307 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
307 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
@c This is part of the preview-latex manual.
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@c Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009
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@c 2017, 2021-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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@c See file preview-latex.texi for copying conditions.
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@ifset rawfile
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@include macros.texi
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@node Frequently Asked Questions, Introduction to FAQ, (dir), (dir)
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@top Frequently Asked Questions about @previewlatex{}
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@contents
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@end ifset
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@menu
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* Introduction to FAQ::
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* Requirements::
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* Installation Trouble::
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* Customization::
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* Troubleshooting::
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* Other formats::
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@end menu
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@comment we need at least one chapter, or the numbers disappear in the
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@comment plain version of the FAQ.
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@ifset rawfile
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@node Introduction to FAQ, Requirements, Frequently Asked Questions, Frequently Asked Questions
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@chapter Introduction
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@raisesections
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@end ifset
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@ifclear rawfile
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@node Introduction to FAQ, Requirements, Frequently Asked Questions, Frequently Asked Questions
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@section Introduction
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@end ifclear
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@subsection How can I contribute to the FAQ?
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Send an email with the subject:
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@example
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Preview FAQ
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@end example
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to @email{auctex-devel@@gnu.org}.
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@node Requirements, Installation Trouble, Introduction to FAQ, Frequently Asked Questions
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@section Requirements
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@subsection Which version of Emacs is needed?
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@previewlatex{} nominally requires @w{GNU Emacs} with a version of at
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least 26.1.
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@subsection Which versions of Ghostscript and @AUCTeX{} are needed?
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We recommend to use GNU or AFPL Ghostscript with a version of at least
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7.07.
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@previewlatex{} has been distributed as part of @AUCTeX{} since version
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11.80. If your version of @AUCTeX{} is older than that, or if it does
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not contain a working copy of @previewlatex{}, complain to wherever you
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got it from.
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@subsection I have trouble with the display format...
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We recommend keeping the variable @code{preview-image-type} set to
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@code{dvipng} (if you have it installed) or @code{png}. This is the
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default and can be set via the @samp{Preview/Customize} menu.
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All other formats are known to have inconveniences, either in file size
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or quality. There are some Emacs versions around not supporting
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@acronym{PNG}; the proper way to deal with that is to complain to your
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Emacs provider. Short of that, checking out @acronym{PNM} or
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@acronym{JPEG} formats might be a good way to find out whether the lack
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of @acronym{PNG} format support might be the only problem with your
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Emacs.
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@subsection For which OS does preview work?
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It is known to work under the X Window System for Linux and for several
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flavors of Unix: we have reports for HP and Solaris.
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There are several development versions of Emacs around for native MacOS
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Carbon, and @previewlatex{} is working with them, too.
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With Windows, both native Emacs and Cygwin Emacs should work. However, it
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is known that @url{https://miktex.org/,MiK@TeX{}} sometimes doesn't work
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with @previewlatex{}. In that case, use
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@url{https://tug.org/texlive/,@TeX{} Live} instead.
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@node Installation Trouble, Customization, Requirements, Frequently Asked Questions
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@section Installation Trouble
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@subsection I just get @samp{LaTeX found no preview images}.
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The reason for this is that @LaTeX{} found no preview images in the
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document in question.
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One reason might be that there are no previews to be seen. If you have
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not used @previewlatex{} before, you might not know its manner of
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operation. One sure-fire way to test if you just have a document where
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no previews are to be found is to use the provided example document
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@file{circ.tex} (you will have to copy it to some directory where you
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have write permissions). If the symptom persists, you have a problem,
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and the problem is most likely a @LaTeX{} problem. Here are possible
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reasons:
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@table @asis
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@item Filename database not updated
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Various @TeX{} distributions have their own ways of knowing where the
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files are without actually searching directories. The normal
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@previewlatex{} installation should detect common tools for that purpose
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and use them. If this goes wrong, or if the files get installed into a
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place where they are not looked for, the @LaTeX{} run will fail.
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@item An incomplete manual installation
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This should not happen if you followed installation instructions.
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Unfortunately, people know better all the time. If only
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@file{preview.sty} gets installed without a set of supplementary files
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also in the @file{latex} subdirectory, @previewlatex{} runs will not
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generate any errors, but they will not produce any previews, either.
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@item An outdated @file{preview} installation
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The @file{preview.sty} package is useful for more than just
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@previewlatex{}. For example, it is part of @w{@TeX{} Live}. So you have
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to make sure that @previewlatex{} does not get to work with outdated
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style and configuration files: some newer features will not work with
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older @TeX{} style files, and really old files will make
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@previewlatex{} fail completely. There usual is a local @file{texmf}
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tree, or even a user-specific tree that are searched before the default
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tree. Make sure that the first version of those files that gets found
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is the correct one.
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@end table
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@node Customization, Troubleshooting, Installation Trouble, Frequently Asked Questions
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@section Customization
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@subsection How to include additional environments like @code{enumerate}
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By default, @previewlatex{} is intended mainly for displaying
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mathematical formulas, so environments like @code{enumerate} or
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@code{tabular} (except where contained in a float) are not included.
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You can include them however manually by adding the lines:
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@example
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\usepackage[displaymath,textmath,sections,graphics,floats]@{preview@}
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\PreviewEnvironment@{enumerate@}
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@end example
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@noindent
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in your document header, that is before
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@example
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\begin@{document@}
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@end example
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@noindent
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In general, @file{preview} should be loaded as the last thing before
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the start of document.
