LaTeX
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Reference
- Cheat sheet:
- Wiki
Install
Ubuntu
See reference page.
sudo apt-get install texlive
sudo apt-get install texlive2html # To support TeX to HTML conversion
sudo apt-get install texlive-xetex # To install XeTeX
Basic Usage
This is basic commands for MikTeX (the Windows port of LaTeX):
pdflatex <file.tex> # Convert a .tex file directly to pdf format
latex <file.tex> # Convert a .tex file to .dvi file
dvips <file.dvi> # Convert a .dvi file to .ps
dvipdfm -p a4 <filetex> # Convert a .dvi file to .pdf (using a4 paper)
For TeX documents:
tex <file.tex> # Convert a .tex into .dvi
pdftex <file.tex> # Convert a .tex directly into .pdf
Troubleshoot
- LaTeX Error: Cannot determine size of graphic (no BoundingBox)
- LaTeX does not find the BoundingBox information which is necessary to produce the .dvi file. A way to fix this is either to edit the graphic to add the bounding box information, or to use pdflatex to produce directly a .pdf file.
- Missing table of content (file *.toc not found)
- This happens when the command \tableofcontents is used in the document, but LaTeX did not produce yet a table of content file. The .toc file is produced at the first invocation. To solve this, just run LaTex a second time:
pdflatex mypresentation.tex # produce a pdf without toc, and a toc file
pdflatex mypresentation.tex # produce a pdf with toc generated in the previous pass
Importing MS Visio Graphics in LaTeX
Method 1: Using OpenOffice Draw
This procedure creates from a Visio drawing, a PDF file that has the correct page dimension in order to be directly imported in a LaTeX document. This procedure requires to have OpenOffice Draw installed.
- In Visio, File → Save As, select type Enhanced Metafile (.emf), enter a file name, click Save.
- (Using intermediate .emf is less convenient but gives better results than Paste Special as GDI object, which sometimes modify the pasted object)
- In OpenOffice Draw, Open the newly saved file, Select the drawing with the mouse, and then go to menu File → Export.
- Check the box Selection, select format EPS - Encapsulated PostScript (.eps), save the file.
- Press OK, to accept all default options (no preview, Level 2, Grayscale, no compression)
- In a shell, type the LaTeX command
epstopdf <filename.eps>
which will create a file <filename.pdf> with the correct page size.
- Limitations
- Some line formats are not correctly rendered by OpenOffice Draw when exporting to EPS format.
Method 2: Using Custom PostScript Page Size
This procedure can be used to solve problem in the 1st method where some line formats are not correctly rendered in the EPS. This procedure requires to have a PDF printer installed, such as PrimoPDF.
- In Visio, select the drawing to print, and copy-paste it into a new document.
- Go to menu File → Page Setup
- Go to Page Size panel
- Select Size to fit drawing contents, and note the page size as computed by Visio
- Go to Print Setup panel
- Click on Printer Paper Setup
- Click on Printer...
- Select the PDF printer, and click on Properties...
- Click on Advanced...
- For Paper size, select PostScript Custom Page Size, then click on Edit Custom Page Size
- Select unit Millimeter, and then in Width and Height, enter the same size as computed by Visio, plus 1 or 2mm.
- Click Ok buttons until back in the Print Setup dialog. Set Left, Right, Top and Bottom margin to be 0mm, and select Center horizontally and Center vertically.
- If necessary, move the drawing so that it fits perfectly in the middle of the page.
- Print the document.
The result is a PDF document with the best output quality and the correct dimension.
- Limitations
- Sometimes text police are rasterized.