LaTeX logo in tufte-book












3















LaTeX will not typeset as the designed logo in tufte-book.



  documentclass[twoside,symmetric]{tufte-book}

begin{document}

title{My book}

author{me}

maketitle

chapter{First chapter}

This book was written in $LaTeX$.

end{document}


How can one fix that?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    It does, provided you remove the $ characters. LaTeX is not MathJax.

    – egreg
    Mar 9 at 23:06











  • @egreg: Oh... silly me. Thanks so much.

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 9 at 23:08
















3















LaTeX will not typeset as the designed logo in tufte-book.



  documentclass[twoside,symmetric]{tufte-book}

begin{document}

title{My book}

author{me}

maketitle

chapter{First chapter}

This book was written in $LaTeX$.

end{document}


How can one fix that?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    It does, provided you remove the $ characters. LaTeX is not MathJax.

    – egreg
    Mar 9 at 23:06











  • @egreg: Oh... silly me. Thanks so much.

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 9 at 23:08














3












3








3








LaTeX will not typeset as the designed logo in tufte-book.



  documentclass[twoside,symmetric]{tufte-book}

begin{document}

title{My book}

author{me}

maketitle

chapter{First chapter}

This book was written in $LaTeX$.

end{document}


How can one fix that?










share|improve this question
















LaTeX will not typeset as the designed logo in tufte-book.



  documentclass[twoside,symmetric]{tufte-book}

begin{document}

title{My book}

author{me}

maketitle

chapter{First chapter}

This book was written in $LaTeX$.

end{document}


How can one fix that?







errors tufte logos






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 10 at 3:11









JouleV

13.1k22663




13.1k22663










asked Mar 9 at 23:03









David G. StorkDavid G. Stork

26119




26119








  • 3





    It does, provided you remove the $ characters. LaTeX is not MathJax.

    – egreg
    Mar 9 at 23:06











  • @egreg: Oh... silly me. Thanks so much.

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 9 at 23:08














  • 3





    It does, provided you remove the $ characters. LaTeX is not MathJax.

    – egreg
    Mar 9 at 23:06











  • @egreg: Oh... silly me. Thanks so much.

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 9 at 23:08








3




3





It does, provided you remove the $ characters. LaTeX is not MathJax.

– egreg
Mar 9 at 23:06





It does, provided you remove the $ characters. LaTeX is not MathJax.

– egreg
Mar 9 at 23:06













@egreg: Oh... silly me. Thanks so much.

– David G. Stork
Mar 9 at 23:08





@egreg: Oh... silly me. Thanks so much.

– David G. Stork
Mar 9 at 23:08










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














It does, but you get a funny error:



! You can't use `spacefactor' in math mode.
@->spacefactor
@m {}


This is because of how LaTeX is defined:



% latex.ltx, line 1644:
DeclareRobustCommand{LaTeX}{Lkern-.36em%
{sboxz@ T%
vbox tohtz@{hbox{check@mathfonts
fontsizesf@sizez@
math@fontsfalseselectfont
A}%
vss}%
}%
kern-.15em%
TeX}


Now let's look at TeX:



% latex.ltx, line 1643:
defTeX{Tkern-.1667emlower.5exhbox{E}kern-.125emX@}


and that's where the error comes from: @ is used to mark the X like a lower case letter, as far as the space factor is concerned.



Well, you are not supposed to use LaTeX in math mode, whatever our MathJax friends think. ;-) The correct input is just



This book was written in LaTeX.




By the way, if you want to properly typeset the LaTeX logo in MathJax, please use



$mathrm{LaTeX}$


enter image description here



Can you see the difference?






share|improve this answer
























  • Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 0:30











  • Yep... got it..

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 3:21











  • I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

    – manooooh
    Mar 10 at 6:46














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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














It does, but you get a funny error:



! You can't use `spacefactor' in math mode.
@->spacefactor
@m {}


This is because of how LaTeX is defined:



% latex.ltx, line 1644:
DeclareRobustCommand{LaTeX}{Lkern-.36em%
{sboxz@ T%
vbox tohtz@{hbox{check@mathfonts
fontsizesf@sizez@
math@fontsfalseselectfont
A}%
vss}%
}%
kern-.15em%
TeX}


Now let's look at TeX:



% latex.ltx, line 1643:
defTeX{Tkern-.1667emlower.5exhbox{E}kern-.125emX@}


and that's where the error comes from: @ is used to mark the X like a lower case letter, as far as the space factor is concerned.



