These freeware
packages vary in their goodness. PrintToPDF for older Macs is
not bad. That may be a way for George to generate his document.

Dan

PS - I have volunteered to help George with his formatting and web
delivery if he provides the content!





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