Hello,
In Windows (XP) one can use TeXstudio, the viewer's outputscreen is
automatically refreshed with each compilation. (B.t.w. TeXnicCentre is nowadays
not anymore preferred.)
In TeXstudio one can even make ConTeXt available by assigning a less used
shortcut (f.i. F10) to:
C:\context\te
Le mardi 27 août 2013 12:12:32 Thangalin a écrit :
> When using the "evince" PDF reader on Linux, reloading the PDF is as simple
> as:
>
> context filename.tex -- Generate for the first time
> evince filename.pdf & -- Open the reader in the background
>
> context filename.tex -- The evince
On Tue, 27 Aug 2013, "H. Özoguz" wrote:
For LaTex there exists a tool, named "latexmk", which allows a "preview
continuous mode", that is to update the compiled pdf automatically. It is
really very helpful!
Because it is open-source: It is possible to addapt this tool for context,
too? Maybe
When using the "evince" PDF reader on Linux, reloading the PDF is as simple
as:
context filename.tex -- Generate for the first time
evince filename.pdf & -- Open the reader in the background
context filename.tex -- The evince process automatically refreshes with
new content
__
On Mon, 19 Aug 2013 13:51:51 +0600
Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
> But why should parts not get displayed by default?
Because Hans (and others?) have decided that the default for part should be no
titles.
This may be convenient but seems to me to be incoherent. Indeed, I would prefer
placehead=y
On 2013–08–27 Marco Patzer wrote:
> while true do
> inotifywait --event modify somefile.tex; context --batchmode somefile.tex
> done
Better:
file='somefile.tex'
while inotifywait --event modify "$file"; do
context --batchmode "$file"
done
For BSDs/MacOS: http://en.wikipedia.or
On 2013–08–27 "H. Özoguz" wrote:
> For LaTex there exists a tool, named "latexmk", which allows a
> "preview continuous mode", that is to update the compiled pdf
> automatically. It is really very helpful!
I don't know latexmk, but updating the pdf is a feature of the pdf
reader, not of context.
For LaTex there exists a tool, named "latexmk", which allows a "preview
continuous mode", that is to update the compiled pdf automatically. It
is really very helpful!
Because it is open-source: It is possible to addapt this tool for
context, too? Maybe one of the programmers have time for this