Not Obsolete LaTeX to HTML Converter?












35














I am looking to convert LaTeX to HTML. A long time ago (during my thesis, in 2000!), I used Hacha and Hevea ... but obviously, they are no longer maintained, especially the Windows version.
More recently Google sent me to tex4ht, but it seems that there too the project is at a standstill (the site indicates that there will soon be opportunities for image management, but that was in 2014, since then nothing more) and is poorly documented.



Hence my question: is there a recent solution for converting LaTeX to HTML compatible with Windows? The option that I need are:




  • using CSS

  • cutting the document into several file

  • allowing the use of picture for navigation (up, prev, next)

  • compatible with Windows










share|improve this question




















  • 5




    tex4ht is maintained very well with a bunch of new features every few weeks!
    – Keks Dose
    Dec 10 at 11:43






  • 1




    lwarp (which I have not used) tex4ht and latexml are the three main actively maintained ones
    – David Carlisle
    Dec 10 at 12:30






  • 12




    There is also Pandoc, which does not fully support all features and packages but it generally works ok, is easy to use and it is able to convert between many different formats.
    – Marijn
    Dec 10 at 14:45






  • 1




    "not obsolete" today will be "obsolete" tomorrow
    – Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez
    Dec 10 at 17:06






  • 1




    The HeVeA user manual at hevea.inria.fr/doc/index.html seems to be dated July 2018 so it appears to still be maintained and updated. I just found out about it when posting a totally unrelated question and HeVeA came up are a possible match of the tags. I just stated to look into it when I came across this question, so I am curious as to why you think it is no longer maintained?
    – Peter Grill
    Dec 12 at 7:59
















35














I am looking to convert LaTeX to HTML. A long time ago (during my thesis, in 2000!), I used Hacha and Hevea ... but obviously, they are no longer maintained, especially the Windows version.
More recently Google sent me to tex4ht, but it seems that there too the project is at a standstill (the site indicates that there will soon be opportunities for image management, but that was in 2014, since then nothing more) and is poorly documented.



Hence my question: is there a recent solution for converting LaTeX to HTML compatible with Windows? The option that I need are:




  • using CSS

  • cutting the document into several file

  • allowing the use of picture for navigation (up, prev, next)

  • compatible with Windows










share|improve this question




















  • 5




    tex4ht is maintained very well with a bunch of new features every few weeks!
    – Keks Dose
    Dec 10 at 11:43






  • 1




    lwarp (which I have not used) tex4ht and latexml are the three main actively maintained ones
    – David Carlisle
    Dec 10 at 12:30






  • 12




    There is also Pandoc, which does not fully support all features and packages but it generally works ok, is easy to use and it is able to convert between many different formats.
    – Marijn
    Dec 10 at 14:45






  • 1




    "not obsolete" today will be "obsolete" tomorrow
    – Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez
    Dec 10 at 17:06






  • 1




    The HeVeA user manual at hevea.inria.fr/doc/index.html seems to be dated July 2018 so it appears to still be maintained and updated. I just found out about it when posting a totally unrelated question and HeVeA came up are a possible match of the tags. I just stated to look into it when I came across this question, so I am curious as to why you think it is no longer maintained?
    – Peter Grill
    Dec 12 at 7:59














35












35








35


12





I am looking to convert LaTeX to HTML. A long time ago (during my thesis, in 2000!), I used Hacha and Hevea ... but obviously, they are no longer maintained, especially the Windows version.
More recently Google sent me to tex4ht, but it seems that there too the project is at a standstill (the site indicates that there will soon be opportunities for image management, but that was in 2014, since then nothing more) and is poorly documented.



Hence my question: is there a recent solution for converting LaTeX to HTML compatible with Windows? The option that I need are:




  • using CSS

  • cutting the document into several file

  • allowing the use of picture for navigation (up, prev, next)

  • compatible with Windows










share|improve this question















I am looking to convert LaTeX to HTML. A long time ago (during my thesis, in 2000!), I used Hacha and Hevea ... but obviously, they are no longer maintained, especially the Windows version.
More recently Google sent me to tex4ht, but it seems that there too the project is at a standstill (the site indicates that there will soon be opportunities for image management, but that was in 2014, since then nothing more) and is poorly documented.



