LaTeX (/ˈlɑːtɛk/ LAH-tek or /ˈleɪtɛk/ LAY-tek, often stylized as LaTeX) is a software system for typesetting documents. LaTeX markup describes the content and layout of the document, as opposed to the formatted text found in WYSIWYG word processors like Google Docs, LibreOffice Writer, and Microsoft Word. The writer uses markup tagging conventions to define the general structure of a document, to stylize text throughout a document (such as bold and italics), and to add citations and cross-references. A TeX distribution such as TeX Live or MiKTeX is used to produce an output file (such as PDF or DVI) suitable for printing or digital distribution.
The LaTeX Project logo | |
Original author(s) | Leslie Lamport |
---|---|
Initial release | 1984 |
Stable release | November 2024 LaTeX release / 1 November 2024 |
Repository |
|
Type | Typesetting |
License | LaTeX Project Public License (LPPL) |
Website | www |
LaTeX is widely used in academia for the communication and publication of scientific documents and technical note-taking in many fields, owing partially to its support for complex mathematical notation. It also has a prominent role in the preparation and publication of books and articles that contain complex multilingual materials, such as Arabic and Greek. LaTeX uses the TeX typesetting program for formatting its output, and is itself written in the TeX macro language.
LaTeX can be used as a standalone document preparation system, or as an intermediate format. In the latter role, for example, it is sometimes used as part of a pipeline for translating DocBook and other XML-based formats for PDF. The typesetting system offers programmable desktop publishing features and extensive facilities for automating most aspects of typesetting and desktop publishing, including numbering and cross-referencing of tables and figures, chapter and section headings, graphics, page layout, indexing and bibliographies.
Like TeX, LaTeX started as a writing tool for mathematicians and computer scientists, but even from early in its development, it has also been taken up by scholars who needed to write documents that include complex math expressions or non-Latin scripts, such as Arabic, Devanagari, and Chinese.
LaTeX is intended to provide a high-level, descriptive markup language to utilize TeX more easily. TeX handles the document layout, while LaTeX handles the content side for document processing. LaTeX comprises a collection of TeX macros and a program to process LaTeX documents, and because the plain TeX formatting commands are elementary, it provides authors with ready-made commands for formatting and layout requirements such as chapter headings, footnotes, cross-references and bibliographies.
LaTeX was originally written in the early 1980s by Leslie Lamport at SRI International. The current version is LaTeX2e, first released in 1994 but incrementally updated starting in 2015. This update policy replaced earlier plans for a separate release of LaTeX3, which had been in development since 1989. LaTeX is free software and is distributed under the LaTeX Project Public License (LPPL).
History
LaTeX was created in the early 1980s by Leslie Lamport when he was working at Stanford Research Institute (SRI). He needed to write TeX macros for his own use and thought that with a little extra effort, he could make a general package usable by others. Peter Gordon, an editor at Addison-Wesley, convinced him to write a LaTeX user's manual for publication (Lamport was initially skeptical that anyone would pay money for it); it came out in 1986 and sold hundreds of thousands of copies. Meanwhile, Lamport released versions of his LaTeX macros in 1984 and 1985. On 21 August 1989, at a TeX Users Group (TUG) meeting at Stanford, Lamport agreed to turn over maintenance and development of LaTeX to . Frank Mittelbach, along with Chris Rowley and Rainer Schöpf, formed the LaTeX3 team; in 1994, they released LaTeX2e, the current standard version. LaTeX3 has since been cancelled with features intended for that version being back-ported to LaTeX2e since 2018.
Typesetting system
LaTeX attempts to follow the design philosophy of separating presentation from content, so that authors can focus on the content of what they are writing without attending simultaneously to its visual appearance. In preparing a LaTeX document, the author specifies the logical structure using simple, familiar concepts such as chapter, section, table, figure, etc., and lets the LaTeX system handle the formatting and layout of these structures. As a result, it encourages the separation of the layout from the content — while still allowing manual typesetting adjustments whenever needed. This concept is similar to the mechanism by which many word processors allow styles to be defined globally for an entire document, or the use of Cascading Style Sheets in styling HyperText Markup Language (HTML) documents.