Well, you are not supposed to use LaTeX in math mode, whatever our MathJax friends think. ;-) The correct input is just



This book was written in LaTeX.




By the way, if you want to properly typeset the LaTeX logo in MathJax, please use



$mathrm{LaTeX}$


enter image description here



Can you see the difference?






share|improve this answer
























  • Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 0:30











  • Yep... got it..

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 3:21











  • I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

    – manooooh
    Mar 10 at 6:46


















7














It does, but you get a funny error:



! You can't use `spacefactor' in math mode.
@->spacefactor
@m {}


This is because of how LaTeX is defined:



% latex.ltx, line 1644:
DeclareRobustCommand{LaTeX}{Lkern-.36em%
{sboxz@ T%
vbox tohtz@{hbox{check@mathfonts
fontsizesf@sizez@
math@fontsfalseselectfont
A}%
vss}%
}%
kern-.15em%
TeX}


Now let's look at TeX:



% latex.ltx, line 1643:
defTeX{Tkern-.1667emlower.5exhbox{E}kern-.125emX@}


and that's where the error comes from: @ is used to mark the X like a lower case letter, as far as the space factor is concerned.



Well, you are not supposed to use LaTeX in math mode, whatever our MathJax friends think. ;-) The correct input is just



This book was written in LaTeX.




By the way, if you want to properly typeset the LaTeX logo in MathJax, please use



$mathrm{LaTeX}$


enter image description here



Can you see the difference?






share|improve this answer
























  • Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 0:30











  • Yep... got it..

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 3:21











  • I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

    – manooooh
    Mar 10 at 6:46
















7












7








7







It does, but you get a funny error:



! You can't use `spacefactor' in math mode.
@->spacefactor
@m {}


This is because of how LaTeX is defined:



% latex.ltx, line 1644:
DeclareRobustCommand{LaTeX}{Lkern-.36em%
{sboxz@ T%
vbox tohtz@{hbox{check@mathfonts
fontsizesf@sizez@
math@fontsfalseselectfont
A}%
vss}%
}%
kern-.15em%
TeX}


Now let's look at TeX:



% latex.ltx, line 1643:
defTeX{Tkern-.1667emlower.5exhbox{E}kern-.125emX@}


and that's where the error comes from: @ is used to mark the X like a lower case letter, as far as the space factor is concerned.



Well, you are not supposed to use LaTeX in math mode, whatever our MathJax friends think. ;-) The correct input is just



This book was written in LaTeX.




By the way, if you want to properly typeset the LaTeX logo in MathJax, please use



$mathrm{LaTeX}$


enter image description here



Can you see the difference?






share|improve this answer













It does, but you get a funny error:



! You can't use `spacefactor' in math mode.
@->spacefactor
@m {}


This is because of how LaTeX is defined:



% latex.ltx, line 1644:
DeclareRobustCommand{LaTeX}{Lkern-.36em%
{sboxz@ T%
vbox tohtz@{hbox{check@mathfonts
fontsizesf@sizez@
math@fontsfalseselectfont
A}%
vss}%
}%
kern-.15em%
TeX}


Now let's look at TeX:



% latex.ltx, line 1643:
defTeX{Tkern-.1667emlower.5exhbox{E}kern-.125emX@}


and that's where the error comes from: @ is used to mark the X like a lower case letter, as far as the space factor is concerned.



Well, you are not supposed to use LaTeX in math mode, whatever our MathJax friends think. ;-) The correct input is just



This book was written in LaTeX.




By the way, if you want to properly typeset the LaTeX logo in MathJax, please use



$mathrm{LaTeX}$


enter image description here



Can you see the difference?







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 9 at 23:17









egregegreg

734k8919323256




734k8919323256













  • Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 0:30











  • Yep... got it..

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 3:21











  • I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

    – manooooh
    Mar 10 at 6:46





















  • Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 0:30











  • Yep... got it..

    – David G. Stork
    Mar 10 at 3:21











  • I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

    – manooooh
    Mar 10 at 6:46



















Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

– David G. Stork
Mar 10 at 0:30





Hah... interesting! Thanks (+1) (but no "accept" because egreg actually answered my question).

– David G. Stork
Mar 10 at 0:30













Yep... got it..

– David G. Stork
Mar 10 at 3:21





Yep... got it..

– David G. Stork
Mar 10 at 3:21













I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

– manooooh
Mar 10 at 6:46







I want to mention that for many months I used to write simply $LaTeX$ in math, but since @egreg shows the difference I could improve my typography skills. Thanks to him and to @David for asking!!

– manooooh
Mar 10 at 6:46




















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