James A. Holmes

A Tufte-Stylesheet

CodePen Press

An Experiment in Style

First Edition

Introduction

This sample document discusses the design of Edward Tufte’s books Edward R. Tufte. The Visual Display of Quantitative Information. Graphics Press, Cheshire, Connecticut, 2001. ISBN 0-9613921-4-2; Edward R. Tufte. Envisioning Information. Graphics Press, Cheshire, Connecticut, 1990. ISBN 0-9613921-1-8; Edward R. Tufte. Visual Explanations. Graphics Press, Cheshire, Connecticut, 1997. ISBN 0-9613921-2-6; and Edward R. Tufte. Beautiful Evidence. Graphics Press, LLC, first edition, May 2006. ISBN 0-9613921-7-7 and the use of the tufte-book and tufte-handout document classes.

The Design of Tufte’s Books

The pages of a book are usually divided into three major sections: the front matter (also called preliminary matter or prelim), the main matter (the core text of the book), and the back matter (or end matter).

The front matter of a book refers to all of the material that comes before the main text. The following table from shows a list of ma- terial that appears in the front matter of The Visual Display of Quan- titative Information, Envisioning Information, Visual Explanations, and Beautiful Evidence along with its page number. Page numbers that appear in parentheses refer to folios that do not have a printed page number (but they are still counted in the page number sequence).

Page Content Books
VDQI EI VE BE
Black half title page (1) (1) (1) (1)