![]() Update: The command latexmk works similar to rubber (i.e. beginners) on openSUSE will find these applications useful. Rubber makes the process of compiling a source file into the final document completely automated including processing bibliographic references or indices, as well as compilation or conversion of figures and several post-processing work. Rubber is a command line application that automates compilation of latex documents, in the sense that it takes care of getting cross-referencing, citations and so on just right with one run, while it takes the native texlive commands (latex/pdflatex) as many as four runs to do so. I think, but I am not sure, that TeXworks is the only Linux application which uses source/preview synchronisation at present. This makes it possible for you to right-click on the embedded preview and choose to go to the corresponding line/paragraph in the latex source. OpenSUSE 11.2 (from my home project, this requires libqt4 >= 4.6.1)Īlso based on the qt toolkit, TeXworks is a Latex frontend with an integrated viewer that supports source/preview synchronisation. ![]() based on qt with no dependence on kde libraries, which means somebody using a non-kde desktop might install it without pulling in one big chunk of the kde base (as a GNOME user, I find this to be a problem with kile), and so integrates well with a non-KDE desktop as well.an integrated LaTeX to html conversion tool.This is a frontend for editing latex documents much like kile (which is distributed with openSUSE 11.3 and prior), with several useful features: These applications make working with and compiling latex documents user-friendly and painless. I have started maintaining three packages, namely Texmaker, TeXworks and Rubber, in the Publishing repository. Or you know about the excellent application kile but as a GNOME/LXDE/Xfce user you did not want a zillion kde libraries installed. Or found it just irritating to google every time or look up a cheat-sheet to insert a not-so-common symbol. Whether you are a frequent latex user, and especially if you are just starting off with it, you must have encountered situations where compiling the document correctly gets downright painful.
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