The LaTeX system is a markup language that handles typesetting and rendering, and can be arbitrarily extended by using the underlying macro language to develop custom macros such as new environments and commands. Such macros are often collected into packages, which could then be made available to address some specific typesetting needs such as the formatting of complex mathematical expressions or graphics (e.g., the use of the align
environment provided by the amsmath
package to produce aligned equations).
To create a document in LaTeX, a user first creates a file, such as document.tex
, typically using a text editor. The user then gives their document.tex
file as input to the TeX program (with the LaTeX macros loaded), which prompts TeX to write out a file suitable for onscreen viewing or printing. This write-format-preview cycle is one of the chief ways in which working with LaTeX differs from the What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get (WYSIWYG) style of document editing. It is similar to the code-compile-execute cycle known to computer programmers. Today, many LaTeX-aware editing programs make this cycle a simple matter through the pressing of a single key, while showing the output preview on the screen beside the input window. Some online LaTeX editors even automatically refresh the preview, while other online tools provide incremental editing in-place, mixed in with the preview in a single window.
Example
The example below shows the input to LaTeX and the corresponding output from the system:
Input | Output |
---|---|
\documentclass{article} % Starts an article \usepackage{amsmath} % Imports amsmath \title{\LaTeX} % Title \begin{document} % Begins a document \maketitle \LaTeX{} is a document preparation system for the \TeX{} typesetting program. It offers programmable desktop publishing features and extensive facilities for automating most aspects of typesetting and desktop publishing, including numbering and cross-referencing, tables and figures, page layout, bibliographies, and much more. \LaTeX{} was originally written in 1984 by Leslie Lamport and has become the dominant method for using \TeX; few people write in plain \TeX{} anymore. The current version is \LaTeXe. % This is a comment, not shown in final output. % The following shows typesetting power of LaTeX: \begin{align} E_0 &= mc^2 \\ E &= \frac{mc^2}{\sqrt{1-\frac{v^2}{c^2}}} \end{align} \end{document} |
Pronouncing and writing "LaTeX"
The characters 'T', 'E', and 'X' in the name come from the Greek capital letters tau, epsilon, and chi, as the name of TeX derives from the Ancient Greek: τέχνη ('skill', 'art', 'technique'); for this reason, TeX's creator Donald Knuth promotes its pronunciation as /tɛx/ (tekh) (that is, with a voiceless velar fricative as in Modern Greek, similar to the ch in loch). Lamport remarks that "TeX is usually pronounced tech, making lah-tech, lah-tech, and lay-tech the logical choices; but language is not always logical, so lay-tecks is also possible."
The name is printed in running text with a typographical logo: LaTeX. In media where the logo cannot be precisely reproduced in running text, the word is typically given the unique capitalization LaTeX. Alternatively, the TeX, LaTeX, and XeTeX logos can also be rendered via pure CSS and XHTML for use in graphical web browsers — by following the specifications of the internal \LaTeX
macro.
Related software
As a macro package, LaTeX provides a set of macros for TeX to interpret. There are many other macro packages for TeX, including Plain TeX, GNU Texinfo, AMSTeX, and ConTeXt.
When TeX "compiles" a document, it follows (from the user's point of view) the following processing sequence: Macros → TeX → Driver → Output. Different implementations of each of these steps are typically available in TeX distributions. Traditional TeX will output a DVI file, which is usually converted to a PostScript file. In 2000, Hàn Thế Thành and others wrote an implementation of TeX called pdfTeX, which also outputs to PDF and takes advantage of features available in that format. The XeTeX engine developed by Jonathan Kew, on the other hand, merges modern font technologies and Unicode with TeX.LuaTeX is an extended version of pdfTeX using Lua as an embedded scripting language.
There are also many editors for LaTeX, some of which are offline, source-code-based while others are online, partial-WYSIWYG-based. For more, see Comparison of TeX editors.
Compatibility and converters
LaTeX documents (*.tex
) can be opened with any text editor. They consist of plain text and contain no hidden formatting codes or binary information. TeX documents can also be shared by rendering the LaTeX file to other formats such as OpenDocument, XML, or class (*.cls
) files. LaTeX can also (and commonly is) rendered to PDF files using the LaTeX extension pdfLaTeX. LaTeX files containing Unicode text can be processed into PDFs with the inputenc
package, or by the TeX extensions XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX.
- TeX4ht is a converter that can translate TeX and LaTeX documents to HTML and certain XML formats. It is now included preconfigured with all TeX distributions.
