-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 106
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
More trim for printing. #68
Comments
@bgeorge77 I'm sorry for being so slow to respond. This is not difficult in general, but I need to update the version with line numbers, since there were quite a few updates in the code elsewhere. I'm working on it right now. Also, to increase the margins I need to know what is the target paper size. Currently it's made to fit within A5 format (148 by 210 mm), so the easiest thing is to simply make it slightly bigger (say, 158 by 220 mm), but I'm not sure if it's a convenient format for Lulu to print on. |
@bgeorge77 It's awesome to see the thing on real paper! Looks really nice in print. I'm really sorry for not making the version I promised yet, it's been a somewhat tough year. At the moment I'm slowly working on a LaTeX version of the book, which should be a tad easier to handle than the current ConTeXt one. |
Yes! I print out pages from the PDF for the students. The combo of colors AND letters AND line numbers is just so essential, the three keys to unlocking Euclid for young (and old!) students. I've been using this now for several years, it has been wonderful. My only wish? A version of Heath's text, even just the first three or four books, but Byrnified. :) |
@bgeorge77 Sounds very interesting! I always suspected that colors+letters should be helpful, planned to perform some tests to, maybe, write some sort of research paper so that there's not just tools to design geometry proofs like this, but also some data on how exactly, if at all, this approach is helpful. Did you consider performing a research like this? I could help with designing proofs/theorems for testing and analyzing data, if needed. Since Heath's text seems to be in public domain, it's technically possible to "byrnify" it, it's just somewhat difficult to support multiple books at once. I also though of "byrnifying" a more modern geometry textbook, but not being a teacher myself, I just couldn't figure out which one makes more sense for the modern-day geometry education. |
I am just a humble middle school teacher, not really a researcher, but I would be happy to participate in any research anyone would like to do here! I have been thinking of what modern book could be Byrnified, but there is really no book out there that has the same aesthetic draw and lasting impact of Euclid--kids LOVE that this is an ancient tome, well known and time tested, it plugs into the same part of their brain that loves the Hobbit and mythology. Maybe David Hilbert's famous classic Geometry and Imagination would be good Byrnified? But I don't think it's public domain. There are colleges in the US, "classical colleges" that use Heath's Euclid as their freshman math textbook, and heath's Apollonius' Conic Sections as their sophomore book. |
@bgeorge77 A friend of mine, @MarcinCiura, is currently working on a deeply reworked edition of "The Elements," it features letter designations and line numbers, which you found useful. It is in Polish, but we plan to make an English translation. Could you help us with the English version and provide some advice, based on your teaching experience, on how we could improve the book? |
Absolutely!! That sounds great. |
Oh, and another book that might need Byrnification is Euclid's "Optics", it it public domain and very ignored, but it is an introduction to perspective geometry. Also pretty short. https://philomatica.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Optics-of-Euclid.pdf |
@bgeorge77 May I ask you for your email? You can write it in the comment and then delete it. |
bgeorge77 at gmail |
I just tried to upload the pdf (with lettrines and larger diagrams and line numbers) to Lulu for printing for my class, but it says the trim is too thin. Is there a way to increase the margins?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: