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author | mattkae <mattkae@protonmail.com> | 2022-06-07 08:23:47 -0400 |
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committer | mattkae <mattkae@protonmail.com> | 2022-06-07 08:23:47 -0400 |
commit | bd18a38c2898548a3664a9ddab9f79c84f2caf4a (patch) | |
tree | 95b9933376770381bd8859782ae763be81c2d72b /elpa/auctex-13.1.3/preview-latex.info | |
parent | b07628dddf418d4f47b858e6c35fd3520fbaeed2 (diff) | |
parent | ef160dea332af4b4fe5e2717b962936c67e5fe9e (diff) |
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diff --git a/elpa/auctex-13.1.3/preview-latex.info b/elpa/auctex-13.1.3/preview-latex.info deleted file mode 100644 index b6aae47..0000000 --- a/elpa/auctex-13.1.3/preview-latex.info +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2582 +0,0 @@ -This is preview-latex.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.8 from -preview-latex.texi. - -This manual is for preview-latex, a LaTeX preview mode for AUCTeX -(version 13.1.3 from 2022-04-16). - - Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2017-2019, 2021 -Free Software Foundation, Inc. - - Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this - document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, - Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software - Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts and no - Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section - entitled "GNU Free Documentation License." -INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs -START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY -* preview-latex: (preview-latex). Preview LaTeX fragments in Emacs -END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY - -INFO-DIR-SECTION TeX -START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY -* preview-latex: (preview-latex). Preview LaTeX fragments in Emacs -END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Top, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir) - -preview-latex -************* - -This manual may be copied under the conditions spelled out in *note -Copying this Manual::. - - preview-latex is a package embedding preview fragments into Emacs -source buffers under the AUCTeX editing environment for LaTeX. It uses -'preview.sty' for the extraction of certain environments (most notably -displayed formulas). Other applications of this style file are possible -and exist. - - The name of the package is really 'preview-latex', all in lowercase -letters, with a hyphen. If you typeset it, you can use a sans-serif -font to visually offset it. - -* Menu: - -* Copying:: Copying -* Introduction:: Getting started. -* Installation:: Make Install. -* Keys and lisp:: Key bindings and user-level lisp functions. -* Simple customization:: To make it fit in. -* Known problems:: When things go wrong. -* For advanced users:: Internals and more customizations. -* ToDo:: Future development. -* Frequently Asked Questions:: All about preview-latex -* Copying this Manual:: GNU Free Documentation License -* Index:: A menu of many topics. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Copying, Next: Introduction, Prev: Top, Up: Top - -Copying -******* - -For the conditions for copying parts of preview-latex, see the General -Public Licenses referred to in the copyright notices of the files, the -General Public Licenses accompanying them and the explanatory section in -*note (auctex)Copying::. - - This manual specifically is covered by the GNU Free Documentation -License (*note Copying this Manual::). - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Installation, Prev: Copying, Up: Top - -1 Introduction -************** - -Does your neck hurt from turning between previewer windows and the -source too often? This AUCTeX component will render your displayed -LaTeX equations right into the editing window where they belong. - - The purpose of preview-latex is to embed LaTeX environments such as -display math or figures into the source buffers and switch conveniently -between source and image representation. - -* Menu: - -* What use is it?:: -* Activating preview-latex:: -* Getting started:: -* Basic modes of operation:: -* More documentation:: -* Availability:: -* Contacts:: - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: What use is it?, Next: Activating preview-latex, Prev: Introduction, Up: Introduction - -1.1 What use is it? -=================== - -WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) sometimes is considered all the -rage, sometimes frowned upon. Do we really want it? Wrong question. -The right question is _what_ we want from it. Except when finetuning -the layout, we don't want to use printer fonts for on-screen text -editing. The low resolution and contrast of a computer screen render -all but the coarsest printer fonts (those for low-quality newsprint) -unappealing, and the margins and pagination of the print are not wanted -on the screen, either. On the other hand, more complex visual -compositions like math formulas and tables can't easily be taken in when -seen only in the source. preview-latex strikes a balance: it only uses -graphic renditions of the output for certain, configurable constructs, -does this only when told, and then right in the source code. Switching -back and forth between the source and preview is easy and natural and -can be done for each image independently. Behind the scenes of -preview-latex, a sophisticated framework of other programs like -'dvipng', Dvips and Ghostscript are employed together with a special -LaTeX style file for extracting the material of interest in the -background and providing fast interactive response. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Activating preview-latex, Next: Getting started, Prev: What use is it?, Up: Introduction - -1.2 Activating preview-latex -============================ - -After installation, the package may need to be activated (and remember -to activate AUCTeX too). If preview-latex is installed via the Emacs -package manager (ELPA), activation should be automatic upon -installation. - - The usual activation (if it is not done automatically) would be - - (load "preview-latex.el" nil t t) - - If you still don't get a "Preview" menu in LaTeX mode in spite of -AUCTeX showing its "Command", your installation is broken. One possible -cause are duplicate Lisp files that might be detectable with 'M-x -list-load-path-shadows <RET>'. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Getting started, Next: Basic modes of operation, Prev: Activating preview-latex, Up: Introduction - -1.3 Getting started -=================== - -Once activated, preview-latex and its documentation will be accessible -via its menus (note that preview-latex requires AUCTeX to be loaded). -When you have loaded a LaTeX document (a sample document 'circ.tex' is -included in the distribution, but most documents including math and/or -figures should do), you can use its menu or 'C-c C-p C-d' (for -'Preview/Document'). Previews will now be generated for various objects -in your document. You can use the time to take a short look at the -other menu entries and key bindings in the 'Preview' menu. You'll see -the previewed objects change into a roadworks sign when preview-latex -has determined just what it is going to preview. Note that you can -freely navigate the buffer while this is going on. When the process is -finished you will see the objects typeset in your buffer. - - It is a bad idea, however, to edit the buffer before the roadworks -signs appear, since that is the moment when the correlation between the -original text and the buffer locations gets established. If the buffer -changes before that point of time, the previews will not be placed where -they belong. If you do want to change some obvious error you just -spotted, we recommend you stop the background process by pressing 'C-c -C-k'. - - To see/edit the LaTeX code for a specific object, put the point (the -cursor) on it and press 'C-c C-p C-p' (for 'Preview/at point'). It will -also do to click with the middle mouse button on the preview. Now you -can edit the code, and generate a new preview by again pressing 'C-c C-p -C-p' (or by clicking with the middle mouse button on the icon before the -edited text). - - If you are using the 'desktop' package, previews will remain from one -session to the next as long as you don't kill your buffer. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Basic modes of operation, Next: More documentation, Prev: Getting started, Up: Introduction - -1.4 Basic modes of operation -============================ - -preview-latex has a number of methods for generating its graphics. Its -default operation is equivalent to using the 'LaTeX' command from -AUCTeX. If this happens to be a call of PDFLaTeX generating PDF output -(you need at least AUCTeX 11.51 for this), then Ghostscript will be -called directly on the resulting PDF file. If a DVI file gets produced, -first Dvips and then Ghostscript get called by default. - - The image type to be generated by Ghostscript can be configured with - - M-x customize-option <RET> preview-image-type <RET> - -The default is 'png' (the most efficient image type). A special setting -is 'dvipng' in case you have the 'dvipng' program installed. In this -case, 'dvipng' will be used for converting DVI files and Ghostscript -(with a 'PNG' device) for converting PDF files. 'dvipng' is much faster -than the combination of Dvips and Ghostscript. You can get downloads, -access to its CVS archive and further information from its project site -(https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/dvipng). - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: More documentation, Next: Availability, Prev: Basic modes of operation, Up: Introduction - -1.5 More documentation -====================== - -After the installation, documentation in the form of this info manual -will be available. You can access it with the standalone info reader -with - - info preview-latex - -or by pressing 'C-h i d m preview-latex <RET>' in Emacs. Once -preview-latex is activated, you can instead use 'C-c C-p <TAB>' (or the -menu entry 'Preview/Read documentation'). - - Depending on your installation, a printable manual may also be -available in the form of 'preview-latex.pdf'. - - Detailed documentation for the LaTeX style used for extracting the -preview images is placed in 'preview.pdf' in a suitable directory during -installation; on typical TeX Live-based systems, - - texdoc preview - -will display it. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Availability, Next: Contacts, Prev: More documentation, Up: Introduction - -1.6 Availability -================ - -The preview-latex project is now part of AUCTeX and accessible as part -of the AUCTeX project page (https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/auctex). -You can get its files from the AUCTeX download area -(https://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/auctex/). As of AUCTeX 11.81, -preview-latex should already be integrated into AUCTeX, so no separate -download will be necessary. - - Anonymous Git is available at <git://git.savannah.gnu.org/auctex.git> -or <https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/auctex.git>. You can also browse -the repository (https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/auctex.git) via web -interface. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Contacts, Prev: Availability, Up: Introduction - -1.7 Contacts -============ - -Bug reports should be sent by using 'M-x preview-report-bug <RET>', as -this will fill in a lot of information interesting to us. If the -installation fails (but this should be a rare event), report bugs to -<bug-auctex@gnu.org>. - - There is a general discussion list for AUCTeX which also covers -preview-latex, look at <https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/auctex>. -For more information on the mailing list, send a message with just the -word "help" as subject or body to <auctex-request@gnu.org>. For the -developers, there is the <auctex-devel@gnu.org> list; it would probably -make sense to direct feature requests and questions about internal -details there. There is a low-volume read-only announcement list -available to which you can subscribe by sending a mail with "subscribe" -in the subject to <info-auctex-request@gnu.org>. - - Offers to support further development will be appreciated. If you -want to show your appreciation with a donation to the main developer, -you can do so via PayPal to <dak@gnu.org>, and of course you can arrange -for service contracts or for added functionality. Take a look at the -'TODO' list for suggestions in that area. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Installation, Next: Keys and lisp, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top - -2 Installation -************** - -Installation is now being covered in *note (auctex)Installation::. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Keys and lisp, Next: Simple customization, Prev: Installation, Up: Top - -3 Key bindings and user-level lisp functions -******************************************** - -preview-latex adds key bindings starting with 'C-c C-p' to the supported -modes of AUCTeX (*Note (auctex)Key Index::). It will also add its own -'Preview' menu in the menu bar, as well as an icon in the toolbar. - - The following only describes the interactive use: view the -documentation strings with 'C-h f' if you need the Lisp information. - -'C-c C-p C-p' -'preview-at-point' -Preview/Generate previews (or toggle) at point - If the cursor is positioned on or inside of a preview area, this - toggles its visibility, regenerating the preview if necessary. If - not, it will run the surroundings through preview. The - surroundings include all areas up to the next valid preview, unless - invalid previews occur before, in which case the area will include - the last such preview in either direction. And overriding any - other action, if a region is active ('transient-mark-mode'), it is - run through 'preview-region'. - -'<mouse-2>' - The middle mouse button has a similar action bound to it as - 'preview-at-point', only that it knows which preview to apply it to - according to the position of the click. You can click either - anywhere on a previewed image, or when the preview is opened and - showing the source text, you can click on the icon preceding the - source text. In other areas, the usual mouse key action - (typically: paste) is not affected. - -'<mouse-3>' - The right mouse key pops up a context menu with several options: - toggling the preview, regenerating it, removing it (leaving the - unpreviewed text), copying the text inside of the preview, and - copying it in a form suitable for copying as an image into a mail - or news article. This is a one-image variant of the following - command: - -'C-c C-p C-w' -'preview-copy-region-as-mml' -Copy a region as MML - This command is also available as a variant in the context menu on - the right mouse button (where the region is the preview that has - been clicked on). It copies the current region into the kill - buffer in a form suitable for copying as a text including images - into a mail or news article using mml-mode (*note Composing: - (emacs-mime)Composing.). - - If you regenerate or otherwise kill the preview in its source - buffer before the mail or news gets posted, this will fail. Also - you should generate images you want to send with - 'preview-transparent-border' set to 'nil', or the images will have - an ugly border. preview-latex detects this condition and asks - whether to regenerate the region with borders switched off. As - this is an asynchronous operation running in the background, you'll - need to call this command explicitly again to get the newly - generated images into the kill ring. - - Preview your articles with 'mml-preview' (on 'C-c C-m P') to make - sure they look fine. - -'C-c C-p C-e' -'preview-environment' -Preview/Generate previews for environment - Run preview on LaTeX environment. The environments in - 'preview-inner-environments' are treated as inner levels so that - for instance, the 'split' environment in - '\begin{equation}\begin{split}...\end{split}\end{equation}' is - properly displayed. If called with a numeric argument, the - corresponding number of outward nested environments is treated as - inner levels. - -'C-c C-p C-s' -'preview-section' -Preview/Generate previews for section - Run preview on this LaTeX section. - -'C-c C-p C-r' -'preview-region' -Preview/Generate previews for region - Run preview on current region. - -'C-c C-p C-b' -'preview-buffer' -Preview/Generate previews for buffer - Run preview on the current buffer. - -'C-c C-p C-d' -'preview-document' -Preview/Generate previews for document - Run preview on the current document. - -'C-c C-p C-c C-p' -'preview-clearout-at-point' -Preview/Remove previews at point - Clear out (remove) the previews that are immediately adjacent to - point. - -'C-c C-p C-c C-s' -'preview-clearout-section' -Preview/Remove previews from section - Clear out all previews in current section. - -'C-c C-p C-c C-r' -'preview-clearout' -Preview/Remove previews from region - Clear out all previews in the current region. - -'C-c C-p C-c C-b' -'preview-clearout-buffer' -Preview/Remove previews from buffer - Clear out all previews in current buffer. This makes the current - buffer lose all previews. - -'C-c C-p C-c C-d' -'preview-clearout-document' -Preview/Remove previews from document - Clear out all previews in current document. The document consists - of all buffers that have the same master file as the current - buffer. This makes the current document lose all previews. - -'C-c C-p C-f' -'preview-cache-preamble' -Preview/Turn preamble cache on - Dump a pregenerated format file. For the rest of the session, this - file is used when running on the same master file. Use this if you - know your LaTeX takes a long time to start up, the speedup will be - most noticeable when generating single or few previews. If you - change your preamble, do this again. preview-latex will try to - detect the necessity of that automatically when editing changes to - the preamble are done from within Emacs, but it will not notice if - the preamble effectively changes because some included file or - style file is tampered with. - - Note that support for preamble cache is limited for LaTeX variants. - c.f. <https://github.com/davidcarlisle/dpctex/issues/15> - * XeLaTeX cannot use preamble cache at all. The reason is - intrinsic in XeLaTeX, so preview-latex can't help. - * LuaLaTeX works with preamble cache only when the preamble is - simple enough, i.e., when it doesn't load opentype fonts and - it doesn't use lua codes in preamble. - -'C-c C-p C-c C-f' -'preview-cache-preamble-off' -Preview/Turn preamble cache off - Clear the pregenerated format file and stop using preambles for the - current document. If the caching gives you problems, use this. - -'C-c C-p C-i' -'preview-goto-info-page' -Preview/Read Documentation - Read this info manual. - -'M-x preview-report-bug <RET>' -'preview-report-bug' -Preview/Report Bug - This is the preferred way of reporting bugs as it will fill in what - version of preview-latex you are using as well as versions of - relevant other software, and also some of the more important - settings. Please use this method of reporting, if at all possible - and before reporting a bug, have a look at *note Known problems::. - -'C-c C-k' -LaTeX/TeX Output/Kill Job - Kills the preview-generating process. This is really an AUCTeX - keybinding, but it is included here as a hint. If you are - generating a preview and then make a change to the buffer, - preview-latex may be confused and place the previews wrong. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Simple customization, Next: Known problems, Prev: Keys and lisp, Up: Top - -4 Simple customization -********************** - -Customization options can be found by typing 'M-x customize-group <RET> -preview <RET>'. Remember to set the option when you have changed it. -The list of suggestions can be made very long (and is covered in detail -in *note For advanced users::), but some are: - - * Change the color of the preview background - - If you use a non-white background in Emacs, you might have color - artifacts at the edges of your previews. Playing around with the - option 'preview-transparent-color' in the 'Preview Appearance' - group might improve things. With some settings, the cursor may - cover the whole background of a preview, however. - - This option is specific to the display engine in use. - - * Showing '\label's - - When using preview-latex, the '\label's are hidden by the previews. - It is possible to make them visible in the output by using the - LaTeX package 'showkeys' alternatively 'showlabels'. However, the - boxes of these labels will be outside the region preview-latex - considers as the preview image. To enable a similar mechanism - internal to preview-latex, enable the 'showlabels' option in the - variable 'preview-default-option-list' in the 'Preview Latex' - group. - - It must be noted, however, that a much better idea may be to use - the RefTeX package for managing references. *Note RefTeX in a - Nutshell: (reftex)RefTeX in a Nutshell. - - * Open previews automatically - - The current default is to open previews automatically when you - enter them with cursor left/right motions. Auto-opened previews - will close again once the cursor leaves them again (this is also - done when doing incremental search, or query-replace operations), - unless you changed anything in it. In that case, you will have to - regenerate the preview (via e.g., 'C-c C-p C-p'). Other options - for 'preview-auto-reveal' are available via 'customize'. - - * Automatically cache preambles - - Currently preview-latex asks you whether you want to cache the - document preamble (everything before '\begin{document}') before it - generates previews for a buffer the first time. Caching the - preamble will significantly speed up regeneration of previews. The - larger your preamble is, the more this will be apparent. Once a - preamble is cached, preview-latex will try to keep track of when it - is changed, and dump a fresh format in that case. If you - experience problems with this, or if you want it to happen without - asking you the first time, you can customize the variable - 'preview-auto-cache-preamble'. - - * Attempt to keep counters accurate when editing - - Since preview-latex frequently runs only small regions through - LaTeX, values like equation counters are not consistent from run to - run. If this bothers you, customize the variable - 'preview-preserve-counters' to 't' (this is consulted by - 'preview-required-option-list'). LaTeX will then output a load of - counter information during compilation, and this information will - be used on subsequent updates to keep counters set to useful - values. The additional information takes additional time to - analyze, but this is relevant mostly only when you are regenerating - all previews at once, and maybe you will be less tempted to do so - when counters appear more or less correct. - - * Preview your favourite LaTeX constructs - - If you have a certain macro or environment that you want to - preview, first check if it can be chosen by cutomizing - 'preview-default-option-list' in the 'Preview Latex' group. - - If it is not available there, you can add it to - 'preview-default-preamble' also in the 'Preview Latex' group, by - adding a '\PreviewMacro' or '\PreviewEnvironment' entry (*note - Provided commands::) _after_ the '\RequirePackage' line. For - example, if you want to preview the 'center' environment, press the - <Show> button and the last <INS> button, then add - - \PreviewEnvironment{center} - in the space that just opened. Note that since 'center' is a - generic formatting construct of LaTeX, a general configuration like - that is not quite prudent. You better to do this on a per-document - base so that it is easy to disable this behavior when you find this - particular entry gives you trouble. - - One possibility is to save such settings in the corresponding - file-local variable instead of your global configuration (*note - Local Variables in Files: (emacs)File Variables.). A perhaps more - convenient place for such options would be in a configuration file - in the same directory with your project (*note Package options::). - - The usual file for preview-latex preconfiguration is - 'prauctex.cfg'. If you also want to keep the systemwide defaults, - you should add a line - - \InputIfFileExists{preview/prauctex.cfg}{}{} - to your own version of 'prauctex.cfg' (this is assuming that global - files relating to the 'preview' package are installed in a - subdirectory 'preview', the default behavior). - - * Don't preview inline math - - If you have performance problems because your document is full of - inline math ('$...