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Be aware that
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@example
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\PreviewEnvironment@{...@}
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@end example
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@noindent
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does not accept a comma separated
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list! Also note that by putting more and more
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@example
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\PreviewEnvironment@{...@}
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@end example
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@noindent
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in your document, it will look more and more like a @acronym{DVI} file
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preview when running @previewlatex{}. Since each preview is treated as
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one large monolithic block by Emacs, one should really restrict
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previews to those elements where the improvement in visual
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representation more than makes up for the decreased editability.
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@subsection What if I don't want to change the document?
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The easiest way is to generate a configuration file in the current
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directory. You can basically either create @file{prdefault.cfg} which
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is used for any use of the @samp{preview} package, or you can use
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@file{prauctex.cfg} which only applies to the use from with Emacs. Let
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us assume you use the latter. In that case you should write something like
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@example
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\InputIfFileExists@{preview/prauctex.cfg@}@{@}@{@}
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\PreviewEnvironment@{enumerate@}
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@end example
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@noindent
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in it. The first line inputs the system-wide default configuration
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(the file name should match that, but not your own
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@file{prauctex.cfg}), then you add your own stuff.
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@subsection Suddenly I get gazillions of ridiculous pages?!?
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When @previewlatex{} works on extracting its stuff, it typesets each
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single preview on a page of its own. This only happens when actual
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previews get generated. Now if you want to configure @previewlatex{} in
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your document, you need to add your own @code{\usepackage} call to
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@samp{preview} so that it will be able to interpret its various
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definition commands. It is an error to add the @code{active} option to
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this invocation: you don't want the package to be active unless
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@previewlatex{} itself enables the previewing operation (which it will).
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@subsection Does @previewlatex{} work with presentation classes?
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@previewlatex{} should work with most presentation classes. However,
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since those classes often have macros or pseudo environments
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encompassing a complete slide, you will need to use the customization
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facilities of @file{preview.sty} to tell it how to resolve this, whether
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you want no previews, previews of whole slides or previews of inner
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material.
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@node Troubleshooting, Other formats, Customization, Frequently Asked Questions
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@section Troubleshooting
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@subsection Preview causes all sort of strange error messages
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When running @previewlatex{} and taking a look at either log file or
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terminal output, lots of messages like
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@example
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! Preview: Snippet 3 started.
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<-><->
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l.52 \item Sie lassen sich als Funktion $
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y = f(x)$ darstellen.
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! Preview: Snippet 3 ended.(491520+163840x2494310).
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<-><->
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l.52 \item Sie lassen sich als Funktion $y = f(x)$
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darstellen.
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@end example
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@noindent
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appear (previous versions generated messages looking even more like
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errors). Those are not real errors (as will be noted in the log
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file). Or rather, while they @strong{are} really @TeX{} error
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messages, they are intentional. This currently is the only reliable
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way to pass the information from the @LaTeX{} run of @previewlatex{} to
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its Emacs part about where the previews originated in the source text.
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Since they are actual errors, you will also get @AUCTeX{} to state
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@example
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Preview-LaTeX exited as expected with code 1 at Wed Sep 4 17:03:30
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@end example
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@noindent
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after the @LaTeX{} run in the run buffer. This merely indicates that
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errors were present, and errors will always be present when
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@previewlatex{} is operating. There might be also real errors, so in
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case of doubt, look for them explicitly in either run buffer or the
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resulting @file{.log} file.
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@subsection Why do my @acronym{DVI} and @acronym{PDF} output files vanish?
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In order to produce the preview images @previewlatex{} runs @LaTeX{} on
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the master or region file. The resulting @acronym{DVI} or @acronym{PDF}
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file can happen to have the same name as the output file of a regular
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@LaTeX{} run. So the regular output file gets overwritten and is
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subsequently deleted by @previewlatex{}.
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@subsection My output file suddenly only contains preview images?!
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As mentioned in the previews @acronym{FAQ} entry, @previewlatex{} might
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use the file name of the original output file for the creation of
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preview images. If the original output file is being displayed with a
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viewer when this happens, you might see strange effects depending on the
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viewer, e.g.@: a message about the file being corrupted or the display of
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all the preview images instead of your typeset document. (Also
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@pxref{Customization}.)
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@node Other formats, , Troubleshooting, Frequently Asked Questions
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@section @previewlatex{} when not using @LaTeX{}
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@subsection Does @previewlatex{} work with PDF@LaTeX{}?
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Yes, as long as you use @AUCTeX{}'s own PDF@LaTeX{} mode and have not
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messed with @samp{TeX-command-list}.
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@subsection Does @previewlatex{} work with @samp{elatex}?
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No problem here. If you configure your @AUCTeX{} to use @samp{elatex},
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or simply have @samp{latex} point to @samp{elatex}, this will work fine.
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Modern @TeX{} distributions use e@TeX{} for @LaTeX{}, anyway.
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@subsection Does @previewlatex{} work with @ConTeXt{}?
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In short, no. The @samp{preview} package is
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@LaTeX{}-dependent. Adding support for other formats requires
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volunteers.
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@subsection Does @previewlatex{} work with plain @TeX{}?
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Again, no. Restructuring the @samp{preview} package for @samp{plain}
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operation would be required. Volunteers welcome.
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In some cases you might get around by making a wrapper pseudo-Master
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file looking like the following:
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@example
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\documentclass@{article@}
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\usepackage@{plain@}
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\begin@{document@}
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\begin@{plain@}
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\input myplainfile
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\end@{plain@}
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\end@{document@}
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@end example
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