- HeVeA is a converter written in OCaml that converts LaTeX documents to HTML5. This way documents such as scientific papers, primarily typeset for printing, can be placed on the World Wide Web for online viewing. It is licensed under the Q Public License.
- LaTeX2HTML is a converter written in Perl that converts LaTeX documents to HTML. It is licensed under GPL v2. The latest updates are available from Comprehensive TeX Archive Network (CTAN).
- LaTeX2RTF is a converter written in C that converts LaTeX documents to RTF. It is licensed under GPL v2 or later.
- LaTeXML is a converter written in Perl that converts LaTeX documents into a variety of XML-based formats, including HTML5 (with MathML), ePub ebooks, JATS, and TEI. It was developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology by US Federal Government employees and is therefore in the public domain. It is available for free.
- Pandoc is a "universal document converter" able to transform LaTeX (as well as other formats) into many different file formats, including HTML5, ePub, OpenDocument (
*.odt
), Microsoft Office Open XML (*.docx
), and even text with MediaWiki markup as used in Wikipedia. It is licensed under GPL v2.
LaTeX has become the de facto standard to typeset mathematical expression in scientific documents. Hence, there are several conversion tools focusing on mathematical LaTeX expressions, such as converters to MathML or Computer Algebra System.
- MathJax is a JavaScript library for converting LaTeX to MathML, picture formats including SVG and PNG, or HTML for embedding within a webpage.
- The Wikimedia Foundation uses MathJax to build Mathoid, a web service that uses Node.js to render math that is used in Wikipedia.
- KaTeX is a JavaScript library for converting LaTeX to HTML and MathML. It is developed by Khan Academy, and is among the fastest LaTeX to HTML converters.
Licensing
LaTeX is typically distributed along with plain TeX under a free software licence: the LaTeX Project Public License (LPPL). The LPPL is not compatible with the GNU General Public License, as it requires that modified files must be clearly differentiable from their originals (usually by changing the filename); this was done to ensure that files that depend on other files will produce the expected behavior and avoid dependency hell. The LPPL is Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) compliant as of version 1.3. As free software, LaTeX is available on most operating systems, which include Unix (Solaris, HP-UX, AIX), BSD (FreeBSD, macOS, NetBSD, OpenBSD), Linux (Red Hat, Debian, Arch, Gentoo), Windows, DOS, RISC OS, AmigaOS, and Plan 9.
Versions
Filename extension | .tex |
---|---|
Internet media type | application/x-latex |
Initial release | 1994 |
Latest release | LaTeX2e 1994 |
Type of format | Document file format |
LaTeX2e is the current version of LaTeX, since it replaced LaTeX 2.09 in 1994. As of 2020[update], LaTeX3, which started in the early 1990s, is under a long-term development project. Planned features include improved syntax (separation of content from styling), hyperlink support, a new user interface, access to arbitrary fonts and a new documentation. Some LaTeX3 features are available in LaTeX2e using packages, and by 2020 many features have been enabled in LaTeX2e by default for a gradual transition.
There are many commercial implementations of the entire TeX system. System vendors may add extra features like added typefaces and telephone support. LyX is a free software, WYSIWYM visual document processor that uses LaTeX for a back-end.TeXmacs is a free, WYSIWYG editor with similar functionalities as LaTeX, but with a different typesetting engine. Other WYSIWYG editors that produce LaTeX include Scientific Word on Windows, and on Windows, Mac, and Linux.
Many community-supported TeX distributions are available.
See also
- LyX - GUI front-end for LaTeX
- BibTeX – reference management software usually used with LaTeX
- Formula editor
- Help:Displaying a formula
- KaTeX
- List of document markup languages
- List of TeX extensions
- MathJax
- xdvi – software to view DVI files while using Unix
Notes
- Also pronounced /ˈlɑːtɛx/ LAH-tekh or /ˈleɪtɛx/ LAY-tekh or /ˈleɪtɛks/ LAY-tex.
- Unregistered media type
References
- "LaTeX2e Release Newsletter". Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- "An introduction to LaTeX". LaTeX project. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
- Lamport, Leslie (1986). LATEX: a document preparation system. Addison-Wesley Pub. Co. ISBN 0-201-15790-X. OCLC 12550262.
- "What are TeX, LaTeX and friends?".
- Alexia Gaudeul (June 2007). "Do Open Source Developers Respond to Competition?: The (La)TeX Case Study". Review of Network Economics. 6 (2). doi:10.2202/1446-9022.1119. S2CID 201097782.
- Markin, Pablo (1 November 2017). "LaTeX, Open Source Software, Facilitates the Adoption of Open Access by Authors, Repositories and Journals". OpenScience. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
- "Multilingual typesetting on Overleaf using babel and fontspec". Retrieved 2022-04-09.
- "Babel: The multilingual framework to localize LaTeX, LuaLaTeX, XeLaTeX". Retrieved 2024-11-09.
- "Chinese". www.overleaf.com. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
- Leslie Lamport (April 23, 2007). "The Writings of Leslie Lamport: LaTeX: A Document Preparation System". Leslie Lamport's Home Page. Retrieved 2007-04-27.
- "Quo vadis LaTeX(3) Team — A look back and at the upcoming years" (PDF). www.latex-project.org. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
- "LaTeX - A document preparation system". www.latex-project.org. Retrieved 2019-07-20.
- Lamport, Leslie (2024-04-29). "My Writings" (PDF). pp. 48–49. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-06-09. Retrieved 2024-06-09.
- The design of LaTeX owes something to earlier markup systems such as Scribe.
- Van Dyke, Jackson. "Getting started with LaTeX and Vim" (PDF). Retrieved 21 February 2024.
- PDF output is common, but TeX can output other formats such as DVI ("Device independent" format). See below for more detail about outputs.
- "Overleaf".
- "Seeveeze".
- "LaTeX Base".
- "Authorea".
- Donald E. Knuth, The TeXbook, Addison–Wesley, Boston, 1986, p. 1.
- Lamport (1994), p 5
- O'Connor, Edward. "TeX and LaTeX logo POSHlets". Archived from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2008-04-21.
- Taraborelli, Dario. "CSS-driven TeX logos". Archived from the original on 2017-09-01. Retrieved 2008-04-21.
- Walden, David (2005-07-15). "Travels in TeX Land: A Macro, Three Software Packages, and the Trouble with TeX". The PracTeX Journal (3). Retrieved 2008-04-21.
- "pdfTeX - TeX Users Group". www.tug.org. Retrieved 2019-07-20.
- "XeTeX - TeX Users Group". www.tug.org. Retrieved 2019-07-20.
- "LuaTeX". Retrieved 2023-07-18.
- Website http://hevea.inria.fr/
- According to LICENSE file in the source repository.
- "CTAN: Package latex2html". ctan.org.
- "CTAN: /tex-archive/support/latex2rtf". ctan.org.
- "LaTeXML A LaTeX to XML/HTML/MathML Converter". dlmf.nist.gov. Retrieved 2018-08-18.
- "Pandoc - About pandoc". pandoc.org.
- Knauff, Markus; Nejasmic, Jelica (December 19, 2019). "An Efficiency Comparison of Document Preparation Systems Used in Academic Research and Development". PLOS ONE. 9 (12): e115069. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0115069. PMC 4272305. PMID 25526083.
- Schubotz, Moritz; Wicke, Gabriel (2014). "Mathoid: Robust, Scalable, Fast and Accessible Math Rendering for Wikipedia". Intelligent Computer Mathematics – International Conference. CICM. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 8543. Springer. pp. 224–235. arXiv:1404.6179. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-08434-3_17. ISBN 978-3-319-08433-6.
- "KaTeX – The fastest math typesetting library for the web". katex.org.
- "The LaTeX project public license". www.latex-project.org. Retrieved 2019-07-20.
- Scavo, Tom. "TeX, LaTeX, and AMS-LaTeX". Archived from the original on 3 December 1998. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
- Frank Mittelbach, Chris Rowley (January 12, 1999). "The LaTeX3 Project" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-07-30.
- Wright, Joseph. "Why is LaTeX3 taking so long to come out?". TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange.
- "LyX: What is LyX?". www.lyx.org. Retrieved 2019-07-20.
- "Welcome to GNU TeXmacs (FSF GNU project)". www.texmacs.org.
Further reading
- Flynn, Peter (2017) [2002]. Formatting Information: A Beginner's Guide to LaTeX (7th online ed.). Cork: Silmaril. p. 193.