$'), or if your usage of '$' conflicts with - preview-latex's, you can turn off inline math previews. In the - 'Preview Latex' group, remove 'textmath' from - 'preview-default-option-list' by customizing this variable. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Known problems, Next: For advanced users, Prev: Simple customization, Up: Top - -5 Known problems -**************** - -A number of issues are known concerning the interoperation with various -other software. Some of the known problems can be solved by moving to -newer versions of the problematic software or by simple patches. - -* Menu: - -* Font problems with Dvips:: -* Too small bounding boxes:: -* x-symbol interoperation:: -* Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling:: -* No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier:: - - If you find something not mentioned here, please send a bug report -using 'M-x preview-report-bug <RET>', which will fill in a lot of -information interesting to us and send it to the <bug-auctex@gnu.org> -list. Please use the bug reporting commands if at all possible. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Font problems with Dvips, Next: Too small bounding boxes, Up: Known problems - -5.1 Font problems with Dvips -============================ - -Some fonts have been reported to produce wrong characters with -preview-latex. preview-latex calls Dvips by default with the option -'-Pwww' in order to get scalable fonts for nice results. If you are -using antialiasing, however, the results might be sufficiently nice with -bitmapped fonts, anyway. You might try '-Ppdf' for another stab at -scalable fonts, or other printer definitions. Use - - 'M-x customize-option <RET> preview-fast-dvips-command <RET>' -and - 'M-x customize-option <RET> preview-dvips-command <RET>' -in order to customize this. - - One particular problem is that several printer setup files (typically -in a file called '/usr/share/texmf/dvips/config/config.pdf' if you are -using the '-Ppdf' switch) contain the 'G' option for 'character -shifting'. This option will result in 'fi' being rendered as '£' -(British Pounds sign) in several fonts, unless your version of Dvips has -a long-standing bug in its implementation fixed (only very recent -versions of Dvips have). - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Too small bounding boxes, Next: x-symbol interoperation, Prev: Font problems with Dvips, Up: Known problems - -5.2 Too small bounding boxes -============================ - -The bounding box of a preview is determined by the LaTeX package using -the pure TeX bounding boxes. If there is material extending outside of -the TeX box, that material will be missing from the preview image. This -happens for the label-showing boxes from the 'showkeys' package. This -particular problem can be circumvented by using the 'showlabels' option -of the preview package. - - In general, you should try to fix the problem in the TeX code, like -avoiding drawing outside of the picture with PSTricks. - - One possible remedy is to set 'preview-fast-conversion' to 'Off' -(*note The Emacs interface::). The conversion will take more time, but -will then use the bounding boxes from EPS files generated by Dvips. - - Dvips generally does not miss things, but it does not understand -PostScript constructs like '\resizebox' or '\rotate' commands, so will -generate rather wrong boxes for those. Dvips can be helped with the -'psfixbb' package option to preview (*note The LaTeX style file::), -which will tag the corners of the included TeX box. This will mostly be -convenient for _pure_ PostScript stuff like that created by PSTricks, -which Dvips would otherwise reserve no space for. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: x-symbol interoperation, Next: Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling, Prev: Too small bounding boxes, Up: Known problems - -5.3 x-symbol interoperation -=========================== - -Thanks to the work of Christoph Wedler, starting with version -'4.0h/beta' of x-symbol, the line parsing of AUCTeX and preview-latex is -fully supported. Earlier versions exhibit problems. However, versions -before '4.2.2' will cause a drastic slowdown of preview-latex's parsing -pass, so we don't recommend to use versions earlier than that. - - If you wonder what x-symbol is, it is a package that transforms -various tokens and subscripts to a more readable form while editing and -offers a few input methods handy especially for dealing with math. Take -a look at <http://x-symbol.sourceforge.net/>. - - x-symbol versions up to '4.5.1-beta' at least require an 8bit-clean -TeX implementation (meaning that its terminal output should not use -'^^'-started escape sequences) for cooperation with preview-latex. -Later versions may get along without it, like preview-latex does now. - - If you experience problems with 'circ.tex' in connection with both -x-symbol and Latin-1 characters, you may need to change your language -environment or, as a last resort, customize the variable -'LaTeX-command-style' by replacing the command 'latex' with 'latex --translate-file=cp8bit'. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling, Next: No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier, Prev: x-symbol interoperation, Up: Known problems - -5.4 Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling -=========================================== - -This is probably the fault of your favorite package. 'isearch.el' is -known to be affected while searches are in progress, but the code is -such a complicated mess that no patch is in sight. Better just end the -search with '<RET>' before toggling and resume with 'C-s C-s' or similar -afterwards. Since previews over the current match will auto-open, -anyway, this should not be much of a problem in practice. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier, Prev: Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling, Up: Known problems - -5.5 No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier -==================================================== - -preview-latex tries to adjust the foreground and background colors of -generated images to those of Emacs. Unfortunately, incompatible changes -introduced in Ghostscript 9.27 breaks the traditional method partially, -and preview-latex can display no images under certain circumstances. - - A new method implemented alternatively works only with Ghostscript > -9.27. If you are using Ghostscript 9.27 or earlier, customize the -option 'preview-pdf-adjust-color-method'. - - -- User Option: preview-pdf-adjust-color-method - Method to adjust colors of images generated from PDF. It is not - consulted when the LaTeX command produces DVI files. - - When the option is 't' (default), preview-latex adjusts the FG and - BG colors of the generated images by the new method. This method - requires that Ghostscript has working 'DELAYBIND' feature, thus is - invalid with gs 9.27 (and possibly < 9.27). - - When it is 'compatible', preview-latex uses traditional method. - This option is provided for backward compatibility with older gs. - See the below explanation for detail. - - When 'nil', no adjustment is done and "black on white" image is - generated regardless of Emacs color. This is provided for fallback - for gs 9.27 users with customized foreground color. See the below - explanation for detail. - - When the LaTeX command produces PDF rather than DVI and Emacs has - non-trivial foreground color, the traditional method ('compatible') - makes gs >= 9.27 to stop with error. Here, "non-trivial foreground - color" includes customized themes. - - If you use such non-trivial foreground color and the version of - Ghostscript equals to 9.27, you have two options: - 1. Choose the value 'compatible' and customize - 'preview-reference-face' to have default (black) foreground - color. This makes the generated image almost non-readable on - dark background, so the next option would be your only choice - in that case. - 2. Choose the value 'nil', which forces plain "black on white" - appearance for the generated image. You can at least read - what are written in the image although they may not match with - your Emacs color well. - - The default value used to be 'compatible' for short period before - Ghostscript 9.50 was released but now is 't'. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: For advanced users, Next: ToDo, Prev: Known problems, Up: Top - -6 For advanced users -******************** - -This package consists of two parts: a LaTeX style that splits the output -into appropriate parts with one preview object on each page, and an -Emacs-lisp part integrating the thing into Emacs (aided by AUCTeX). - -* Menu: - -* The LaTeX style file:: -* The Emacs interface:: -* The preview images:: -* Misplaced previews:: - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: The LaTeX style file, Next: The Emacs interface, Prev: For advanced users, Up: For advanced users - -6.1 The LaTeX style file -======================== - -The main purpose of this package is the extraction of certain -environments (most notably displayed formulas) from LaTeX sources as -graphics. This works with DVI files postprocessed by either Dvips and -Ghostscript or dvipng, but it also works when you are using PDFTeX for -generating PDF files (usually also postprocessed by Ghostscript). - - Current uses of the package include the preview-latex package for -WYSIWYG functionality in the AUCTeX editing environment, generation of -previews in LyX, as part of the operation of the pst-pdf package, the -tbook XML system and some other tools. - - Producing EPS files with Dvips and its derivatives using the '-E' -option is not a good alternative: People make do by fiddling around with -'\thispagestyle{empty}' and hoping for the best (namely, that the -specified contents will indeed fit on single pages), and then trying to -guess the baseline of the resulting code and stuff, but this is at best -dissatisfactory. The preview package provides an easy way to ensure -that exactly one page per request gets shipped, with a well-defined -baseline and no page decorations. While you still can use the preview -package with the 'classic' - - dvips -E -i - -invocation, there are better ways available that don't rely on Dvips not -getting confused by PostScript specials. - - For most applications, you'll want to make use of the 'tightpage' -option. This will embed the page dimensions into the PostScript or PDF -code, obliterating the need to use the '-E -i' options to Dvips. You -can then produce all image files with a single run of Ghostscript from a -single PDF or PostScript (as opposed to EPS) file. - - Various options exist that will pass TeX dimensions and other -information about the respective shipped out material (including -descender size) into the log file, where external applications might -make use of it. - - The possibility for generating a whole set of graphics with a single -run of Ghostscript (whether from LaTeX or PDFLaTeX) increases both speed -and robustness of applications. It is also feasible to use dvipng on a -DVI file with the options - - -picky -noghostscript - -to omit generating any image file that requires Ghostscript, then let a -script generate all missing files using Dvips/Ghostscript. This will -usually speed up the process significantly. - -* Menu: - -* Package options:: -* Provided commands:: - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Package options, Next: Provided commands, Prev: The LaTeX style file, Up: The LaTeX style file - -6.1.1 Package options ---------------------- - -The package is included with the customary - - \usepackage[OPTIONS]{preview} - -You should usually load this package as the last one, since it redefines -several things that other packages may also provide. - - The following options are available: - -'active' - is the most essential option. If this option is not specified, the - 'preview' package will be inactive and the document will be typeset - as if the 'preview' package were not loaded, except that all - declarations and environments defined by the package are still - legal but have no effect. This allows defining previewing - characteristics in your document, and only activating them by - calling LaTeX as - - latex '\PassOptionsToPackage{active}{preview} \input{FILENAME}' - -'noconfig' - Usually the file 'prdefault.cfg' gets loaded whenever the 'preview' - package gets activated. 'prdefault.cfg' is supposed to contain - definitions that can cater for otherwise bad results, for example, - if a certain document class would otherwise lead to trouble. It - also can be used to override any settings made in this package, - since it is loaded at the very end of it. In addition, there may - be configuration files specific for certain 'preview' options like - 'auctex' which have more immediate needs. The 'noconfig' option - suppresses loading of those option files, too. -'psfixbb' - Dvips determines the bounding boxes from the material in the DVI - file it understands. Lots of PostScript specials are not part of - that. Since the TeX boxes do not make it into the DVI file, but - merely characters, rules and specials do, Dvips might include far - too small areas. The option 'psfixbb' will include '/dev/null' as - a graphic file in the ultimate upper left and lower right corner of - the previewed box. This will make Dvips generate an appropriate - bounding box. -'dvips' - If this option is specified as a class option or to other packages, - several packages pass things like page size information to Dvips, - or cause crop marks or draft messages written on pages. This - seriously hampers the usability of previews. If this option is - specified, the changes will be undone if possible. -'pdftex' - If this option is set, PDFTeX is assumed as the output driver. - This mainly affects the 'tightpage' option. -'xetex' - If this option is set, XeTeX is assumed as the output driver. This - mainly affects the 'tightpage' option. -'displaymath' - will make all displayed math environments subject to preview - processing. This will typically be the most desired option. -'floats' - will make all float objects subject to preview processing. If you - want to be more selective about what floats to pass through to a - preview, you should instead use the '\PreviewSnarfEnvironment' - command on the floats you want to have previewed. -'textmath' - will make all text math subject to previews. Since math mode is - used throughly inside of LaTeX even for other purposes, this works - by redefining '\(', '\)' and '$' and the 'math' environment - (apparently some people use that). Only occurences of these text - math delimiters in later loaded packages and in the main document - will thus be affected. -'graphics' - will subject all '\includegraphics' commands to a preview. -'sections' - will subject all section headers to a preview. -'delayed' - will delay all activations and redefinitions the 'preview' package - makes until '\''begin{document}'. The purpose of this is to cater - for documents which should be subjected to the 'preview' package - without having been prepared for it. You can process such - documents with - - latex '\RequirePackage[active,delayed,OPTIONS]{preview} - \input{FILENAME}' - - This relaxes the requirement to be loading the 'preview' package as - last package. -DRIVER - loads a special driver file 'prDRIVER.def'. The remaining options - are implemented through the use of driver files. -'auctex' - This driver will produce fake error messages at the start and end - of every preview environment that enable the Emacs package - preview-latex in connection with AUCTeX to pinpoint the exact - source location where the previews have originated. Unfortunately, - there is no other reliable means of passing the current TeX input - position _in_ a line to external programs. In order to make the - parsing more robust, this option also switches off quite a few - diagnostics that could be misinterpreted. - - You should not specify this option manually, since it will only be - needed by automated runs that want to parse the pseudo error - messages. Those runs will then use '\PassOptionsToPackage' in - order to effect the desired behaviour. In addition, 'prauctex.cfg' - will get loaded unless inhibited by the 'noconfig' option. This - caters for the most frequently encountered problematic commands. -'showlabels' - During the editing process, some people like to see the label names - in their equations, figures and the like. Now if you are using - Emacs for editing, and in particular preview-latex, I'd strongly - recommend that you check out the RefTeX package which pretty much - obliterates the need for this kind of functionality. If you still - want it, standard LaTeX provides it with the 'showkeys' package, - and there is also the less encompassing 'showlabels' package. - Unfortunately, since those go to some pain not to change the page - layout and spacing, they also don't change 'preview''s idea of the - TeX dimensions of the involved boxes. So if you are using - 'preview' for determing bounding boxes, those packages are mostly - useless. The option 'showlabels' offers a substitute for them. -'tightpage' - It is not uncommon to want to use the results of 'preview' as - graphic images for some other application. One possibility is to - generate a flurry of EPS files with - - dvips -E -i -Pwww -o OUTPUTFILE.000 INPUTFILE - - However, in case those are to be processed further into graphic - image files by Ghostscript, this process is inefficient since all - of those files need to be processed one by one. In addition, it is - necessary to extract the bounding box comments from the EPS files - and convert them into page dimension parameters for Ghostscript in - order to avoid full-page graphics. This is not even possible if - you wanted to use Ghostscript in a _single_ run for generating the - files from a single PostScript file, since Dvips will in that case - leave no bounding box information anywhere. - - The solution is to use the 'tightpage' option. That way a single - command line like - - gs -sDEVICE=png16m -dTextAlphaBits=4 -r300 - -dGraphicsAlphaBits=4 -dSAFER -q -dNOPAUSE - -sOutputFile=OUTPUTFILE%d.png INPUTFILE.ps - - will be able to produce tight graphics from a single PostScript - file generated with Dvips _without_ use of the options '-E -i', in - a single run. - - The 'tightpage' option actually also works when using the 'pdftex' - option and generating PDF files with PDFTeX. The resulting PDF - file has separate page dimensions for every page and can directly - be converted with one run of Ghostscript into image files. - - If neither 'dvips' or 'pdftex' have been specified, the - corresponding option will get autodetected and invoked. - - If you need this in a batch environment where you don't want to use - 'preview''s automatic extraction facilities, no problem: just don't - use any of the extraction options, and wrap everything to be - previewed into 'preview' environments. This is how LyX does its - math previews. - - If the pages under the 'tightpage' option are just too tight, you - can adjust by setting the length '\PreviewBorder' to a different - value by using '\setlength'. The default value is '0.50001bp', - which is half of a usual PostScript point, rounded up. If you go - below this value, the resulting page size may drop below '1bp', and - Ghostscript does not seem to like that. If you need finer control, - you can adjust the bounding box dimensions individually by changing - the macro '\PreviewBbAdjust' with the help of '\renewcommand'. Its - default value is - - \newcommand \PreviewBbAdjust - {-\PreviewBorder -\PreviewBorder - \PreviewBorder \PreviewBorder} - - This adjusts the left, lower, right and upper borders by the given - amount. The macro must contain 4 TeX dimensions after another, and - you may not omit the units if you specify them explicitly instead - of by register. PostScript points have the unit 'bp'. -'lyx' - This option is for the sake of LyX developers. It will output a - few diagnostics relevant for the sake of LyX' preview functionality - (at the time of writing, mostly implemented for math insets, in - versions of LyX starting with 1.3.0). -'counters' - This writes out diagnostics at the start and the end of previews. - Only the counters changed since the last output get written, and if - no counters changed, nothing gets written at all. The list - consists of counter name and value, both enclosed in '{}' braces, - followed by a space. The last such pair is followed by a colon - (':') if it is at the start of the preview snippet, and by a period - ('.') if it is at the end. The order of different diagnostics like - this being issued depends on the order of the specification of the - options when calling the package. - - Systems like preview-latex use this for keeping counters accurate - when single previews are regenerated. -'footnotes' - This makes footnotes render as previews, and only as their footnote - symbol. A convenient editing feature inside of Emacs. - - The following options are just for debugging purposes of the package -and similar to the corresponding TeX commands they allude to: - -'tracingall' - causes lots of diagnostic output to appear in the log file during - the preview collecting phases of TeX's operation. In contrast to - the similarly named TeX command, it will not switch to - '\errorstopmode', nor will it change the setting of - '\tracingonline'. -'showbox' - This option will show the contents of the boxes shipped out to the - DVI files. It also sets '\showboxbreadth' and '\showboxdepth' to - their maximum values at the end of loading this package, but you - may reset them if you don't like that. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Provided commands, Prev: Package options, Up: The LaTeX style file - -6.1.2 Provided commands ------------------------ - -'\begin{preview}...\end{preview}' - The 'preview' environment causes its contents to be set as a single - preview image. Insertions like figures and footnotes (except those - included in minipages) will typically lead to error messages or be - lost. In case the 'preview' package has not been activated, the - contents of this environment will be typeset normally. - -'\begin{nopreview}...\end{nopreview}' - The 'nopreview' environment will cause its contents not to undergo - any special treatment by the 'preview' package. When 'preview' is - active, the contents will be discarded like all main text that does - not trigger the 'preview' hooks. When 'preview' is not active, the - contents will be typeset just like the main text. - - Note that both of these environments typeset things as usual when - preview is not active. If you need something typeset - conditionally, use the '\ifPreview' conditional for it. - -'\PreviewMacro' - If you want to make a macro like '\includegraphics' (actually, this - is what is done by the 'graphics' option to 'preview') produce a - preview image, you put a declaration like - - \PreviewMacro[*[[!]{\includegraphics} - - or, more readable, - - \PreviewMacro[{*[][]{}}]{\includegraphics} - - into your preamble. The optional argument to '\PreviewMacro' - specifies the arguments '\includegraphics' accepts, since this is - necessary information for properly ending the preview box. Note - that if you are using the more readable form, you have to enclose - the argument in a '[{' and '}]' pair. The inner braces are - necessary to stop any included '[]' pairs from prematurely ending - the optional argument, and to make a single '{}' denoting an - optional argument not get stripped away by TeX's argument parsing. - - The letters simply mean - - '*' - indicates an optional '*' modifier, as in '\includegraphics*'. - '[' - indicates an optional argument in brackets. This syntax is - somewhat baroque, but brief. - '[]' - also indicates an optional argument in brackets. Be sure to - have encluded the entire optional argument specification in an - additional pair of braces as described above. - '!' - indicates a mandatory argument. - '{}' - indicates the same. Again, be sure to have that additional - level of braces around the whole argument specification. - '?'DELIMITER{TRUE CASE}{FALSE CASE} - is a conditional. The next character is checked against being - equal to DELIMITER. If it is, the specification TRUE CASE is - used for the further parsing, otherwise FALSE CASE will be - employed. In neither case is something consumed from the - input, so {TRUE CASE} will still have to deal with the - upcoming delimiter. - '@'{LITERAL SEQUENCE} - will insert the given sequence literally into the executed - call of the command. - '-' - will just drop the next token. It will probably be most often - used in the true branch of a '?' specification. - '#'{ARGUMENT}{REPLACEMENT} - is a transformation rule that calls a macro with the given - argument and replacement text on the rest of the argument - list. The replacement is used in the executed call of the - command. This can be used for parsing arbitrary constructs. - For example, the '[]' option could manually be implemented - with the option string '?[{#{[#1]}{[{#1}]}}{}'. PStricks - users might enjoy this sort of flexibility. - ':'{ARGUMENT}{REPLACEMENT} - is again a transformation rule. As opposed to '#', however, - the result of the transformation is parsed again. You'll - rarely need this. - - There is a second optional argument in brackets that can be used to - declare any default action to be taken instead. This is mostly for - the sake of macros that influence numbering: you would want to keep - their effects in that respect. The default action should use '#1' - for referring to the original (not the patched) command with the - parsed options appended. Not specifying a second optional argument - here is equivalent to specifying '[#1]'. - -'\PreviewMacro*' - A similar invocation '\PreviewMacro*' simply throws the macro and - all of its arguments declared in the manner above away. This is - mostly useful for having things like '\footnote' not do their magic - on their arguments. More often than not, you don't want to declare - any arguments to scan to '\PreviewMacro*' since you would want the - remaining arguments to be treated as usual text and typeset in that - manner instead of being thrown away. An exception might be, say, - sort keys for '\cite'. - - A second optional argument in brackets can be used to declare any - default action to be taken instead. This is for the sake of macros - that influence numbering: you would want to keep their effects in - that respect. The default action might use '#1' for referring to - the original (not the patched) command with the parsed options - appended. Not specifying a second optional argument here is - equivalent to specifying '[]' since the command usually gets thrown - away. - - As an example for using this argument, you might want to specify - - \PreviewMacro*[{[]}][#1{}]{\footnote} - - This will replace a footnote by an empty footnote, but taking any - optional parameter into account, since an optional paramter changes - the numbering scheme. That way the real argument for the footnote - remains for processing by preview-latex. - -'\PreviewEnvironment' - The macro '\PreviewEnvironment' works just as '\PreviewMacro' does, - only for environments. -'\PreviewEnvironment*' - And the same goes for '\PreviewEnvironment*' as compared to - '\PreviewMacro*'. - -'\PreviewSnarfEnvironment' - This macro does not typeset the original environment inside of a - preview box, but instead typesets just the contents of the original - environment inside of the preview box, leaving nothing for the - original environment. This has to be used for figures, for - example, since they would - - 1. produce insertion material that cannot be extracted to the - preview properly, - 2. complain with an error message about not being in outer par - mode. - -'\PreviewOpen' -'\PreviewClose' - Those Macros form a matched preview pair. This is for macros that - behave similar as '\begin' and '\end' of an environment. It is - essential for the operation of '\PreviewOpen' that the macro - treated with it will open an additional group even when the preview - falls inside of another preview or inside of a 'nopreview' - environment. Similarly, the macro treated with '\PreviewClose' - will close an environment even when inactive. - -'\ifPreview' - In case you need to know whether 'preview' is active, you can use - the conditional '\ifPreview' together with '\else' and '\fi'. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: The Emacs interface, Next: The preview images, Prev: The LaTeX style file, Up: For advanced users - -6.2 The Emacs interface -======================= - -You can use 'M-x customize-group <RET> preview-latex <RET>' in order to -customize these variables, or use the menus for it. We explain the -various available options together with explaining how they work -together in making preview-latex work as intended. - -'preview-LaTeX-command' - When you generate previews on a buffer or a region, the command in - 'preview-LaTeX-command' gets run (that variable should only be - changed with Customize since its structure is somewhat peculiar, - though expressive). As usual with AUCTeX, you can continue working - while this is going on. It is not a good idea to change the file - until after preview-latex has established where to place the - previews which it can only do after the LaTeX run completes. This - run produces a host of pseudo-error messages that get parsed by - preview-latex at the end of the LaTeX run and give it the necessary - information about where in the source file the LaTeX code for the - various previews is located exactly. The parsing takes a moment - and will render Emacs busy. - -'preview-LaTeX-command-replacements' - This variable specifies transformations to be used before calling - the configured command. One possibility is to have '\pdfoutput=0 ' - appended to every command starting with 'pdf'. This particular - setting is available as the shortcut - 'preview-LaTeX-disable-pdfoutput'. Since preview-latex can work - with PDF files by now, there is little incentive for using this - option, anymore (for projects not requiring PDF output, the added - speed of 'dvipng' might make this somewhat attractive). - -'preview-required-option-list' - 'preview-LaTeX-command' uses 'preview-required-option-list' in - order to pass options such as 'auctex', 'active' and 'dvips' to the - 'preview' package. This means that the user need (and should) not - supply these in the document itself in case he wants to be able to - still compile his document without it turning into an incoherent - mass of little pictures. These options even get passed in when the - user loads 'preview' explicitly in his document. - - The default includes an option 'counters' that is controlled by the - boolean variable - -'preview-preserve-counters' - This option will cause the 'preview' package to emit information - that will assist in keeping things like equation counters and - section numbers reasonably correct even when you are regenerating - only single previews. - -'preview-default-option-list' -'preview-default-preamble' - If the document does not call in the package 'preview' itself (via - '\usepackage') in the preamble, the preview package is loaded using - default options from 'preview-default-option-list' and additional - commands specified in 'preview-default-preamble'. - -'preview-fast-conversion' - This is relevant only for DVI mode. It defaults to 'On' and - results in the whole document being processed as one large - PostScript file from which the single images are extracted with the - help of parsing the PostScript for use of so-called DSC comments. - The bounding boxes are extracted with the help of TeX instead of - getting them from Dvips. If you are experiencing bounding box - problems, try setting this option to 'Off'. - -'preview-prefer-TeX-bb' - If this option is 'On', it tells preview-latex never to try to - extract bounding boxes from the bounding box comments of EPS files, - but rather rely on the boxes it gets from TeX. If you activated - 'preview-fast-conversion', this is done, anyhow, since there are no - EPS files from which to read this information. The option defaults - to 'Off', simply because about the only conceivable reason to - switch off 'preview-fast-conversion' would be that you have some - bounding box problem and want to get Dvips' angle on that matter. - -'preview-scale-function' -'preview-reference-face' -'preview-document-pt-list' -'preview-default-document-pt' - 'preview-scale-function' determines by what factor images should be - scaled when appearing on the screen. If you specify a numerical - value here, the physical size on the screen will be that of the - original paper output scaled by the specified factor, at least if - Emacs' information about screen size and resolution are correct. - The default is to let 'preview-scale-from-face' determine the scale - function. This function determines the scale factor by making the - size of the default font in the document match that of the - on-screen fonts. - - The size of the screen fonts is deduced from the font - 'preview-reference-face' (usually the default face used for - display), the size of the default font for the document is - determined by calling 'preview-document-pt'. This function - consults the members of 'preview-document-pt-list' in turn until it - gets the desired information. The default consults first - 'preview-parsed-font-size', then calls 'preview-auctex-font-size' - which asks AUCTeX about any size specification like '12pt' to the - documentclass that it might have detected when parsing the - document, and finally reverts to just assuming - 'preview-default-document-pt' as the size used in the document - (defaulting to 10pt). - - If you find that the size of previews and the other Emacs display - clashes, something goes wrong. 