Hence my question: is there a recent solution for converting LaTeX to HTML compatible with Windows? The option that I need are:




  • using CSS

  • cutting the document into several file

  • allowing the use of picture for navigation (up, prev, next)

  • compatible with Windows







conversion html latex2html






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 12 at 14:24









Martin Schröder

12.8k639122




12.8k639122










asked Dec 10 at 11:42









Christophe Genolini

18614




18614








  • 5




    tex4ht is maintained very well with a bunch of new features every few weeks!
    – Keks Dose
    Dec 10 at 11:43






  • 1




    lwarp (which I have not used) tex4ht and latexml are the three main actively maintained ones
    – David Carlisle
    Dec 10 at 12:30






  • 12




    There is also Pandoc, which does not fully support all features and packages but it generally works ok, is easy to use and it is able to convert between many different formats.
    – Marijn
    Dec 10 at 14:45






  • 1




    "not obsolete" today will be "obsolete" tomorrow
    – Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez
    Dec 10 at 17:06






  • 1




    The HeVeA user manual at hevea.inria.fr/doc/index.html seems to be dated July 2018 so it appears to still be maintained and updated. I just found out about it when posting a totally unrelated question and HeVeA came up are a possible match of the tags. I just stated to look into it when I came across this question, so I am curious as to why you think it is no longer maintained?
    – Peter Grill
    Dec 12 at 7:59














  • 5




    tex4ht is maintained very well with a bunch of new features every few weeks!
    – Keks Dose
    Dec 10 at 11:43






  • 1




    lwarp (which I have not used) tex4ht and latexml are the three main actively maintained ones
    – David Carlisle
    Dec 10 at 12:30






  • 12




    There is also Pandoc, which does not fully support all features and packages but it generally works ok, is easy to use and it is able to convert between many different formats.
    – Marijn
    Dec 10 at 14:45






  • 1




    "not obsolete" today will be "obsolete" tomorrow
    – Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez
    Dec 10 at 17:06






  • 1




    The HeVeA user manual at hevea.inria.fr/doc/index.html seems to be dated July 2018 so it appears to still be maintained and updated. I just found out about it when posting a totally unrelated question and HeVeA came up are a possible match of the tags. I just stated to look into it when I came across this question, so I am curious as to why you think it is no longer maintained?
    – Peter Grill
    Dec 12 at 7:59








5




5




tex4ht is maintained very well with a bunch of new features every few weeks!
– Keks Dose
Dec 10 at 11:43




tex4ht is maintained very well with a bunch of new features every few weeks!
– Keks Dose
Dec 10 at 11:43




1




1




lwarp (which I have not used) tex4ht and latexml are the three main actively maintained ones
– David Carlisle
Dec 10 at 12:30




lwarp (which I have not used) tex4ht and latexml are the three main actively maintained ones
– David Carlisle
Dec 10 at 12:30




12




12




There is also Pandoc, which does not fully support all features and packages but it generally works ok, is easy to use and it is able to convert between many different formats.
– Marijn
Dec 10 at 14:45




There is also Pandoc, which does not fully support all features and packages but it generally works ok, is easy to use and it is able to convert between many different formats.
– Marijn
Dec 10 at 14:45




1




1




"not obsolete" today will be "obsolete" tomorrow
– Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez
Dec 10 at 17:06




"not obsolete" today will be "obsolete" tomorrow
– Mauricio Gracia Gutierrez
Dec 10 at 17:06




1




1




The HeVeA user manual at hevea.inria.fr/doc/index.html seems to be dated July 2018 so it appears to still be maintained and updated. I just found out about it when posting a totally unrelated question and HeVeA came up are a possible match of the tags. I just stated to look into it when I came across this question, so I am curious as to why you think it is no longer maintained?
– Peter Grill
Dec 12 at 7:59




The HeVeA user manual at hevea.inria.fr/doc/index.html seems to be dated July 2018 so it appears to still be maintained and updated. I just found out about it when posting a totally unrelated question and HeVeA came up are a possible match of the tags. I just stated to look into it when I came across this question, so I am curious as to why you think it is no longer maintained?
– Peter Grill
Dec 12 at 7:59










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















45





+500









It is true that the main page of tex4ht and documentation seems obsolete, but the project itself is alive, as can be seen from the history of commits and the mailing list. We added MathJax output support recently, for example.



It is also true that the full distribution which is on CTAN haven't been updated since the original author passed away, but the updates go directly to TeX distributions, so it is not necessary to install the distribution by hand, it would be quite complicated process. Everything you need to run updated tex4ht is included in TeX Live.



At the moment, I am working on a new documentation, which should be big improvement over the current state.



Regarding your question, all of this should be possible with tex4ht. It produces basic CSS for your document, it also enables to include custom CSS in the generated HTML. It supports cutting of the document to separate files for chapters, sections etc. It works on Windows when you use TL, but Miktex works as well.



The following file, myconfig.cfg will split an article on sections:



Preamble{xhtml,2}
Configure{AddCss}{test.css}
Css{body{background-color:green;}}
Configure{crosslinks}{}{}{includegraphics{next.png}}{includegraphics{prev.png}}{}{}{}{includegraphics{up.jpg}}
begin{document}
EndPreamble


The split is requested using 2 option used in the Preamble command. The Css command can be used for simple CSS instruction, while the Configure{AddCss} requires inclusion of an external CSS file. The Configure{crosslinks} requires pictures for links for previous, next and top pages.



Compilation of the document can be requested using the following command:



make4ht -uc myconfig.cfg filename.tex


make4ht is a build system for tex4ht, it should be used instead of the htlatex command.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
    – michal.h21
    Dec 10 at 17:18






  • 1




    Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
    – Christophe Genolini
    Dec 11 at 15:47








  • 2




    @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
    – michal.h21
    Dec 11 at 16:20






  • 3




    Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
    – cmhughes
    Dec 12 at 12:51






  • 2




    @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
    – michal.h21
    Dec 12 at 20:48



















3














Pandoc is the new kid on the block if it comes to processing LaTeX input, and it is very actively developed with a new release every few weeks. (It can handle LaTeX output since its early days). It's available for Windows, and it is recent too...



Pandoc has multiple input formats it can process:



echo $(pandoc --list-input-formats)

commonmark creole docbook docx epub gfm haddock html jats json latex
markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd markdown_phpextra markdown_strict
mediawiki muse native odt opml org rst t2t textile tikiwiki twiki vimwiki


Each of these inputs it can convert into the following output formats:



 echo $(pandoc --list-output-formats)

asciidoc beamer commonmark context docbook docbook4 docbook5 docx
dokuwiki dzslides epub epub2 epub3 fb2 gfm haddock html html4 html5 icml
jats json latex man markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd
markdown_phpextra markdown_strict mediawiki ms muse native odt
opendocument opml org plain pptx revealjs rst rtf s5 slideous slidy tei
texinfo textile zimwiki


The detailed styling of these outputs can be manipulated in appropriate ways for almost every single format: for HTML based outputs (including EPUB or Slidy, DZSlides, Slideous, Reveal.JS and S5 slideshows) you can apply CSS, for ODT or DOCX you can use a reference.docx or reference.odt to clone the styles from, for LaTeX you can customize the document template, etc.



The way Pandoc works is very modular: It first reads each input with a specialized Reader component, converts it into its own internal format, native, and then in turn converts native to the final output using the appropriate Writer component.



The Reader component for LaTeX is Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX. Now here is an extract of the changelog in its recently (Nov 2019) released v2.5 which proofs its active maintenance and development of the relevant component:




Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX



Cleaned up handling of dimension arguments. Allow decimal points, preceding space.

