CommunityData:TeX: Difference between revisions
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== Sending Patches == | == Sending Patches == | ||
If you want to send patches, these currently should be sent over email to mako. Details on how to do this with the <code>git format-patch<code> command are online here: http://projects.mako.cc/source/ | If you want to send patches, these currently should be sent over email to mako. Details on how to do this with the <code>git format-patch</code> command are online here: http://projects.mako.cc/source/ |
Revision as of 21:45, 3 July 2017
Installing Dependencies
Debian/Ubuntu Installation Instructions
First, you'll want to install the following packages:
- rubber
- latexmk
- texlive-latex-recommended
- texlive-latex-extra
- texlive-fonts-extra
- texlive-fonts-recommended
- texlive-bibtex-extra
- moreutils
- gawk
Also, to install Garamond grab and install the font from here through the following complicated process:
- Download the file
- Create ~/texmf if it does not exist yet
- Unzip the file ugm.zip from the garamond.zip file into that ~/texmf/
- Copy the other font files in the root directory of garamond.zip into ~/texmf/fonts/type1/
- Run "texhash ~/texmf
Alternatively, if you want to install them system wide and have root credentials, you can also place them in /usr/local/share/texmf instead.
Using MacTeX on OSX
To install with MacTeX, you need to install the font:
wget http://tug.org/fonts/getnonfreefonts/install-getnonfreefonts texlua install-getnonfreefonts sudo getnonfreefonts-sys garamond
Getting/Installing Templates
You can find the latest version of Mako's templates here: http://projects.mako.cc/source/?p=latex_mako
To clone the public repository, you can do:
git clone git://projects.mako.cc/latex_mako
If you can clone them into the directory ~/tex/
(e.g., by doing mkdir ~/tex; cd ~/tex
before running the clone command above) it will make things a bit easier.
If you want, you can copy the files new_tex_document new_tex_letter into your path (e.g., ~/bin
) this will allow you to run new_tex_document documentname
to create new documents from the template more easily. It's totally optional.
Using the Templates
The templates themselves use the LaTeX Memoir Class (warning that link is a ~1000 page PDF and the documentation). There are three styles that come with it and two basic layouts that are defined. To switch between them, you just edit the following line:
\chapterstyle{article-2}
The first style article-1
is the most conservative. article-2
is great for papers (a perhaps dated example). The third style article-3
is more for shorter pieces and memos (a perhaps dated example). If you want to use the style, you might want to consider switching the pagestyle from mako-mem
to memo
by editing the following line:
\pagestyle{mako-mem}
Sending Patches
If you want to send patches, these currently should be sent over email to mako. Details on how to do this with the git format-patch
command are online here: http://projects.mako.cc/source/