Online Google Dictionary

typeset 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈtīpˌset/,
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typesets, 3rd person singular present; typeset, past participle; typeset, past tense; typesetting, present participle;
  1. Arrange or generate the type for (a piece of text to be printed)


  1. set in type; "My book will be typeset nicely"; "set these words in italics"
  2. Typesetting is the composition of text material by means of types.Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House, Inc. 23 December 2009.
  3. to set or compose written material into type; Set in type
  4. (Typesetting) To layout words, text and logos for printing.
  5. (Typesetting) Term originally referred to the setting of lead type for printing presses or phototypesetting. With advancing technology nearly all "typesetting" is now done on the computer.
  6. (Typesetting) Formatting a book's content to include typeface, font size, and layout.
  7. (Typesetting) the process of laying out the book to the agreed page design, including any pictures, tables, maps, diagrams etc
  8. (11 TYPESETTING) charge is $ 20.00 (v) per color, minimum
  9. (Typesetting) (abbr. setting)   The composition of typographical characters into lines of type and, together with other elements such as images and illustrations, into pages—a highly skilled craft crucial to the production of quality books but, sadly, no longer taught in the formal sense. ...
  10. (Typesetting) An old term for artworking where somebody is setting the type on a page to create a brochure etc..
  11. (Typesetting) Composing type into words and lines in accordance with the manuscript and typographic specifications.
  12. (Typesetting) The assembly of text and pictures on a MAC or PC by keyboard or other digital means.
  13. (Typesetting) The craft of setting text or display copy from typefaces for output at medium and high resolutions.
  14. (Typesetting) The method of creating a listing of names for a shirt, typically needed when creating transfers with class lists or schedules.
  15. (Typesetting) Traditionally, the assemblage of characters into words and compositions for use in various printing operations. Today, the production of black and white letters, numerals, symbols, etc., onto paper, plastic, film or other flexible artwork or film medium.
  16. (typesetting) the process of formatting a manuscript into the look it will have when printed and bound. Page proofs have been typeset; a copy-edited manuscript has not.
  17. To create type of a quality usable for reproduction, whether electronically or mechanically.
  18. The process of applying style specifications such as typeface and point size to raw text.
  19. The formal composition of a page for publication. Today this can be accomplished via desktop applications to sophisticated composition programs.
  20. A generic term meaning to lay out text elements on a page.  In olden days, to "typeset" meant to physically set each piece of "type" -- or letter -- into the press, prior to inking and printing.
  21. the arrangement of text in its chosen font, presented in a manner ready for reproduction
  22. A set of customized types (for example, numeric or character) representing how a language writes data to a file.