Don’t allow arguments for verbatim, etc.

Allow space before bracketed options.

Allow optional arguments after in tables.

Improve parsing of tiny, scriptsize, etc. Parse as raw, but know that these font changing commands take no arguments.




I cannot comment on the scope of Pandocs reading support for specialized LaTeX features and environments though. That's up to you to decide and evaluate. Maybe, or even likely, tex4ht or HaVeA are still better. But I'm sure you already have a few LaTeX documents at hand which you can put to a test quickly:



pandoc          
--from=latex
--to=html
--output=my.html


Or shorter, but with a CSS of your own choice applied:



pandoc          
-f latex
-t html
--css=my.css
--output=my.html





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    2 Answers
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    active

    oldest

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    45





    +500









    It is true that the main page of tex4ht and documentation seems obsolete, but the project itself is alive, as can be seen from the history of commits and the mailing list. We added MathJax output support recently, for example.



    It is also true that the full distribution which is on CTAN haven't been updated since the original author passed away, but the updates go directly to TeX distributions, so it is not necessary to install the distribution by hand, it would be quite complicated process. Everything you need to run updated tex4ht is included in TeX Live.



    At the moment, I am working on a new documentation, which should be big improvement over the current state.



    Regarding your question, all of this should be possible with tex4ht. It produces basic CSS for your document, it also enables to include custom CSS in the generated HTML. It supports cutting of the document to separate files for chapters, sections etc. It works on Windows when you use TL, but Miktex works as well.



    The following file, myconfig.cfg will split an article on sections:



    Preamble{xhtml,2}
    Configure{AddCss}{test.css}
    Css{body{background-color:green;}}
    Configure{crosslinks}{}{}{includegraphics{next.png}}{includegraphics{prev.png}}{}{}{}{includegraphics{up.jpg}}
    begin{document}
    EndPreamble


    The split is requested using 2 option used in the Preamble command. The Css command can be used for simple CSS instruction, while the Configure{AddCss} requires inclusion of an external CSS file. The Configure{crosslinks} requires pictures for links for previous, next and top pages.



    Compilation of the document can be requested using the following command:



    make4ht -uc myconfig.cfg filename.tex


    make4ht is a build system for tex4ht, it should be used instead of the htlatex command.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 10 at 17:18






    • 1




      Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
      – Christophe Genolini
      Dec 11 at 15:47








    • 2




      @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 11 at 16:20






    • 3




      Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
      – cmhughes
      Dec 12 at 12:51






    • 2




      @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
      – michal.h21
      Dec 12 at 20:48
















    45





    +500









    It is true that the main page of tex4ht and documentation seems obsolete, but the project itself is alive, as can be seen from the history of commits and the mailing list. We added MathJax output support recently, for example.



    It is also true that the full distribution which is on CTAN haven't been updated since the original author passed away, but the updates go directly to TeX distributions, so it is not necessary to install the distribution by hand, it would be quite complicated process. Everything you need to run updated tex4ht is included in TeX Live.



    At the moment, I am working on a new documentation, which should be big improvement over the current state.



    Regarding your question, all of this should be possible with tex4ht. It produces basic CSS for your document, it also enables to include custom CSS in the generated HTML. It supports cutting of the document to separate files for chapters, sections etc. It works on Windows when you use TL, but Miktex works as well.



    The following file, myconfig.cfg will split an article on sections:



    Preamble{xhtml,2}
    Configure{AddCss}{test.css}
    Css{body{background-color:green;}}
    Configure{crosslinks}{}{}{includegraphics{next.png}}{includegraphics{prev.png}}{}{}{}{includegraphics{up.jpg}}
    begin{document}
    EndPreamble


    The split is requested using 2 option used in the Preamble command. The Css command can be used for simple CSS instruction, while the Configure{AddCss} requires inclusion of an external CSS file. The Configure{crosslinks} requires pictures for links for previous, next and top pages.



