2023-11-18 01:26:09 +01:00

3.1 KiB

@slide(layout=chapter-slide)

@number 0

@title First steps with LATEX

@content In order to compile the script for this tutorial, a few steps have to be followed, which are explained in the next slides.

@slide(layout=content-only)

@title Digression: Opening a command prompt

@content

  • For the following tasks, we are going to need a command prompt

  • It can be opened in different ways, depending on your operating system

  • Windows: Press the Windows key and type in cmd, press Enter

  • MacOS: Press the Command key and the space bar simultaneously, then type in Terminal and double click on Terminal

  • Linux: Press Ctrl + Alt + T

@slide(layout=content-only)

@title Installing the compiler

@content

  • The compiler translates our LATEX code into a PDF
  • Depending on your operating system, different compilers are available
  • Windows: MikTEX
  • macOS: MacTEX
  • Linux distributions: TEXLive
    • Debian-based distributions: run sudo apt install texlive-full
    • other distributions: see the TEXLive website
Make sure to install the full version with all packages, if you can!

@slide(layout=content-only)

@title Installing the editor

@content

  • An editor can downloaded once the compiler has been installed
  • For editing LaTeX documents, any text editor works fine, e.g., Notepad++, VSCode
  • For beginners, TEXstudio is recommended due to its LaTeX-specific features
  • Download and install TEXstudio

@slide(layout=content-only) @title Compile the script for the first time

@content

  • Download the project archive from the VC.
  • Unzip the archive.
  • Open the file main-exercises.tex in TEXstudio. It is located in the root directory of the archive.
  • Compile main-exercises.tex by pressing
  • A few new files will be generated by the compilation.
Windows users: In order to enable file endings, click the view tab in the file explorer, and select *file name extensions*. This helps differentiating the different ``main`` files.