A friend of mine asked me why I use LaTeX
instead of Word/OpenOffice/LibreOffice etc. (no, this is not going to be a question like 'Word vs. LaTeX')
I showed him some of the showcases here on TeX.SE
, some of my personal work too (not shown here). He was puzzled about the 'huge range of commands' to be learned. He wanted to know which and how many commands he should learn in order to produce 'reasonable' documents.
My answer was that this would depend on the type and content of the document, but I could not give a clear answer.
I know, this question might provoke opinion based answers or is too broad, therefore I want to restrict the question
What are the 50 most useful/important commands or environments for writing a typographically good every-day-document (article/book/beamer)? Probably those commands/environments are the most used ones(?)
In order to reduce the wide range of possible answers I will put some more obstacles:
Since a lot of
TeX
macros deal with mathematical typesetting, it's better to exclude them in this question, environments however are 'allowed'No
LaTeX
document can 'live' without\documentclass
and\document
, so those macros are mandatory anyway and can be excluded- Environments
\begin{...}...\end{...}
should count just as one command - Class/Package writer commands and deep internals should be excluded too, as they have in principle nothing to do with everyday's work.
- TikZ/pstricks etc. are really nice bundles, but it's not useful to list a lot of macros from those packages
- Structuring commands like
\chapter
etc. are basically the same, so they count as one \blindtext
\lipsum
are not useful in producing everyday's document, so they do not count as well- The various
\cite...
commands available from bibliographies count as one
I know, there are some (un)related questions
- What are the most common mistakes that beginners of (La)TeX and Friends make?
- How can I explain the meaning of LaTeX to my grandma?
- What packages do people load by default in LaTeX?
\documentclass{article}\begin{document}
. – cfr Jan 2 '15 at 0:21tabular
, for example – user31729 Jan 2 '15 at 0:23