teTeX
teTeX was a TeX distribution for Unix-like systems. As of May 2006, teTeX is no longer actively maintained and its former maintainer Thomas Esser recommended TeX Live as the replacement.[1]
Developer(s) | Thomas Esser |
---|---|
Stable release | 3.0
|
Operating system | Unix-like |
Type | TeX distribution |
Website | www |
The teTeX package is available as a package for system architectures:[2]
Other supported operating systems include:
History
Thomas Esser maintained teTeX from 1994 until May, 2006.[3] According to Esser, the time taken to package each successive release took longer than the previous.[4] It has been superseded by TeX Live, a “comprehensive TeX system for most types of Unix, including GNU/Linux and Mac OS X, and also Windows”.[5] The goals of the teTeX project were to be easy, use free software, be well-documented, avoiding bugs along the way.
gollark: I am definitely not using this in any serious setting, though. If the computer shuts down at the wrong time, boom.
gollark: I put in the HECf-251-Ox as a joke. 282240RF/t, 462480H/t, and the only way it hasn't melted yet is an opencomputers controller dynamically toggling it on or off every tick as needed.
gollark: Er, 28224, whatever.
gollark: I'm perfectly happy with the 28000RF/t.
gollark: For moar powar, I guess you could make a bigger lattice of these on the X and Z axis.
References
- teTeX Home Page (Retrieved January 31, 2007)
- The TeX Live Guide
- Guide to teTeX Documentation (Retrieved January 31, 2007)
- Thomas Esser - Interview - TeX Users Group
- TeX Live home page (Retrieved January 31, 2007)
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