Dr. John P. Costella

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Contents


Papers and letters

All papers listed below are preprints. Where they have been published, you can obtain paper reprints from me directly; the copyright owner listed is that of the published paper.

Virtual Reality and Computer Graphics

Politics

Pure mathematics

Classical electrodynamics

Quantum mechanics

Relativistic constituent quark models


LaTeX

Introduction to LaTeX seminar notes

These are the notes for the Introduction to LaTeX seminars that I present every six months or so. Note that the complete set of notes takes HOURS to print, even on the fastest departmental printers. You should team up with colleagues, to have the notes photocopied in bulk. I take NO responsibility for anyone printing these notes recklessly. Please contact the person originating the print job if you have a problem with this.

Old LaTeX seminar notes (October 1994)

Although they have been comprehensively superceded by the current LaTeX seminar notes, a number of people still want access to the notes for the original October 1994 series of seminars (usually because they are missing one or two of the later sets of notes). Note that the diagrams in seminar 1 are not available.

LaTeX seminar notes source files

I have made the entire set of source files for the above Introduction to LaTeX seminar notes available by anonymous-ftp. These source files also serve as a useful guide to using the CostelLaTeX macro package.

CostelLaTeX macro package

For a full, detailed description of how to use the functionality of the CostelLaTeX macro package, see my Introduction to LaTeX seminar notes.

UnMacro program

This program reads in an arbitrary LaTeX file, reading in any files included in that file, expanding out all LaTeX macros it finds, and writing the result to a single LaTeX source file. If you LaTeX this output file, you get exactly the SAME output DVI file (byte for byte) as when you LaTeX the original file. This program is most useful for producing an output file of a CostelLaTeX document, to post overseas; the recipient need not even know what CostelLaTeX is, let alone have the macro package themselves. It is also useful for producing electronic RevTeX submissions for the Physical Review (who do not allow macros in compuscripts at all).


Ph.D. thesis


More information

Page of links

Mail, fax and voice addresses

Biographical information

Web pages maintained


Copyright © 1994-1996 John P. Costella (jpc@physics.unimelb.edu.au). Accesses since 13 February 1996: