On Sun, 2005-02-06 at 08:49 -0800, Globe Trotter wrote: > Dear all, > > In my huge effort to move everyone away from anything remotely smelling > Windoze-y, I am often told that some people prefer using horrible, awful Word > (whether from the bloated Office or from Star Office) even when having to do > complicated equations and mathematical formulae (over LaTeX) because it > provides for tracking of changes to a document. I personally don't care about > tracking, but I am perhaps not that old and wise. Well, anyway, does anyone > know if there is a program which can track changes in a document in LaTeX? It > can not be that different to set up, using a combination of diffs on the old > and the new file, and then including it during the processing by striking out > the old and retaining the new in a different color/type. Hi "Globe Trotter", LaTeX files are plain text files and readily lend themselves to storage and tracking within a source management system such as CVS, Subversion, etc. Many individuals and development groups keep their LaTeX files within CVS. Ed -- Edward H. Hill III, PhD office: MIT Dept. of EAPS; Rm 54-1424; 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 emails: eh3@xxxxxxx ed@xxxxxxx URLs: http://web.mit.edu/eh3/ http://eh3.com/ phone: 617-253-0098 fax: 617-253-4464