On 14 Apr 2017, at 14:07, Wolfgang Helbig <helbig(a)mailbox.org> wrote:
That's just TeX, Metafont, and perhaps plain & the MF sources for CMR.
Installing that might indeed be interesting in the context of this list, because it would
give a feeling for what installing TeX was like in the early 1980s: you went through some
more-or-less painful process to get the thing to compile at all, typically involving
building a Pascal-C converter of some kind, converting tangle into C, fiddling with the
result so it would compile, then using the result to convert TeX (with the various patches
which I forget how they work now, except not by 'patch' which probably did not
exist anyway) into C, fiddling with *that* to get it to compile, then doing the same for
MF, building the plain format & font metrics. At which point you could probably make
DVI files using macros in plain, but not print them or see what they looked like at all.
After dealing with that somehow you realised just how horrible plain looked and started on
a huge slow journey of acquiring sets of macros, usually culminating in the inevitability
of having to write a less-horrible style for LaTeX (which would be 2.09 without the NFSS
and thus deeply painful to use). Oh, and you had to work out some directory structure for
it all to live in, because there wasn't any standard for that, of course.
So, such a thing is interesting in the way that installing 7th edition is interesting, but
probably not if you want to actually set text. If you want to set text just install TeX
Live. Yes, it's big (by 1980s standards: you can perhaps still buy a smartphone
without enough storage for it), but it's big because it includes everything you
need.
--tim