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  2. Texinfo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texinfo

    It can represent the exact appearance of a document and supports arbitrary scaling. It is intended to be platform-independent and can be viewed with a large variety of software. By default, Texinfo uses the pdftex program, a variant of TeX, to output PDF. LaTeX (Generated via texi2any --latex.) This is a typesetting system built on top of TeX.

  3. pdfTeX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PdfTeX

    Moreover, since LaTeX, ConTeXt et al. are simply macro packages for TeX, they work equally well with pdfTeX. Hence, pdflatex, for example, calls the pdfTeX program using the standard LaTeX macros to typeset LaTeX documents, whereas it was the default rendering engine for ConTeXt documents. Current versions of ConTeXt use LuaMetaTeX as default ...

  4. Comparison of TeX editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_TeX_editors

    Screenshots and Video Tutorials of TeX editors Editor Screenshot LyX: Screenshot Texmaker: Screenshot of Texmaker version 4.5: TeXmacs: The TeXmacs editor: TeXstudio: Screenshot of TeXstudio (2.12.6) Visual Studio Code: The LaTex Workshop extension for Visual Studio Code: Editor Screenshot

  5. PSTricks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSTricks

    PSTricks is only fully compatible with TeX systems using PostScript intermediates, including but not limited to eTeX and others. However, it is not compatible with the widely used pdfTeX engine in PDF mode. As pdfTeX is the default engine in most current installations, users of PSTricks must either force pdfTeX to DVI mode or use auto-pst-pdf.

  6. LuaTeX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LuaTeX

    LuaTeX is a TeX-based computer typesetting system which started as a version of pdfTeX with a Lua scripting engine embedded. After some experiments it was adopted by the TeX Live distribution as a successor to pdfTeX (itself an extension of ε-TeX, which generates PDFs).

  7. TeX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TeX

    TeX was designed with two main goals in mind: to allow anybody to produce high-quality books with minimal effort, and to provide a system that would give exactly the same results on all computers, at any point in time (together with the Metafont language for font description and the Computer Modern family of typefaces). [4] TeX is free software ...

  8. LaTeX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LaTeX

    LaTeX (/ ˈ l ɑː t ɛ k / ⓘ LAH-tek or / ˈ l eɪ t ɛ k / LAY-tek, [2] [Note 1] often stylized as L a T e X) is a software system for typesetting documents. [3] LaTeX markup describes the content and layout of the document, as opposed to the formatted text found in WYSIWYG word processors like Google Docs, LibreOffice Writer, and Microsoft Word.

  9. TeX Live - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TeX_Live

    TeX Live is a cross-platform, free software distribution for the TeX typesetting system that includes major TeX-related programs, macro packages, and fonts. It is the replacement of its no-longer supported [ 2 ] counterpart teTeX . [ 3 ]