    Compilation of the document can be requested using the following command:



    make4ht -uc myconfig.cfg filename.tex


    make4ht is a build system for tex4ht, it should be used instead of the htlatex command.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 10 at 17:18






    • 1




      Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
      – Christophe Genolini
      Dec 11 at 15:47








    • 2




      @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 11 at 16:20






    • 3




      Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
      – cmhughes
      Dec 12 at 12:51






    • 2




      @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
      – michal.h21
      Dec 12 at 20:48














    45





    +500







    45





    +500



    45




    +500




    It is true that the main page of tex4ht and documentation seems obsolete, but the project itself is alive, as can be seen from the history of commits and the mailing list. We added MathJax output support recently, for example.



    It is also true that the full distribution which is on CTAN haven't been updated since the original author passed away, but the updates go directly to TeX distributions, so it is not necessary to install the distribution by hand, it would be quite complicated process. Everything you need to run updated tex4ht is included in TeX Live.



    At the moment, I am working on a new documentation, which should be big improvement over the current state.



    Regarding your question, all of this should be possible with tex4ht. It produces basic CSS for your document, it also enables to include custom CSS in the generated HTML. It supports cutting of the document to separate files for chapters, sections etc. It works on Windows when you use TL, but Miktex works as well.



    The following file, myconfig.cfg will split an article on sections:



    Preamble{xhtml,2}
    Configure{AddCss}{test.css}
    Css{body{background-color:green;}}
    Configure{crosslinks}{}{}{includegraphics{next.png}}{includegraphics{prev.png}}{}{}{}{includegraphics{up.jpg}}
    begin{document}
    EndPreamble


    The split is requested using 2 option used in the Preamble command. The Css command can be used for simple CSS instruction, while the Configure{AddCss} requires inclusion of an external CSS file. The Configure{crosslinks} requires pictures for links for previous, next and top pages.



    Compilation of the document can be requested using the following command:



    make4ht -uc myconfig.cfg filename.tex


    make4ht is a build system for tex4ht, it should be used instead of the htlatex command.






    share|improve this answer














    It is true that the main page of tex4ht and documentation seems obsolete, but the project itself is alive, as can be seen from the history of commits and the mailing list. We added MathJax output support recently, for example.



    It is also true that the full distribution which is on CTAN haven't been updated since the original author passed away, but the updates go directly to TeX distributions, so it is not necessary to install the distribution by hand, it would be quite complicated process. Everything you need to run updated tex4ht is included in TeX Live.



    At the moment, I am working on a new documentation, which should be big improvement over the current state.



    Regarding your question, all of this should be possible with tex4ht. It produces basic CSS for your document, it also enables to include custom CSS in the generated HTML. It supports cutting of the document to separate files for chapters, sections etc. It works on Windows when you use TL, but Miktex works as well.



    The following file, myconfig.cfg will split an article on sections:



    Preamble{xhtml,2}
    Configure{AddCss}{test.css}
    Css{body{background-color:green;}}
    Configure{crosslinks}{}{}{includegraphics{next.png}}{includegraphics{prev.png}}{}{}{}{includegraphics{up.jpg}}
    begin{document}
    EndPreamble


    The split is requested using 2 option used in the Preamble command. The Css command can be used for simple CSS instruction, while the Configure{AddCss} requires inclusion of an external CSS file. The Configure{crosslinks} requires pictures for links for previous, next and top pages.



    Compilation of the document can be requested using the following command:



    make4ht -uc myconfig.cfg filename.tex


    make4ht is a build system for tex4ht, it should be used instead of the htlatex command.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 10 at 15:07

























    answered Dec 10 at 12:20









    michal.h21

    30.2k446104




    30.2k446104








    • 1




      @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 10 at 17:18






    • 1




      Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
      – Christophe Genolini
      Dec 11 at 15:47








    • 2




      @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 11 at 16:20






    • 3




      Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
      – cmhughes
      Dec 12 at 12:51






    • 2




      @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
      – michal.h21
      Dec 12 at 20:48














    • 1




      @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 10 at 17:18






    • 1




      Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
      – Christophe Genolini
      Dec 11 at 15:47








    • 2




      @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
      – michal.h21
      Dec 11 at 16:20






    • 3




      Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
      – cmhughes
      Dec 12 at 12:51






    • 2




      @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
      – michal.h21
      Dec 12 at 20:48








    1




    1




    @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
    – michal.h21
    Dec 10 at 17:18




    @ChristopheGenolini have you tried the Configure{crosslinks} from my answer? The used pictures must be present on your system.
    – michal.h21
    Dec 10 at 17:18




    1




    1




    Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
    – Christophe Genolini
    Dec 11 at 15:47






    Yes, it works. Thanks a lot. So now that it works, I will have dozens of question (like : "I want the arrow to be in order left / up / next, how can I do that?") :-) Is there an official active forum somewhere?
    – Christophe Genolini
    Dec 11 at 15:47






    2




    2




    @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
    – michal.h21
    Dec 11 at 16:20




    @ChristopheGenolini the unofficial forum is here, just add tex4ht tag to your question. We have also mailing list.
    – michal.h21
    Dec 11 at 16:20




    3




    3




    Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
    – cmhughes
    Dec 12 at 12:51




    Thanks so much for all of your work! A bounty is coming your way :) I also haven't forgotten that I've promised to contribute to the documentation, it's high on my list.
    – cmhughes
    Dec 12 at 12:51




    2




    2




    @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
    – michal.h21
    Dec 12 at 20:48




    @cmhughes thanks :) I've created a basic design for the documentation, inspired by Readthedocs theme and started collecting existing pieces of information from the old documentation, the log file created using "info" option, etc. so any contribution is welcomed!
    – michal.h21
    Dec 12 at 20:48











    3














    Pandoc is the new kid on the block if it comes to processing LaTeX input, and it is very actively developed with a new release every few weeks. (It can handle LaTeX output since its early days). It's available for Windows, and it is recent too...



    Pandoc has multiple input formats it can process:



    echo $(pandoc --list-input-formats)

    commonmark creole docbook docx epub gfm haddock html jats json latex
    markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd markdown_phpextra markdown_strict
    mediawiki muse native odt opml org rst t2t textile tikiwiki twiki vimwiki


    Each of these inputs it can convert into the following output formats:



     echo $(pandoc --list-output-formats)

    asciidoc beamer commonmark context docbook docbook4 docbook5 docx
    dokuwiki dzslides epub epub2 epub3 fb2 gfm haddock html html4 html5 icml
    jats json latex man markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd
    markdown_phpextra markdown_strict mediawiki ms muse native odt
    opendocument opml org plain pptx revealjs rst rtf s5 slideous slidy tei
    texinfo textile zimwiki


    The detailed styling of these outputs can be manipulated in appropriate ways for almost every single format: for HTML based outputs (including EPUB or Slidy, DZSlides, Slideous, Reveal.JS and S5 slideshows) you can apply CSS, for ODT or DOCX you can use a reference.docx or reference.odt to clone the styles from, for LaTeX you can customize the document template, etc.



    The way Pandoc works is very modular: It first reads each input with a specialized Reader component, converts it into its own internal format, native, and then in turn converts native to the final output using the appropriate Writer component.



    The Reader component for LaTeX is Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX. Now here is an extract of the changelog in its recently (Nov 2019) released v2.5 which proofs its active maintenance and development of the relevant component:




    Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX



    Cleaned up handling of dimension arguments. Allow decimal points, preceding space.

    Don’t allow arguments for verbatim, etc.

    Allow space before bracketed options.

    Allow optional arguments after in tables.

    Improve parsing of tiny, scriptsize, etc. Parse as raw, but know that these font changing commands take no arguments.




    I cannot comment on the scope of Pandocs reading support for specialized LaTeX features and environments though. That's up to you to decide and evaluate. Maybe, or even likely, tex4ht or HaVeA are still better. But I'm sure you already have a few LaTeX documents at hand which you can put to a test quickly:



    pandoc          
    --from=latex
    --to=html
    --output=my.html


    Or shorter, but with a CSS of your own choice applied:



    pandoc          
    -f latex
    -t html
    --css=my.css
    --output=my.html





    share|improve this answer


























      3














      Pandoc is the new kid on the block if it comes to processing LaTeX input, and it is very actively developed with a new release every few weeks. (It can handle LaTeX output since its early days). It's available for Windows, and it is recent too...



      Pandoc has multiple input formats it can process:



      echo $(pandoc --list-input-formats)

      commonmark creole docbook docx epub gfm haddock html jats json latex
      markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd markdown_phpextra markdown_strict
      mediawiki muse native odt opml org rst t2t textile tikiwiki twiki vimwiki


      Each of these inputs it can convert into the following output formats:



       echo $(pandoc --list-output-formats)

      asciidoc beamer commonmark context docbook docbook4 docbook5 docx
      dokuwiki dzslides epub epub2 epub3 fb2 gfm haddock html html4 html5 icml
      jats json latex man markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd
      markdown_phpextra markdown_strict mediawiki ms muse native odt
      opendocument opml org plain pptx revealjs rst rtf s5 slideous slidy tei
      texinfo textile zimwiki


      The detailed styling of these outputs can be manipulated in appropriate ways for almost every single format: for HTML based outputs (including EPUB or Slidy, DZSlides, Slideous, Reveal.JS and S5 slideshows) you can apply CSS, for ODT or DOCX you can use a reference.docx or reference.odt to clone the styles from, for LaTeX you can customize the document template, etc.



      The way Pandoc works is very modular: It first reads each input with a specialized Reader component, converts it into its own internal format, native, and then in turn converts native to the final output using the appropriate Writer component.



      The Reader component for LaTeX is Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX. Now here is an extract of the changelog in its recently (Nov 2019) released v2.5 which proofs its active maintenance and development of the relevant component:




      Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX



      Cleaned up handling of dimension arguments. Allow decimal points, preceding space.

      Don’t allow arguments for verbatim, etc.

      Allow space before bracketed options.

      Allow optional arguments after in tables.

      Improve parsing of tiny, scriptsize, etc. Parse as raw, but know that these font changing commands take no arguments.




      I cannot comment on the scope of Pandocs reading support for specialized LaTeX features and environments though. That's up to you to decide and evaluate. Maybe, or even likely, tex4ht or HaVeA are still better. But I'm sure you already have a few LaTeX documents at hand which you can put to a test quickly:



      pandoc          
      --from=latex
      --to=html
      --output=my.html


      Or shorter, but with a CSS of your own choice applied:



      pandoc          
      -f latex
      -t html
      --css=my.css
      --output=my.html





      share|improve this answer
























        3












        3








        3






        Pandoc is the new kid on the block if it comes to processing LaTeX input, and it is very actively developed with a new release every few weeks. (It can handle LaTeX output since its early days). It's available for Windows, and it is recent too...



        Pandoc has multiple input formats it can process:



        echo $(pandoc --list-input-formats)

        commonmark creole docbook docx epub gfm haddock html jats json latex
        markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd markdown_phpextra markdown_strict
        mediawiki muse native odt opml org rst t2t textile tikiwiki twiki vimwiki


        Each of these inputs it can convert into the following output formats:



         echo $(pandoc --list-output-formats)

        asciidoc beamer commonmark context docbook docbook4 docbook5 docx
        dokuwiki dzslides epub epub2 epub3 fb2 gfm haddock html html4 html5 icml
        jats json latex man markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd
        markdown_phpextra markdown_strict mediawiki ms muse native odt
        opendocument opml org plain pptx revealjs rst rtf s5 slideous slidy tei
        texinfo textile zimwiki


        The detailed styling of these outputs can be manipulated in appropriate ways for almost every single format: for HTML based outputs (including EPUB or Slidy, DZSlides, Slideous, Reveal.JS and S5 slideshows) you can apply CSS, for ODT or DOCX you can use a reference.docx or reference.odt to clone the styles from, for LaTeX you can customize the document template, etc.



