Digital Typography (Center for the Study of Language and Information - Lecture Notes) | 
enlarge | Author: Donald E. Knuth Publisher: Center for the Study of Language and Inf Category: Book
List Price: $40.95 Buy New: $33.63 You Save: $7.32 (18%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 348590
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 685 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.3 x 1.3
ISBN: 1575860104 Dewey Decimal Number: 686.22544536 EAN: 9781575860107 ASIN: 1575860104
Publication Date: June 1, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
In this collection, the second in the series, Knuth explores the relationship between computers and typography. The present volume, in the words of the author, is a legacy to all the work he has done on typography. When he thought he would take a few years' leave from his main work on the art of computer programming, as is well known, the short typographic detour lasted more than a decade. When type designers, punch cutters, typographers, book historians, and scholars visited the University during this period, it gave to Stanford what some consider to be its golden age of digital typography. By the author's own admission, the present work is one of the most difficult books that he has prepared. This is truly a work that only Knuth himself could have produced.
Book Description One of the foremost figures in the field of mathematical sciences, Knuth has written papers which are widely referenced and stand as milestones of development over a wide range of topics. In this collection, the second in the series, Knuth explores the relationship between computers and typography.
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Enjoyable synopsis of Knuth's typesetting adventures May 19, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I got this book primarily to understand the word-wrapping algorithm in TeX, and just that chapter alone was worth the price of the book.
Having said that... when explaining algorithms, I find Knuth concentrates so much on the minutiae that the bigger picture is often lost; but that's just his style and the exposition is always very clear. I've gone through parts of TAOCP, so his style of teaching wasn't a complete surprise to me. The word-wrapping chapter itself has a very leisurely style with a lot of history and background, and it was a very enlightening and pleasant read.
The book itself is a selection of papers, articles, transcripts of talks and working documents by Knuth on TeX and Metafont (for the most part.)
Some chapters were not particularly interesting to me, they dealt with specifics of tricky typesetting with TeX, which I feel has a clumsy programming syntax.
Other chapters were great reading as they dealt with the historical development of TeX and Metafont. For example, he writes about his collaboration with Hermann Zapf on the AMS Euler typeface, which gives great insights on how fonts were developed with Metafont. There are a couple of chapters talking about his fascination with digital typography and his gradual descent (or is that ascent!) into developing TeX and Metafont, and they were fun to read.
If you're a Knuth fan, you'll definitely want to get this book. The historical material makes for nice, light reading, and if you get the urge, you can plunge into the technical chapters and see some interesting gears within TeX and Metafont.
Fascinating Background Material to Knuth's Typesetting Work March 23, 2002 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
This book won't teach you TeX or Metafont. It might not even teach you all that much about particular algorithms (although Chapter 3 is one of the most detailed explanations of TeX's linebreaking algorithms published anywhere). Instead, this book offers a look behind the scenes. Instead of beholding TeX and Metafont in their almost final versions, as published in _TeX: The Program_ and _Metafont: The Program_, respectively, you see them grow from the first design studies (when Knuth thought of TeX as a program for two grad students to write over a summer) to where they are today. You see how the collaboration between Knuth and Zapf on the Euler fonts worked, and you get another glance at many facets of Knuth's mind (And a beautiful mind it is indeed, even though it is entirely sane). If you have any deeper interest in TeX and Metafont, this book is well worth the money.
MASTERFUL August 1, 2001 0 out of 10 found this review helpful
EXCELLENT book.... I cannot rate this one high enough.... at firstI thought it might have been expensive but it is NOT... the price is well WORTH it for what you get, Knuth is a master!
The Art of Beautiful Print January 19, 2000 9 out of 13 found this review helpful
This is a highly stimulating collection of essays about TeX, typography, the delectable art of programming, the joy of a beautifully constructed letter A, the world, the universe and everything. Knuth's style is, as always, eminently readable and possessed of a fluidity unmatched in technical writing this century. Definitely recommended.
A very stimulating bathroom read June 12, 1999 13 out of 15 found this review helpful
This book collects numerous writings on TeX and typography from one of the greatest coumputer scientists of all time, Donald Knuth. Here you get to read fascinating inside information on Knuth's earliest development of TeX, how doggone hard he worked to get the letter "S" just right in his computer modern fonts, how to typeset his wife's recipes, and other bits of amazing minutiae. Knuth's style is breezy and funny in a wry-dry kind of way. (He's the kind of down-to-earth genius you'd love to take out to dinner.), and I was amused to find out that he seems to be a film buff. (His journal from his early work on TeX shows that he went to see "Earthquake," for goshsakes, "to relax"!)This is a brilliant book, a book to treasure, and with its relatively short essays, a book to keep handy for bathroom reading. But then again, you may get addicted and just keep reading one chapter after another! If you love TeX (or LaTeX or AMS-TeX) as much as I do, you'll have to have this book. It's that good, and you will not only be astounded by his genius, entertained by the presentation, but you'll learn things too. Trust me on this one.
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