- Griffiths, David F.; Highman, David S. (1997). Learning LaTeX. Philadelphia: Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. ISBN 0-89871-383-8.
- Kopka, Helmut; Daly, Patrick W. (2003). Guide to LaTeX (4th ed.). Addison-Wesley Professional. ISBN 0-321-17385-6.
- Lamport, Leslie (1994). LaTeX: A document preparation system: User's guide and reference. illustrations by Duane Bibby (2nd ed.). Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley Professional. ISBN 0-201-52983-1.
- Mittelbach, Frank; Fischer, Ulrike (2023). The LaTeX Companion (3rd ed.). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-13-465894-0. Vol II: Mittelbach, Frank; Fischer, Ulrike (2023). The LaTeX Companion (3rd ed.). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-36300-5.
External links
- Official website
LaTeX ˈ l ɑː t ɛ k LAH tek or ˈ l eɪ t ɛ k LAY tek often stylized as La Te X is a software system for typesetting documents LaTeX markup describes the content and layout of the document as opposed to the formatted text found in WYSIWYG word processors like Google Docs LibreOffice Writer and Microsoft Word The writer uses markup tagging conventions to define the general structure of a document to stylize text throughout a document such as bold and italics and to add citations and cross references A TeX distribution such as TeX Live or MiKTeX is used to produce an output file such as PDF or DVI suitable for printing or digital distribution LaTeXThe LaTeX Project logoOriginal author s Leslie LamportInitial release1984 41 years ago 1984 Stable releaseNovember 2024 LaTeX release 1 November 2024 3 months ago 1 November 2024 Repositorygithub wbr com wbr latex3 wbr latex2eTypeTypesettingLicenseLaTeX Project Public License LPPL Websitewww wbr latex project wbr org LaTeX is widely used in academia for the communication and publication of scientific documents and technical note taking in many fields owing partially to its support for complex mathematical notation It also has a prominent role in the preparation and publication of books and articles that contain complex multilingual materials such as Arabic and Greek LaTeX uses the TeX typesetting program for formatting its output and is itself written in the TeX macro language LaTeX can be used as a standalone document preparation system or as an intermediate format In the latter role for example it is sometimes used as part of a pipeline for translating DocBook and other XML based formats for PDF The typesetting system offers programmable desktop publishing features and extensive facilities for automating most aspects of typesetting and desktop publishing including numbering and cross referencing of tables and figures chapter and section headings graphics page layout indexing and bibliographies Like TeX LaTeX started as a writing tool for mathematicians and computer scientists but even from early in its development it has also been taken up by scholars who needed to write documents that include complex math expressions or non Latin scripts such as Arabic Devanagari and Chinese LaTeX is intended to provide a high level descriptive markup language to utilize TeX more easily TeX handles the document layout while LaTeX handles the content side for document processing LaTeX comprises a collection of TeX macros and a program to process LaTeX documents and because the plain TeX formatting commands are elementary it provides authors with ready made commands for formatting and layout requirements such as chapter headings footnotes cross references and bibliographies LaTeX was originally written in the early 1980s by Leslie Lamport at SRI International The current version is LaTeX2e first released in 1994 but incrementally updated starting in 2015 This update policy replaced earlier plans for a separate release of LaTeX3 which had been in development since 1989 LaTeX is free software and is distributed under the LaTeX Project Public License LPPL HistoryLaTeX was created in the early 1980s by Leslie Lamport when he was working at Stanford Research Institute SRI He needed to write TeX macros for his own use and thought that with a little extra effort he could make a general package usable by others Peter Gordon an editor at Addison Wesley convinced him to write a LaTeX user s manual for publication Lamport was initially skeptical that anyone would pay money for it it came out in 1986 and sold hundreds of thousands of copies Meanwhile Lamport released versions of his LaTeX macros in 1984 and 1985 On 21 August 1989 at a TeX Users Group TUG meeting at Stanford Lamport agreed to turn over maintenance and development of LaTeX to Frank Mittelbach along with Chris Rowley and Rainer Schopf formed the LaTeX3 team in 1994 they released LaTeX2e the current standard version LaTeX3 has since been cancelled with features intended for that version being