From jay.kominek@colorado.edu Fri Aug 03 07:50:20 2001 Return-Path: X-Sender: kominek@ucsub.colorado.edu X-Apparently-To: lojban@yahoogroups.com Received: (EGP: mail-7_2_0); 3 Aug 2001 14:50:19 -0000 Received: (qmail 38385 invoked from network); 3 Aug 2001 14:49:07 -0000 Received: from unknown (10.1.10.26) by l8.egroups.com with QMQP; 3 Aug 2001 14:49:07 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO ucsub.colorado.edu) (128.138.129.12) by mta1 with SMTP; 3 Aug 2001 14:49:06 -0000 Received: from ucsub.colorado.edu (kominek@ucsub.colorado.edu [128.138.129.12]) by ucsub.colorado.edu (8.11.2/8.11.2/ITS-5.0/student) with ESMTP id f73En6F25840 for ; Fri, 3 Aug 2001 08:49:06 -0600 (MDT) Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2001 08:49:06 -0600 (MDT) To: Subject: RE: [lojban] Re: printable dictionary! In-Reply-To: <000a01c11bd9$d094f240$0300a8c0@mcp> Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII From: Jay Kominek X-Yahoo-Message-Num: 9112 On Thu, 2 Aug 2001, Edward Cherlin wrote: > > I intend to produce a PDF version which is fully internally hyperlinked, > > which should make for speedy lookup. Or at least speedy cross referencing. > > How about a PDF with full-text indexing? There is an Acrobat function > called Catalog IIRC to create it. I'm not using Acrobat to create the PDFs. The dictionary is LaTeX, so the PDF is produced by pdflatex. What does "full-text indexing" get you? It seems like indexen are simply lists of words and their pages, and a dictionary is also a list of words, but in alphabetical order so you don't need to know the page number to find it. - Jay Kominek