'preview-parsed-font-size' is - determined at '\begin{document}' time; if the default font size - changes after that, it will not get reported. If you have an - outdated version of 'preview.sty' in your path, the size might not - be reported at all. If in this case AUCTeX is unable to find a - size specification, and if you are using a document class with a - different default value (like 'KomaScript'), the default fallback - assumption will probably be wrong and preview-latex will scale up - things too large. So better specify those size options even when - you know that LaTeX does not need them: preview-latex might benefit - from them. Another possibility for error is that you have not - enabled AUCTeX's document parsing options. The fallback method of - asking AUCTeX about the size might be disabled in future versions - of preview-latex since in general it is more reliable to get this - information from the LaTeX run itself. - -'preview-fast-dvips-command' -'preview-dvips-command' - The regular command for turning a DVI file into a single PostScript - file is 'preview-fast-dvips-command', while 'preview-dvips-command' - is used for cranking out a DVI file where every preview is in a - separate EPS file. Which of the two commands gets used depends on - the setting of 'preview-fast-conversion'. The printer specified - here is '-Pwww' by default, which will usually get you scalable - fonts where available. If you are experiencing problems, you might - want to try playing around with Dvips options (*Note - (dvips)Command-line options::). - - The conversion of the previews into PostScript or EPS files gets - started after the LaTeX run completes when Emacs recognizes the - first image while parsing the error messages. When Emacs has - finished parsing the error messages, it activates all detected - previews. This entails throwing away any previous previews - covering the same areas, and then replacing the text in its visual - appearance by a placeholder looking like a roadworks sign. - -'preview-nonready-icon-specs' - This is the roadworks sign displayed while previews are being - prepared. You may want to customize the font sizes at which - preview-latex switches over between different icon sizes, and the - ascent ratio which determines how high above the base line the icon - gets placed. - -'preview-error-icon-specs' -'preview-icon-specs' - Those are icons placed before the source code of an opened preview - and, respectively, the image specs to be used for PostScript - errors, and a normal open preview in text representation. - -'preview-inner-environments' - This is a list of environments that are regarded as inner levels of - an outer environment when doing 'preview-environment'. One example - when this is needed is in - '\begin{equation}\begin{split}...\end{split}\end{equation}', and - accordingly 'split' is one entry in 'preview-inner-environments'. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: The preview images, Next: Misplaced previews, Prev: The Emacs interface, Up: For advanced users - -6.3 The preview images -====================== - -'preview-image-type' -'preview-image-creators' -'preview-gs-image-type-alist' - What happens when LaTeX is finished depends on the configuration of - 'preview-image-type'. What to do for each of the various settings - is specified in the variable 'preview-image-creators'. The options - to pass into Ghostscript and what Emacs image type to use is - specified in 'preview-gs-image-type-alist'. - - 'preview-image-type' defaults to 'png'. For this to work, your - version of Ghostscript needs to support the 'png16m' device. If - you are experiencing problems here, you might want to reconfigure - 'preview-gs-image-type-alist' or 'preview-image-type'. - Reconfiguring 'preview-image-creators' is only necessary for adding - additional image types. - - Most devices make preview-latex start up a single Ghostscript - process for the entire preview run (as opposed to one per image) - and feed it either sections of a PDF file (if PDFLaTeX was used), - or (after running Dvips) sections of a single PostScript file or - separate EPS files in sequence for conversion into PNG format which - can be displayed much faster by Emacs. Actually, not in sequence - but backwards since you are most likely editing at the end of the - document. And as an added convenience, any preview that happens to - be on-screen is given higher priority so that preview-latex will - first cater for the images that are displayed. There are various - options customizable concerning aspects of that operation, see the - customization group 'Preview Gs' for this. - - Another noteworthy setting of 'preview-image-type' is 'dvipng': in - this case, the 'dvipng' program will get run on DVI output (see - below for PDF). This is in general much faster than Dvips and - Ghostscript. In that case, the option - -'preview-dvipng-command' - will get run for doing the conversion, and it is expected that - -'preview-dvipng-image-type' - images get produced ('dvipng' might be configured for other image - types as well). You will notice that 'preview-gs-image-type-alist' - contains an entry for 'dvipng': this actually has nothing to with - 'dvipng' itself but specifies the image type and Ghostscript device - option to use when 'dvipng' can't be used. This will obviously be - the case for PDF output by PDFLaTeX, but it will also happen if the - DVI file contains PostScript specials in which case the affected - images will get run through Dvips and Ghostscript once 'dvipng' - finishes. - - Note for pLaTeX and upLaTeX users: It is known that 'dvipng' is not - compatible with pLaTeX and upLaTeX. If 'preview-image-type' is set - to 'dvipng' and (u)pLaTeX is used, 'dvipng' just fails and - preview-latex falls back on Dvips and Ghostscript. - -'preview-gs-options' - Most interesting to the user perhaps is the setting of this - variable. It contains the default antialiasing settings - '-dTextAlphaBits=4' and '-dGraphicsAlphaBits=4'. Decreasing those - values to 2 or 1 might increase Ghostscript's performance if you - find it lacking. - - Running and feeding Ghostscript from preview-latex happens -asynchronously again: you can resume editing while the images arrive. -While those pretty pictures filling in the blanks on screen tend to make -one marvel instead of work, rendering the non-displayed images -afterwards will not take away your attention and will eventually -guarantee that jumping around in the document will encounter only -prerendered images. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Misplaced previews, Prev: The preview images, Up: For advanced users - -6.4 Misplaced previews -====================== - -If you are reading this section, the first thing is to check that your -problem is not caused by x-symbol in connection with an installation not -supporting 8-bit characters (*note x-symbol interoperation::). If not, -here's the beef: - - As explained previously, Emacs uses pseudo-error messages generated -by the 'preview' package in order to pinpoint the exact source location -where a preview originated. This works in running text, but fails when -preview material happens to lie in macro arguments, like the contents of -'\emph'. Those macros first read in their entire argument, munge it -through, perhaps transform it somehow, process it and perhaps then -typeset something. When they finally typeset something, where is the -location where the stuff originated? TeX, having read in the entire -argument before, does not know and actually there would be no sane way -of defining it. - - For previews contained inside such a macro argument, the default -behaviour of preview-latex is to use a position immediately after the -closing brace of the argument. All the previews get placed there, all -at a zero-width position, which means that Emacs displays it in an order -that preview-latex cannot influence (currently in Emacs it is even -possible that the order changes between runs). And since the placement -of those previews is goofed up, you will not be able to regenerate them -by clicking on them. The default behaviour is thus somewhat -undesirable. - - The solution (like with other preview problems) is to tell the LaTeX -'preview' package how to tackle this problem (*note The LaTeX style -file::). Simply, you don't need '\emph' do anything at all during -previews! You only want the text math previewed, so the solution is to -use '\PreviewMacro*\emph' in the preamble of your document which will -make LaTeX ignore '\emph' completely as long as it is not part of a -larger preview (in which case it gets typeset as usual). Its argument -thus becomes ordinary text and gets treated like ordinary text. - - Note that it would be a bad idea to declare -'\PreviewMacro*[{{}}]\emph' since then both '\emph' as well as its -argument would be ignored instead of previewed. For user-level macros, -this is almost never wanted, but there may be internal macros where you -might want to ignore internal arguments. - - The same mechanism can be used for a number of other text-formatting -commands like '\textrm', '\textit' and the like. While they all use the -same internal macro '\text@command', it will not do to redefine just -that, since they call it only after having read their argument in, and -then it already is too late. So you need to disable every of those -commands by hand in your document preamble. - - Actually, we wrote all of the above just to scare you. At least all -of the above mentioned macros and a few more are already catered for by -a configuration file 'prauctex.cfg' that gets loaded by default unless -the 'preview' package gets loaded with the 'noconfig' option. You can -make your own copy of this file in a local directory and edit it in case -of need. You can also add loading of a file of your liking to -'preview-default-preamble', or alternatively do the manual disabling of -your favorite macro in 'preview-default-preamble', which is customizable -in the 'Preview Latex' group. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: ToDo, Next: Frequently Asked Questions, Prev: For advanced users, Up: Top - -Appendix A ToDo -*************** - - * Support other formats than just LaTeX - - plain TeX users and ConTeXt users should not have to feel left out. - While ConTeXt is not supported yet by released versions of AUCTeX, - at least supporting plain would help people, and be a start for - ConTeXt as well. There are plain-based formats like MusiXTeX that - could benefit a lot from preview-latex. The main part of the - difficulties here is to adapt 'preview.dtx' to produce stuff not - requiring LaTeX. - - * Support nested snippets - - Currently you can't have both a footnote (which gets displayed as - just its footnote number) and math inside of a footnote rendered as - an image: such nesting might be achieved by rerunning preview-latex - on the footnote contents when one opens the footnote for editing. - - * Support other text properties than just images - - Macros like '\textit' can be rendered as images, but the resulting - humungous blob is not suitable for editing, in particular since the - line filling from LaTeX does not coincide with that of Emacs. It - would be much more useful if text properties just switched the - relevant font to italics rather than replacing the whole text with - an image. It would also make editing quite easier. Then there are - things like footnotes that are currently just replaced by their - footnote number. While editing is not a concern here (the number - is not in the original text, anyway), it would save a lot of - conversion time if no images were generated, but Emacs just - displayed a properly fontified version of the footnote number. - Also, this might make preview-latex useful even on text terminals. - - * Find a way to facilitate Source Specials - - Probably in connection with adding appropriate support to 'dvipng', - it would be nice if clicking on an image from a larger piece of - source code would place the cursor at the respective source code - location. - - * Make 'preview.dtx' look reasonable in AUCTeX - - It is a bit embarrassing that 'preview.dtx' is written in a manner - that will not give either good syntax highlighting or good - indentation when employing AUCTeX. - - * Web page work - - Currently, preview-latex's web page is not structured at all. - Better navigation would be desirable, as well as separate News and - Errata eye catchers. - - * Manual improvements - - - Pepper the manual with screen shots and graphics - - This will be of interest for the HTML and TeX renditions of - the texinfo manual. Since Texinfo now supports images as - well, this could well be nice to have. - - - Fix duplicates - - Various stuff appears several times. - - * Implement rendering pipelines for Emacs - - The current preview-latex interface is fundamentally flawed, not - only because of a broken implementation. A general batchable and - daemonizable rendering infrastructure that can work on all kinds of - preview images for embedding into buffers is warranted. The - current implementation has a rather adhoc flavor and is not easily - extended. It will not work outside of AUCTeX, either. - - * Integrate into RefTeX - - When referencing to equations and the like, the preview-images of - the source rather than plain text should be displayed. If the - preview in question covers labels, those should appear in the - bubble help and/or a context menu. Apropos: - - * Implement LaTeX error indicators - - Previews on erroneous LaTeX passages might gain a red border or - similar. - - * Pop up relevant online documentation for frequent errors - - A lot of errors are of the "badly configured" variety. Perhaps the - relevant info pages should be delivered in addition to the error - message. - - * Implement a table editing mode where every table cell gets output - as a separate preview. Alternatively, output the complete table - metrics in a way that lets people click on individual cells for - editing purposes. - - * Benchmark and kill Emacs inefficiencies - - Both the LaTeX run under Emacs control as well as actual image - insertion in Emacs could be faster. CVS Emacs has improved in that - respect, but it still is slower than desirable. - - * Improve image support under Emacs - - The general image and color handling in Emacs is inefficient and - partly defective. This is still the case in CVS. One option would - be to replace the whole color and image handling with GDK routines - when this library is available, since it has been optimized for it. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Frequently Asked Questions, Next: Copying this Manual, Prev: ToDo, Up: Top - -Appendix B Frequently Asked Questions -************************************* - -* Menu: - -* Introduction to FAQ:: -* Requirements:: -* Installation Trouble:: -* Customization:: -* Troubleshooting:: -* Other formats:: - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Introduction to FAQ, Next: Requirements, Prev: Frequently Asked Questions, Up: Frequently Asked Questions - -B.1 Introduction -================ - -B.1.1 How can I contribute to the FAQ? --------------------------------------- - -Send an email with the subject: - Preview FAQ - to <auctex-devel@gnu.org>. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Requirements, Next: Installation Trouble, Prev: Introduction to FAQ, Up: Frequently Asked Questions - -B.2 Requirements -================ - -B.2.1 Which version of Emacs is needed? ---------------------------------------- - -preview-latex nominally requires GNU Emacs with a version of at least -25.1. - -B.2.2 Which versions of Ghostscript and AUCTeX are needed? ----------------------------------------------------------- - -We recommend to use GNU or AFPL Ghostscript with a version of at least -7.07. - - preview-latex has been distributed as part of AUCTeX since version -11.80. If your version of AUCTeX is older than that, or if it does not -contain a working copy of preview-latex, complain to wherever you got it -from. - -B.2.3 I have trouble with the display format... ------------------------------------------------ - -We recommend keeping the variable 'preview-image-type' set to 'dvipng' -(if you have it installed) or 'png'. This is the default and can be set -via the 'Preview/Customize' menu. - - All other formats are known to have inconveniences, either in file -size or quality. There are some Emacs versions around not supporting -PNG; the proper way to deal with that is to complain to your Emacs -provider. Short of that, checking out PNM or JPEG formats might be a -good way to find out whether the lack of PNG format support might be the -only problem with your Emacs. - -B.2.4 For which OS does preview work? -------------------------------------- - -It is known to work under the X Window System for Linux and for several -flavors of Unix: we have reports for HP and Solaris. - - There are several development versions of Emacs around for native -MacOS Carbon, and preview-latex is working with them, too. - - With Windows, both native Emacs and Cygwin Emacs should work. -However, it is known that MiKTeX (https://miktex.org/) sometimes doesn't -work with preview-latex. In that case, use TeX Live -(https://tug.org/texlive/) instead. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Installation Trouble, Next: Customization, Prev: Requirements, Up: Frequently Asked Questions - -B.3 Installation Trouble -======================== - -B.3.1 I just get 'LaTeX found no preview images'. -------------------------------------------------- - -The reason for this is that LaTeX found no preview images in the -document in question. - - One reason might be that there are no previews to be seen. If you -have not used preview-latex before, you might not know its manner of -operation. One sure-fire way to test if you just have a document where -no previews are to be found is to use the provided example document -'circ.tex' (you will have to copy it to some directory where you have -write permissions). If the symptom persists, you have a problem, and -the problem is most likely a LaTeX problem. Here are possible reasons: - -Filename database not updated - Various TeX distributions have their own ways of knowing where the - files are without actually searching directories. The normal - preview-latex installation should detect common tools for that - purpose and use them. If this goes wrong, or if the files get - installed into a place where they are not looked for, the LaTeX run - will fail. - -An incomplete manual installation - This should not happen if you followed installation instructions. - Unfortunately, people know better all the time. If only - 'preview.sty' gets installed without a set of supplementary files - also in the 'latex' subdirectory, preview-latex runs will not - generate any errors, but they will not produce any previews, - either. - -An outdated 'preview' installation - The 'preview.sty' package is useful for more than just - preview-latex. For example, it is part of TeX Live. So you have - to make sure that preview-latex does not get to work with outdated - style and configuration files: some newer features will not work - with older TeX style files, and really old files will make - preview-latex fail completely. There usual is a local 'texmf' - tree, or even a user-specific tree that are searched before the - default tree. Make sure that the first version of those files that - gets found is the correct one. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Customization, Next: Troubleshooting, Prev: Installation Trouble, Up: Frequently Asked Questions - -B.4 Customization -================= - -B.4.1 How to include additional environments like 'enumerate' -------------------------------------------------------------- - -By default, preview-latex is intended mainly for displaying mathematical -formulas, so environments like 'enumerate' or 'tabular' (except where -contained in a float) are not included. You can include them however -manually by adding the lines: - - \usepackage[displaymath,textmath,sections,graphics,floats]{preview} - \PreviewEnvironment{enumerate} -in your document header, that is before - - \begin{document} -In general, 'preview' should be loaded as the last thing before the -start of document. - - Be aware that - - \PreviewEnvironment{...} -does not accept a comma separated list! Also note that by putting more -and more - - \PreviewEnvironment{...} -in your document, it will look more and more like a DVI file preview -when running preview-latex. Since each preview is treated as one large -monolithic block by Emacs, one should really restrict previews to those -elements where the improvement in visual representation more than makes -up for the decreased editability. - -B.4.2 What if I don't want to change the document? --------------------------------------------------- - -The easiest way is to generate a configuration file in the current -directory. You can basically either create 'prdefault.cfg' which is -used for any use of the 'preview' package, or you can use 'prauctex.cfg' -which only applies to the use from with Emacs. Let us assume you use -the latter. In that case you should write something like - - \InputIfFileExists{preview/prauctex.cfg}{}{} - \PreviewEnvironment{enumerate} -in it. The first line inputs the system-wide default configuration (the -file name should match that, but not your own 'prauctex.cfg'), then you -add your own stuff. - -B.4.3 Suddenly I get gazillions of ridiculous pages?!? ------------------------------------------------------- - -When preview-latex works on extracting its stuff, it typesets each -single preview on a page of its own. This only happens when actual -previews get generated. Now if you want to configure preview-latex in -your document, you need to add your own '\usepackage' call to 'preview' -so that it will be able to interpret its various definition commands. -It is an error to add the 'active' option to this invocation: you don't -want the package to be active unless preview-latex itself enables the -previewing operation (which it will). - -B.4.4 Does preview-latex work with presentation classes? --------------------------------------------------------- - -preview-latex should work with most presentation classes. However, -since those classes often have macros or pseudo environments -encompassing a complete slide, you will need to use the customization -facilities of 'preview.sty' to tell it how to resolve this, whether you -want no previews, previews of whole slides or previews of inner -material. