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Encyclopedia > Typeset

Typesetting involves the presentation of textual material in an aesthetic form on paper or some other media. Before the development of such late 20th century innovations as dot matrix and inkjet printers, printed material was produced in print shops.


In spite of centuries of innovation, the principle of printing remains the same: either a particular part of the page is marked with ink, or it is not. This has remained true at the microscopic level even for halftone and four-color printing. Typesetting is the technology of deciding which parts of the paper should be marked, and printing is the technology of making the marks. However, the two are not rigidly separated: for example, ink flows during the printing process, and type design has to take into account the dynamics of ink on paper.


With early printing presses, individual letters and characters were on blocks (usually of metal, sometimes of wood), which would be assembled for each page.


The setting of individual letters was rendered obsolete by hot-metal setting machines such as the Linotype machine.


The computer era

Computers are useful in automatically typesetting documents.


Character-by-character computer-aided photosetting replaced systems such as Linotype in the 1980s, and was in turn rapidly rendered obsolete by modern systems which employ a raster image processor to render an entire page to a single high-resolution digital image which is then photoset.


The TeX system is a widespread and powerful automatic typesetter.


See also

printing, printing press, typography, typeface, ligature, dingbat, justification (typesetting), orphan (typesetting), widow (typesetting)


External link

  • Metal Type - For Those who Remember Hot Metal Typesetting (http://www.metaltype.co.uk)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Typesetting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (664 words)
Typesetting involves the presentation of textual material in an aesthetic form on paper or some other medium.
After centuries of innovation the basic principle of typesetting remains the same: the composition of glyphs into lines to form body matter, headings, captions and other pieces of text to make up a page image, and the printing or transfer of the page image onto paper and other media.
Hand compositing was rendered obsolete by continuous casting or hot-metal typesetting machines such as the Linotype machine and Monotype at the end of the 19th century.
Computers and Typesetting - definition of Computers and Typesetting in Encyclopedia (286 words)
Knuth's computers and typesetting project was the result of his frustration on the lack of decent software for the typesetting of mathematical and technical documents.
The result of this project include TeX for typesetting, Metafont for font construction and the computer modern typefaces that are the default fonts used by TeX.
It is by far the most common and available of the set, as the TeX interpreter is widely used for typesetting.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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