        The way Pandoc works is very modular: It first reads each input with a specialized Reader component, converts it into its own internal format, native, and then in turn converts native to the final output using the appropriate Writer component.



        The Reader component for LaTeX is Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX. Now here is an extract of the changelog in its recently (Nov 2019) released v2.5 which proofs its active maintenance and development of the relevant component:




        Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX



        Cleaned up handling of dimension arguments. Allow decimal points, preceding space.

        Don’t allow arguments for verbatim, etc.

        Allow space before bracketed options.

        Allow optional arguments after in tables.

        Improve parsing of tiny, scriptsize, etc. Parse as raw, but know that these font changing commands take no arguments.




        I cannot comment on the scope of Pandocs reading support for specialized LaTeX features and environments though. That's up to you to decide and evaluate. Maybe, or even likely, tex4ht or HaVeA are still better. But I'm sure you already have a few LaTeX documents at hand which you can put to a test quickly:



        pandoc          
        --from=latex
        --to=html
        --output=my.html


        Or shorter, but with a CSS of your own choice applied:



        pandoc          
        -f latex
        -t html
        --css=my.css
        --output=my.html





        share|improve this answer












        Pandoc is the new kid on the block if it comes to processing LaTeX input, and it is very actively developed with a new release every few weeks. (It can handle LaTeX output since its early days). It's available for Windows, and it is recent too...



        Pandoc has multiple input formats it can process:



        echo $(pandoc --list-input-formats)

        commonmark creole docbook docx epub gfm haddock html jats json latex
        markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd markdown_phpextra markdown_strict
        mediawiki muse native odt opml org rst t2t textile tikiwiki twiki vimwiki


        Each of these inputs it can convert into the following output formats:



         echo $(pandoc --list-output-formats)

        asciidoc beamer commonmark context docbook docbook4 docbook5 docx
        dokuwiki dzslides epub epub2 epub3 fb2 gfm haddock html html4 html5 icml
        jats json latex man markdown markdown_github markdown_mmd
        markdown_phpextra markdown_strict mediawiki ms muse native odt
        opendocument opml org plain pptx revealjs rst rtf s5 slideous slidy tei
        texinfo textile zimwiki


        The detailed styling of these outputs can be manipulated in appropriate ways for almost every single format: for HTML based outputs (including EPUB or Slidy, DZSlides, Slideous, Reveal.JS and S5 slideshows) you can apply CSS, for ODT or DOCX you can use a reference.docx or reference.odt to clone the styles from, for LaTeX you can customize the document template, etc.



        The way Pandoc works is very modular: It first reads each input with a specialized Reader component, converts it into its own internal format, native, and then in turn converts native to the final output using the appropriate Writer component.



        The Reader component for LaTeX is Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX. Now here is an extract of the changelog in its recently (Nov 2019) released v2.5 which proofs its active maintenance and development of the relevant component:




        Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX



        Cleaned up handling of dimension arguments. Allow decimal points, preceding space.

        Don’t allow arguments for verbatim, etc.

        Allow space before bracketed options.

        Allow optional arguments after in tables.

        Improve parsing of tiny, scriptsize, etc. Parse as raw, but know that these font changing commands take no arguments.




        I cannot comment on the scope of Pandocs reading support for specialized LaTeX features and environments though. That's up to you to decide and evaluate. Maybe, or even likely, tex4ht or HaVeA are still better. But I'm sure you already have a few LaTeX documents at hand which you can put to a test quickly:



        pandoc          
        --from=latex
        --to=html
        --output=my.html


        Or shorter, but with a CSS of your own choice applied:



        pandoc          
        -f latex
        -t html
        --css=my.css
        --output=my.html






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 14 at 22:20









        Kurt Pfeifle

        2,44421630




        2,44421630






























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