I’m a bit confused. What I’m used to is, I make a TeX document (editable) then I typeset it into a PDF document. Anybody can read the PDF, but can’t edit it. If I want the receiver to be able to edit, I send both the TeX file and the PDF.
Did you mean that philosophy journals won’t accept the .tex file format, or that they’ll reject a .pdf written in LaTeX for stylistic reasons?
Adobe’s business model is to give away the reader for free and then sell the editor for a profit. So I would guess most publishers would have no problem.
That doesn’t make sense to me. One can’t re-typeset PDF—well, perhaps you can, but I can’t imagine it would be easy.
I’m a bit confused. What I’m used to is, I make a TeX document (editable) then I typeset it into a PDF document. Anybody can read the PDF, but can’t edit it. If I want the receiver to be able to edit, I send both the TeX file and the PDF.
Did you mean that philosophy journals won’t accept the .tex file format, or that they’ll reject a .pdf written in LaTeX for stylistic reasons?
Adobe’s business model is to give away the reader for free and then sell the editor for a profit. So I would guess most publishers would have no problem.