LaTeX

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The extension EPS stands for Encapsulated PostScript and is my favorite filetype for graphics and figures I produce using applications like Illustrator, Inkscape, and MATLAB. Here is how to insert EPS figures into a LaTex document. First you have to use the graphicx package so insert the following after the \documentclass tag and before the

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Below is code demonstrating how to typeset matrices in LaTeX using the array environment. \begin{displaymath} Q = \left( \begin{array}{ccc} q_{11} & q_{12} & q_{13} \\ q_{21} & q_{22} & q_{23} \\ q_{31} & q_{32} & q_{33} \\ \end{array} \right) \end{displaymath} The code generates a three column matrix with the contents of each column centered ({ccc}).

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It is possible, and only slightly awkward, to make LaTex tables with borders around some of the cells and no borders or only partial borders around other cells. Below are two snippets of code showing you how. Each is followed by an image of the table it produces. This code uses two LaTex packages, multirow