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Troubleshooting, Next: Other formats, Prev: Customization, Up: Frequently Asked Questions - -B.5 Troubleshooting -=================== - -B.5.1 Preview causes all sort of strange error messages -------------------------------------------------------- - -When running preview-latex and taking a look at either log file or -terminal output, lots of messages like - - ! Preview: Snippet 3 started. - <-><-> - - l.52 \item Sie lassen sich als Funktion $ - y = f(x)$ darstellen. - ! Preview: Snippet 3 ended.(491520+163840x2494310). - <-><-> - - l.52 \item Sie lassen sich als Funktion $y = f(x)$ - darstellen. -appear (previous versions generated messages looking even more like -errors). Those are not real errors (as will be noted in the log file). -Or rather, while they *are* really TeX error messages, they are -intentional. This currently is the only reliable way to pass the -information from the LaTeX run of preview-latex to its Emacs part about -where the previews originated in the source text. Since they are actual -errors, you will also get AUCTeX to state - Preview-LaTeX exited as expected with code 1 at Wed Sep 4 17:03:30 -after the LaTeX run in the run buffer. This merely indicates that -errors were present, and errors will always be present when -preview-latex is operating. There might be also real errors, so in case -of doubt, look for them explicitly in either run buffer or the resulting -'.log' file. - -B.5.2 Why do my DVI and PDF output files vanish? ------------------------------------------------- - -In order to produce the preview images preview-latex runs LaTeX on the -master or region file. The resulting DVI or PDF file can happen to have -the same name as the output file of a regular LaTeX run. So the regular -output file gets overwritten and is subsequently deleted by -preview-latex. - -B.5.3 My output file suddenly only contains preview images?! ------------------------------------------------------------- - -As mentioned in the previews FAQ entry, preview-latex might use the file -name of the original output file for the creation of preview images. If -the original output file is being displayed with a viewer when this -happens, you might see strange effects depending on the viewer, e.g. a -message about the file being corrupted or the display of all the preview -images instead of your typeset document. (Also *note Customization::.) - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Other formats, Prev: Troubleshooting, Up: Frequently Asked Questions - -B.6 preview-latex when not using LaTeX -====================================== - -B.6.1 Does preview-latex work with PDFLaTeX? --------------------------------------------- - -Yes, as long as you use AUCTeX's own PDFLaTeX mode and have not messed -with 'TeX-command-list'. - -B.6.2 Does preview-latex work with 'elatex'? --------------------------------------------- - -No problem here. If you configure your AUCTeX to use 'elatex', or -simply have 'latex' point to 'elatex', this will work fine. Modern TeX -distributions use eTeX for LaTeX, anyway. - -B.6.3 Does preview-latex work with ConTeXt? -------------------------------------------- - -In short, no. The 'preview' package is LaTeX-dependent. Adding support -for other formats requires volunteers. - -B.6.4 Does preview-latex work with plain TeX? ---------------------------------------------- - -Again, no. Restructuring the 'preview' package for 'plain' operation -would be required. Volunteers welcome. - - In some cases you might get around by making a wrapper pseudo-Master -file looking like the following: - - \documentclass{article} - \usepackage{plain} - \begin{document} - \begin{plain} - \input myplainfile - \end{plain} - \end{document} - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Copying this Manual, Next: Index, Prev: Frequently Asked Questions, Up: Top - -Appendix C Copying this Manual -****************************** - -The copyright notice for this manual is: - - This manual is for preview-latex, a LaTeX preview mode for AUCTeX -(version 13.1.3 from 2022-04-16). - - Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2017-2019, 2021 -Free Software Foundation, Inc. - - Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this - document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, - Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software - Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts and no - Back-Cover Texts. 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A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU - Free Documentation License''. - - If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover -Texts, replace the "with...Texts." line with this: - - with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with - the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts - being LIST. - - If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other -combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the -situation. - - If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we -recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free -software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit -their use in free software. - - -File: preview-latex.info, Node: Index, Prev: Copying this Manual, Up: Top - -Index -***** - - -* Menu: - -* \PreviewEnvironment: Provided commands. (line 123) -* \PreviewMacro: Provided commands. (line 25) -* Activation: Activating preview-latex. - (line 6) -* C-c C-k: Keys and lisp. (line 168) -* C-c C-m P: Keys and lisp. (line 62) -* C-c C-p C-b: Keys and lisp. (line 89) -* C-c C-p C-c C-b: Keys and lisp. (line 115) -* C-c C-p C-c C-d: Keys and lisp. (line 121) -* C-c C-p C-c C-p: Keys and lisp. (line 99) -* C-c C-p C-c C-r: Keys and lisp. (line 110) -* C-c C-p C-c C-s: Keys and lisp. (line 105) -* C-c C-p C-d: Keys and lisp. (line 94) -* C-c C-p C-e: Keys and lisp. (line 74) -* C-c C-p C-f: Keys and lisp. (line 128) -* C-c C-p C-i: Keys and lisp. (line 155) -* C-c C-p C-p: Keys and lisp. (line 23) -* C-c C-p C-r: Keys and lisp. (line 84) -* C-c C-p C-s: Keys and lisp. (line 79) -* C-c C-p C-w: Keys and lisp. (line 45) -* C-u C-c C-p C-f: Keys and lisp. (line 149) -* Caching a preamble: Simple customization. - (line 57) -* Contacts: Contacts. (line 6) -* Copying: Copying. (line 6) -* Copyright: Copying. (line 6) -* Distribution: Copying. (line 6) -* Download: Availability. (line 6) -* FDL, GNU Free Documentation License: GNU Free Documentation License. - (line 6) -* Free: Copying. (line 6) -* Free software: Copying. (line 6) -* General Public License: Copying. (line 6) -* GIT access: Availability. (line 6) -* GPL: Copying. (line 6) -* Inline math: Simple customization. - (line 108) -* Kill preview-generating process: Keys and lisp. (line 168) -* License: Copying. (line 6) -* M-x preview-report-bug <RET>: Keys and lisp. (line 160) -* Mailing list: Contacts. (line 6) -* Menu entries: Keys and lisp. (line 6) -* Philosophy of preview-latex: What use is it?. (line 6) -* preview-at-point: Keys and lisp. (line 23) -* preview-auctex-font-size: The Emacs interface. (line 99) -* preview-auto-cache-preamble: Simple customization. - (line 57) -* preview-buffer: Keys and lisp. (line 89) -* preview-cache-preamble: Keys and lisp. (line 128) -* preview-cache-preamble-off: Keys and lisp. (line 149) -* preview-clearout: Keys and lisp. (line 110) -* preview-clearout-at-point: Keys and lisp. (line 99) -* preview-clearout-buffer: Keys and lisp. (line 115) -* preview-clearout-document: Keys and lisp. (line 105) -* preview-clearout-document <1>: Keys and lisp. (line 121) -* preview-copy-region-as-mml: Keys and lisp. (line 45) -* preview-default-document-pt: The Emacs interface. (line 82) -* preview-default-option-list: Simple customization. - (line 30) -* preview-default-option-list <1>: Simple customization. - (line 75) -* preview-default-option-list <2>: Simple customization. - (line 108) -* preview-default-option-list <3>: The Emacs interface. (line 53) -* preview-default-preamble: Simple customization. - (line 75) -* preview-default-preamble <1>: The Emacs interface. (line 54) -* preview-default-preamble <2>: Misplaced previews. (line 60) -* preview-default-preamble <3>: Misplaced previews. (line 61) -* preview-document: Keys and lisp. (line 94) -* preview-document-pt: The Emacs interface. (line 96) -* preview-document-pt-list: The Emacs interface. (line 81) -* preview-dvipng-command: The preview images. (line 40) -* preview-dvipng-image-type: The preview images. (line 43) -* preview-dvips-command: The Emacs interface. (line 124) -* preview-environment: Keys and lisp. (line 74) -* preview-error-icon-specs: The Emacs interface. (line 150) -* preview-fast-conversion: The Emacs interface. (line 60) -* preview-fast-dvips-command: The Emacs interface. (line 123) -* preview-goto-info-page: Keys and lisp. (line 155) -* preview-gs-image-type-alist: The preview images. (line 8) -* preview-gs-options: The preview images. (line 59) -* preview-icon-specs: The Emacs interface. (line 151) -* preview-image-creators: The preview images. (line 7) -* preview-image-type: Basic modes of operation. - (line 16) -* preview-image-type <1>: The preview images. (line 6) -* preview-inner-environments: The Emacs interface. (line 156) -* preview-LaTeX-command: The Emacs interface. (line 11) -* preview-LaTeX-command-replacements: The Emacs interface. (line 25) -* preview-nonready-icon-specs: The Emacs interface. (line 143) -* preview-parsed-font-size: The Emacs interface. (line 99) -* preview-pdf-adjust-color-method: No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier. - (line 15) -* preview-prefer-TeX-bb: The Emacs interface. (line 69) -* preview-preserve-counters: Simple customization. - (line 61) -* preview-preserve-counters <1>: The Emacs interface. (line 47) -* preview-reference-face: The Emacs interface. (line 80) -* preview-region: Keys and lisp. (line 84) -* preview-report-bug: Keys and lisp. (line 160) -* preview-required-option-list: Simple customization. - (line 61) -* preview-required-option-list <1>: The Emacs interface. (line 35) -* preview-scale-function: The Emacs interface. (line 79) -* preview-section: Keys and lisp. (line 79) -* preview-transparent-border: Keys and lisp. (line 55) -* Readme: Introduction. (line 6) -* Report a bug: Keys and lisp. (line 160) -* Right: Copying. (line 6) -* Showing \labels: Simple customization. - (line 21) -* Using dvipng: Basic modes of operation. - (line 18) -* Warranty: Copying. (line 6) - - - -Tag Table: -Node: Top959 -Node: Copying2231 -Node: Introduction2685 -Node: What use is it?3359 -Node: Activating preview-latex4748 -Node: Getting started5499 -Node: Basic modes of operation7446 -Node: More documentation8651 -Node: Availability9520 -Node: Contacts10247 -Node: Installation11520 -Node: Keys and lisp11721 -Node: Simple customization18796 -Node: Known problems24458 -Node: Font problems with Dvips25284 -Node: Too small bounding boxes26454 -Node: x-symbol interoperation27850 -Node: Middle-clicks paste instead of toggling29238 -Node: No images are displayed with gs 9.27 and earlier29923 -Node: For advanced users32565 -Node: The LaTeX style file33024 -Node: Package options35586 -Node: Provided commands46490 -Node: The Emacs interface53835 -Node: The preview images62537 -Node: Misplaced previews66294 -Node: ToDo69750 -Node: Frequently Asked Questions74527 -Node: Introduction to FAQ74850 -Node: Requirements75189 -Node: Installation Trouble77157 -Node: Customization79421 -Node: Troubleshooting82497 -Node: Other formats85007 -Node: Copying this Manual86322 -Node: GNU Free Documentation License87268 -Node: Index112391 - -End Tag Table - - -Local Variables: -coding: utf-8 -End: |