Filters

Resultaten voor 'john whitington'

2 resultaten
  1. How Computers Make Books
    1. John , Whitington

    How Computers Make Books

    Learn about computer science by exploring the fascinating journey it took to make this book!How Computers Make Books introduces what’s wonderful about computer science by showing how computers have transformed the art of publishing books. Author and publishing software developer John Whitington reveals the elegant computer science solutions invented to solve big publishing challenges. In How Computers Make Books you’ll discover: How human descriptions are translated into computer programs How a computer can understand document formatting How a program decides where to print ink on a page Why computer science is so interesting to computer scientists, and why it might interest you …and much more! How do computers represent all the different languages and letters used by humans? How do we compress a book’s worth of complex information so it can be transferred in seconds? And what exactly is a computer program? This book answers all those questions by telling the story of how it was created! Purchase of the print book includes a free eBook in PDF and ePub formats from Manning Publications. About the technology Computers are part of every step in creating a book, from capturing the author’s words as a digital document to controlling how the ink gets onto the paper. How Computers Make Books introduces basic computer science concepts like file formatting, transfer, and storage, computer programming, and task automation by guiding you through the modern digital printing process. About the book This book takes you on a journey from the plain white page, weaving through typesetting, making gray images from black ink, electronic file formats, and more. It makes computer science come alive as you see how every word, illustration, and page has its own story. You’ll even learn to write your own simple programs and discover hands-on what’s so intoxicating about computer science. What's inside How human descriptions are translated into computer programs How a digital computer thinks about print documents How a program decides where to print ink on a page How the history of typesetting shows up in modern books About the reader For the curious-but-clueless about computer science—and anyone interested in how computers make books! About the author John Whitington is the founder of a company that builds software for electronic document processing. He has studied and taught Computer Science at Queens’ College, Cambridge. Technical editor on this book was Bojan Stojanović. Table of Contents 1 Putting marks on paper 2 Letter forms 3 Storing words 4 Looking and finding 5 Typing it in 6 Saving space 7 The sums behind the screen 8 Gray areas 9 A typeface 10 Words to paragraphs 11 Out into the world

    € 33,00
  2. PDF Explained
    1. John , Whitington

    PDF Explained

    At last, here's an approachable introduction to the widely used Portable Document Format. PDFs are everywhere, both online and in printed form, but few people take advantage of the useful features or grasp the nuances of this format. This concise book provides a hands-on tour of the world's leading page-description language for programmers, power users, and professionals in the search, electronic publishing, and printing industries. Illustrated with lots of examples, this book is the documentation you need to fully understand PDF.* Build a simple PDF file from scratch in a text editor * Learn the layout and content of a PDF file, as well as the syntax of its objects* Examine the logical structure of PDF objects, and learn how pages and their resources are arranged into a document* Create vector graphics and raster images in PDF, and deal with transparency, color spaces, and patterns* Explore PDF operators for building and showing text strings* Get up to speed on bookmarks, metadata, hyperlinks, annotations, and file attachments* Learn how encryption and document permissions work in PDF* Use the pdftk program to process PDF files from the command line

    € 19,50