back ported to LaTeX2e since 2018 Typesetting systemLaTeX attempts to follow the design philosophy of separating presentation from content so that authors can focus on the content of what they are writing without attending simultaneously to its visual appearance In preparing a LaTeX document the author specifies the logical structure using simple familiar concepts such as chapter section table figure etc and lets the LaTeX system handle the formatting and layout of these structures As a result it encourages the separation of the layout from the content while still allowing manual typesetting adjustments whenever needed This concept is similar to the mechanism by which many word processors allow styles to be defined globally for an entire document or the use of Cascading Style Sheets in styling HyperText Markup Language HTML documents The LaTeX system is a markup language that handles typesetting and rendering and can be arbitrarily extended by using the underlying macro language to develop custom macros such as new environments and commands Such macros are often collected into packages which could then be made available to address some specific typesetting needs such as the formatting of complex mathematical expressions or graphics e g the use of the align environment provided by the amsmath package to produce aligned equations To create a document in LaTeX a user first creates a file such as document tex typically using a text editor The user then gives their document tex file as input to the TeX program with the LaTeX macros loaded which prompts TeX to write out a file suitable for onscreen viewing or printing This write format preview cycle is one of the chief ways in which working with LaTeX differs from the What You See Is What You Get WYSIWYG style of document editing It is similar to the code compile execute cycle known to computer programmers Today many LaTeX aware editing programs make this cycle a simple matter through the pressing of a single key while showing the output preview on the screen beside the input window Some online LaTeX editors even automatically refresh the preview while other online tools provide incremental editing in place mixed in with the preview in a single window ExampleThe example below shows the input to LaTeX and the corresponding output from the system Input Output documentclass article Starts an article usepackage amsmath Imports amsmath title LaTeX Title begin document Begins a document maketitle LaTeX is a document preparation system for the TeX typesetting program It offers programmable desktop publishing features and extensive facilities for automating most aspects of typesetting and desktop publishing including numbering and cross referencing tables and figures page layout bibliographies and much more LaTeX was originally written in 1984 by Leslie Lamport and has become the dominant method for using TeX few people write in plain TeX anymore The current version is LaTeXe This is a comment not shown in final output The following shows typesetting power of LaTeX begin align E 0 amp mc 2 E amp frac mc 2 sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 end align end document Pronouncing and writing LaTeX The LaTeX wordmark typeset with LaTeX s LaTeX macro The characters T E and X in the name come from the Greek capital letters tau epsilon and chi as the name of TeX derives from the Ancient Greek texnh skill art technique for this reason TeX s creator Donald Knuth promotes its pronunciation as t ɛ x tekh that is with a voiceless velar fricative as in Modern Greek similar to the ch in loch Lamport remarks that TeX is usually pronounced tech making lah tech lah tech and lay tech the logical choices but language is not always logical so lay tecks is also possible The name is printed in running text with a typographical logo La Te X In media where the logo cannot be precisely reproduced in running text the word is typically given the unique capitalization LaTeX Alternatively the TeX LaTeX and XeTeX logos can also be rendered via pure CSS and XHTML for use in graphical web browsers by following the specifications of the internal LaTeX macro Related softwareAs a macro package LaTeX provides a set of macros for TeX to interpret There are many other macro packages for TeX including Plain TeX GNU Texinfo AMSTeX and ConTeXt When TeX compiles a document it follows from the user s point of view the following processing sequence Macros TeX Driver Output Different implementations of each of these steps are typically available in TeX distributions Traditional TeX will output a DVI file which is usually converted to a PostScript file In 2000 Han Thế Thanh and others wrote an implementation of TeX called pdfTeX which also outputs to PDF and takes advantage of features available in that format The XeTeX engine developed by Jonathan