\centerline{\bf Mac\TeX\ --- a mathematician's view} \medskip\noindent There are two versions of \TeX\ that are available for use on the Macintosh, namely \TeXtures\ (from Addison-Wesley) and Mac\TeX\ (from {\sl FTL systems Inc} of Toronto). Of the two, Mac\TeX\ is the more sophisticated. I have been using it for more than a year now and have found it a joy to work with. It costs \quid595 (plus {\sc vat}), but educational discounts are available (probably about 15\%). Included in the package are {\sc initex} and \LaTeX\ , as well as useful on-line help files for control sequences, with page references to the \TeX book. Optional extras include \AmSTeX\ and the Computer Modern Fonts. The User Guide is both comprehensive and clear. Currently available is Version 2. The basic package comes on four 800K disks, and it is recommended that it be installed on a hard disc. Users of \TeX\ (on no matter which computer) will be aware that a considerable amount of correcting and adjusting is always needed in processing every job, be it because of input errors, overfull boxes, or page layout. It is therefore essential to have a system that is reasonably fast and user-friendly. Such is Mac\TeX. As one would expect, it has embedded in it full word-processing facilities so that corrections to input material are easy to make. The editor also allows you to choose your favourite screen font in which to type your input material. Each input file has to be named in the form |XYZ.tex| and, following selection of the format (Plain, \LaTeX, or your own), is typeset on a simple menu command. The speed of operation depends on your Mac and what kind of copy you are setting: for average mathematical input, on a Macintosh II the {\tt .dvi} file is created at a rate of about one page every six seconds, which is of the order of four times faster than on a MacPlus. When one has a lot of material to process and re-process, this can be a significant difference. Very complicated pages, for example those containing complex diagrams created with \LaTeX, can take considerably longer. In bearing in mind the needs of the users, the designers of Mac\TeX\ have included several features that are noteworthy. Not least of these is the possibility of including user-defined macros. Of course, every user of \TeX\ will be aware that he can use, for example, the command |\def\1| to create a macro for which he may have a lot of use in a particular document, for instance the instruction |\smallskip\par\noindent|. In Mac\TeX\ there is the option of doing the same by defining (in a pull-down menu) |1| to be |\smallskip\par\noindent|. The main difference between these two methods is that in the former only |\1| appears as input on the screen whereas in the latter the whole of |\smallskip\par\noindent| appears. This can be very useful if, like me, you use such things as |\vartheta| a lot, want to see it on the screen as such, and are not always successful in typing it! A very impressive feature of Mac\TeX\ is the clever way in which one can include graphics from a variety of sources; for example, Super\-Paint files (saved as paint files), MacDraw files (saved as {\sc pict} files), and Adobe Illustrator files (saved as {\sc epsf} files). This can be done by storing the graphic in the Scrapbook then, as appropriate, using the command |\special{!pict n}| followed by a |\vskip| command, or the command |\special{!epsf }|. On previewing a {\tt .dvi} file with an included graphic, the blank area that is left by the |\vskip| command has a grey area in it. Any picture from the Scrapbook can be simply pasted into this area. Once this has been done, it can be resized and positioned anywhere on the page! Previewing {\tt .dvi} files can be done at normal size, at 2 times or 4 times magnification, or at full page. If the standard 10\,pt size type is used then normal screen size, though readable, is not impressive where subscripts are concerned. Better screen characters at 10\,pt or a normal screen image at 12\,pt would be much more useful to a mathematician. Up to four pages can be previewed simultaneously. Graphics included as above can be resized or repositioned in any of these magnifications. With each {\tt .dvi} file there can be activated a {\tt .log} file which gives useful error information. A nice feature when typesetting is that if an error message appears then on activating the Edit command in the menu bar one is taken to the precise line in the input file where the error occurs. Among other choices in the menu bar is a Help command. As for printing, two outlets are available, one to the ImageWriter and one to the LaserWriter. For the latter, Mac\TeX\ has its own built-in high speed spooler and all the necessary fonts are downloaded automatically. If you share a LaserWriter with other types of user then it may be necessary to switch it off then on again before printing (this is probably to get rid of the stuff that {\it PageMaker} leaves behind). Mac\TeX\ is a sophisticated package that contains a lot of useful and impressive features. As with the Mac itself, in using it one soon gains a feeling of deep satisfaction. Mac\TeX\ is distributed in the UK by {\obeylines McQueen Buckholm Galashiels TD1 3NL tel: 0896 4866 } \rightline{\sl Tom Blyth}