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Text is displayed by indenting it from the left
margin. Quotations are commonly displayed. There
are short quotations
This is a short a quotation. It consists of a
single paragraph of text. See how it is formatted.
and longer ones.
This is a longer quotation. It consists of two
paragraphs of text, neither of which are
particularly interesting.
This is the second paragraph of the quotation. It
is just as dull as the first paragraph.
Another frequently-displayed structure is a list.
The following is an example of an itemized
list.
- This is the first item of an itemized list.
Each item in the list is marked with a ``tick''.
You don't have to worry about what kind of tick
mark is used.
- This is the second item of the list. It
contains another list nested inside it. The inner
list is an enumerated list.
- 1.
- This is the first item of an enumerated
list that is nested within the itemized list.
- 2.
- This is the second item of the inner list.
LATEX allows you to nest lists deeper than
you really should.
This is the rest of the second item of the outer
list. It is no more interesting than any other
part of the item.
- This is the third item of the list.
You can even display poetry.
There is an environment
for verse
Whose features some poets
will curse.
For instead of making
Them do all line breaking,
It allows them to put too many words on a line when they'd rather be
forced to be terse.
Mathematical formulas may also be displayed. A
displayed formula
is
one-line long; multiline
formulas require special formatting instructions.
Don't start a paragraph with a displayed equation,
nor make one a paragraph by itself.
Next: About this document ...
Up: An Example Document
Previous: Ordinary Text
Abby Fox
1998-12-18