Kew on the other hand merges modern font technologies and Unicode with TeX LuaTeX is an extended version of pdfTeX using Lua as an embedded scripting language There are also many editors for LaTeX some of which are offline source code based while others are online partial WYSIWYG based For more see Comparison of TeX editors Compatibility and convertersLaTeX documents tex can be opened with any text editor They consist of plain text and contain no hidden formatting codes or binary information TeX documents can also be shared by rendering the LaTeX file to other formats such as OpenDocument XML or class cls files LaTeX can also and commonly is rendered to PDF files using the LaTeX extension pdfLaTeX LaTeX files containing Unicode text can be processed into PDFs with the inputenc package or by the TeX extensions XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX TeX4ht is a converter that can translate TeX and LaTeX documents to HTML and certain XML formats It is now included preconfigured with all TeX distributions HeVeA is a converter written in OCaml that converts LaTeX documents to HTML5 This way documents such as scientific papers primarily typeset for printing can be placed on the World Wide Web for online viewing It is licensed under the Q Public License LaTeX2HTML is a converter written in Perl that converts LaTeX documents to HTML It is licensed under GPL v2 The latest updates are available from Comprehensive TeX Archive Network CTAN LaTeX2RTF is a converter written in C that converts LaTeX documents to RTF It is licensed under GPL v2 or later LaTeXML is a converter written in Perl that converts LaTeX documents into a variety of XML based formats including HTML5 with MathML ePub ebooks JATS and TEI It was developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology by US Federal Government employees and is therefore in the public domain It is available for free Pandoc is a universal document converter able to transform LaTeX as well as other formats into many different file formats including HTML5 ePub OpenDocument odt Microsoft Office Open XML docx and even text with MediaWiki markup as used in Wikipedia It is licensed under GPL v2 LaTeX has become the de facto standard to typeset mathematical expression in scientific documents Hence there are several conversion tools focusing on mathematical LaTeX expressions such as converters to MathML or Computer Algebra System MathJax is a JavaScript library for converting LaTeX to MathML picture formats including SVG and PNG or HTML for embedding within a webpage The Wikimedia Foundation uses MathJax to build Mathoid a web service that uses Node js to render math that is used in Wikipedia KaTeX is a JavaScript library for converting LaTeX to HTML and MathML It is developed by Khan Academy and is among the fastest LaTeX to HTML converters LicensingLaTeX is typically distributed along with plain TeX under a free software licence the LaTeX Project Public License LPPL The LPPL is not compatible with the GNU General Public License as it requires that modified files must be clearly differentiable from their originals usually by changing the filename this was done to ensure that files that depend on other files will produce the expected behavior and avoid dependency hell The LPPL is Debian Free Software Guidelines DFSG compliant as of version 1 3 As free software LaTeX is available on most operating systems which include Unix Solaris HP UX AIX BSD FreeBSD macOS NetBSD OpenBSD Linux Red Hat Debian Arch Gentoo Windows DOS RISC OS AmigaOS and Plan 9 VersionsFilename extension texInternet media typeapplication x latexInitial release1994 31 years ago 1994 Latest releaseLaTeX2e 1994 31 years ago 1994 Type of formatDocument file format LaTeX2e is the current version of LaTeX since it replaced LaTeX 2 09 in 1994 As of 2020 update LaTeX3 which started in the early 1990s is under a long term development project Planned features include improved syntax separation of content from styling hyperlink support a new user interface access to arbitrary fonts and a new documentation Some LaTeX3 features are available in LaTeX2e using packages and by 2020 many features have been enabled in LaTeX2e by default for a gradual transition There are many commercial implementations of the entire TeX system System vendors may add extra features like added typefaces and telephone support LyX is a free software WYSIWYM visual document processor that uses LaTeX for a back end TeXmacs is a free WYSIWYG editor with similar functionalities as LaTeX but with a different typesetting engine Other WYSIWYG editors that produce LaTeX include Scientific Word on Windows and on Windows Mac and Linux Many community supported TeX distributions are available See alsoLyX GUI front end for LaTeXFree and open source software portalBibTeX reference management software usually used with LaTeX Formula editor Help Displaying a formula KaTeX List of document markup languages List of TeX extensions MathJax xdvi software to view DVI files while using UnixNotesAlso pronounced ˈ l ɑː t ɛ x LAH tekh or ˈ l eɪ t ɛ x LAY tekh or ˈ l eɪ t ɛ k s LAY tex Unregistered media typeReferences LaTeX2e Release Newsletter Retrieved 27 November 2024 An introduction to LaTeX LaTeX project Retrieved 18 April 2016 Lamport Leslie 1986 LATEX a document preparation system Addison Wesley Pub Co ISBN 0 201 15790 X OCLC 12550262 What are TeX LaTeX and friends Alexia Gaudeul June 2007 Do Open Source Developers Respond to Competition The La TeX Case Study Review of Network Economics 6 2 doi 10 2202 1446 9022 1119 S2CID 201097782 Markin Pablo 1 November 2017 LaTeX Open Source Software Facilitates the Adoption of Open Access by Authors Repositories and Journals OpenScience Retrieved 5 November 2017 Multilingual typesetting on Overleaf using babel and fontspec Retrieved 2022 04 09 Babel The multilingual framework to localize LaTeX LuaLaTeX XeLaTeX Retrieved 2024 11 09 Chinese www overleaf com Retrieved 2020 12 30 Leslie Lamport April 23 2007 The Writings of Leslie Lamport LaTeX A Document Preparation System Leslie Lamport s Home Page Retrieved 2007 04 27 Quo vadis LaTeX 3 Team A look back and at the upcoming years PDF www latex project org Retrieved 2023 06 09 LaTeX A document preparation system www latex project org Retrieved 2019 07 20 Lamport Leslie 2024 04 29 My Writings PDF pp 48 49 Archived PDF from the original on 2024 06 09 Retrieved 2024 06 09 The design of LaTeX owes something to earlier markup systems such as Scribe Van Dyke Jackson Getting started with LaTeX and Vim PDF Retrieved 21 February 2024 PDF output is common but TeX can output other formats such as DVI Device independent format See below for more detail about outputs Overleaf Seeveeze LaTeX Base Authorea Donald E Knuth The TeXbook Addison Wesley Boston 1986 p 1 Lamport 1994 p 5 O Connor Edward TeX and LaTeX logo POSHlets Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2008 04 21 Taraborelli Dario CSS driven TeX logos Archived from the original on 2017 09 01 Retrieved 2008 04 21 Walden David 2005 07 15 Travels in TeX Land A Macro Three Software Packages and the Trouble with TeX The PracTeX Journal 3 Retrieved 2008 04 21 pdfTeX TeX Users Group www tug org Retrieved 2019 07 20 XeTeX TeX Users Group www tug org Retrieved 2019 07 20 LuaTeX Retrieved 2023 07 18 Website http hevea inria fr According to LICENSE file in the source repository CTAN Package latex2html ctan org CTAN tex archive support latex2rtf ctan org LaTeXML A LaTeX to XML HTML MathML Converter dlmf nist gov Retrieved 2018 08 18 Pandoc About pandoc pandoc org Knauff Markus Nejasmic Jelica December 19 2019 An Efficiency Comparison of Document Preparation Systems Used in Academic Research and Development PLOS ONE 9 12 e115069 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0115069 PMC 4272305 PMID 25526083 Schubotz Moritz Wicke Gabriel 2014 Mathoid Robust Scalable Fast and Accessible Math Rendering for Wikipedia Intelligent Computer Mathematics International Conference CICM Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol 8543 Springer pp 224 235 arXiv 1404 6179 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 08434 3 17 ISBN 978 3 319 08433 6 KaTeX The fastest math typesetting library for the web katex org The LaTeX project public license www latex project org Retrieved 2019 07 20 Scavo Tom TeX LaTeX and AMS LaTeX Archived from the original on 3 December 1998 Retrieved 6 September 2018 Frank Mittelbach Chris Rowley January 12 1999 The LaTeX3 Project PDF Retrieved 2007 07 30 Wright Joseph Why is LaTeX3 taking so long to come out TeX LaTeX Stack Exchange LyX What is LyX www lyx org Retrieved 2019 07 20 Welcome to GNU TeXmacs FSF GNU project www texmacs org Further readingFlynn Peter 2017 2002 Formatting Information A Beginner s Guide to LaTeX 7th online ed Cork Silmaril p 193 Griffiths David F Highman David S 1997 Learning LaTeX Philadelphia Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics ISBN 0 89871 383 8 Kopka Helmut Daly Patrick W 2003 Guide to LaTeX 4th ed Addison Wesley Professional ISBN 0 321 17385 6 Lamport Leslie 1994 LaTeX A document preparation system User s guide and reference illustrations by Duane Bibby 2nd ed Reading Mass Addison Wesley Professional ISBN 0 201 52983 1 Mittelbach Frank Fischer Ulrike 2023 The LaTeX Companion 3rd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 13 465894 0 Vol II Mittelbach Frank Fischer Ulrike 2023 The LaTeX Companion 3rd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 36300 5 External linksLaTeX at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from CommonsTextbooks from WikibooksResources from WikiversityData from Wikidata Official website