NAME
Template::Plugin::Latex - Template Toolkit plugin for Latex
VERSION
This documentation refers to Template::Plugin::Latex
version 3.12
SYNOPSIS
Sample Template Toolkit code:
[%- USE Latex;
mystr = "a, b & c" | latex_encode;
FILTER latex("pdf"); -%]
\documentclass{article}
\begin{document}
This is a PDF document generated by
LaTeX and the Template Toolkit, with some
interpolated data: [% mystr %]
\end{document}
[% END; -%]
DESCRIPTION
The Latex
Template Toolkit plugin provides a latex
filter that allows the use of LaTeX to generate PDF, PostScript and DVI output files from the Template Toolkit. The plugin uses LaTeX::Driver to run the various LaTeX programs.
Processing of the LaTeX document takes place in a temporary directory that is deleted once processing is complete. The standard LaTeX programs (latex
or pdflatex
, bibtex
and makeindex
) are run and re-run as necessary until all references, indexes, bibliographies, table of contents, and lists of figures and tables are stable or it is apparent that they will not stabilize. The format converters dvips
, dvipdf
, ps2pdf
and pdf2ps
are run as necessary to convert the output document to the requested format. The TEXINPUTS
environment variable is set up to include the template directory and the INCLUDES
directories, so that LaTeX file inclusion commands should find the intended files.
The output of the filter is binary data (although PDF and PostScript are not stictly binary). You should be careful not to prepend or append any extraneous characters (even space characters) or text outside the FILTER block as this text will be included in the file output. Notice in the example below how we use the post-chomp flags ('-') at the end of the USE
and END
directives to remove the trailing newline characters:
[% USE Latex(format='pdf') -%]
[% FILTER latex %]
...LaTeX document...
[% END -%]
If you're redirecting the output to a file via the third argument of the Template module's process()
method then you should also pass the binmode
parameter, set to a true value to indicate that it is a binary file.
use Template;
my $tt = Template->new({
INCLUDE_PATH => '/path/to/templates',
OUTPUT_PATH => '/path/to/pdf/output',
});
my $vars = {
title => 'Hello World',
}
$tt->process('example.tt2', $vars, 'example.pdf', binmode => 1)
|| die $tt->error();
If you want to capture the output to a template variable, you can do so like this:
[% output = FILTER latex %]
...LaTeX document...
[% END %]
You can pass additional arguments when you invoke the filter, for example to specify the output format.
[% FILTER latex(format='pdf') -%]
...LaTeX document...
[% END %]
If you want to write the output to a file then you can specify an output
parameter.
[% FILTER latex(output='example.pdf') %]
...LaTeX document...
[% END %]
If you don't explicitly specify an output format then the filename extension (e.g. 'pdf' in the above example) will be used to determine the correct format.
You can specify a different filter name using the filter
parameter.
[% USE Latex(filter='pdf') -%]
[% FILTER pdf %]
...LaTeX document...
[% END %]
You can also specify the default output format. This value can be latex
, pdf
or dvi
.
[% USE Latex(format='pdf') %]
Note: the LaTeX::Driver
distribution includes three filter programs (latex2dvi
, latex2pdf
and latex2ps
) that use the LaTeX::Driver
package to process LaTeX source data into DVI, PDF or PostScript file respectively. These programs have a -tt2
option to run their input through the Template Toolkit before processing as LaTeX source. The programs do not use the Latex
plugin unless the template requests it, but they may provide an alternative way of processing Template Toolkit templates to generate typeset output.
SUBROUTINES/METHODS
USE Latex(options)
This statement loads the plugin (note that prior to version 2.15 the filter was built in to Template Toolkit so this statement was unnecessary; it is now required).
The latex
Filter
The latex
filter accepts a number of options, which may be specified on the USE statement or on the filter invocation.
format
-
specifies the format of the output; one of
dvi
(TeX device independent format),ps
(PostScript) orpdf
(Adobe Portable Document Format). The follow special values are also accepted:pdf(ps)
(generates PDF via PostScript, usingdvips
andps2pdf
),pdf(dvi)
(generates PDF via dvi, usingdvipdfm
) output
-
the name of the output file, or just the output format
indexstyle
-
the name of the
makeindex
style file to use (this is passed with the-s
option tomakeindex
) indexoptions
-
options to be passed to
makeindex
. Useful options are-l
for letter ordering of index terms (rather than the default word ordering),-r
to disable implicit page range formation, and-c
to compress intermediate blanks in index keys. Refer to makeindex(1) for full details. maxruns
-
The maximum number of runs of the formatter program (defaults to 10).
extraruns
-
The number of additional runs of the formatter program after it seems that the formatting of the document has stabilized (default 0). Note that the setting of
maxruns
takes precedence, so ifmaxruns
is set to 10 andextraruns
is set to 3, and formatting stabilizes after 8 runs then only 2 extra runs will be performed.
The latex_encode
filter
The latex_encode
filter encodes LaTeX special characters in its input into their LaTeX encoded representations. It also encodes other characters that have
The special characters are: \
(command character), {
(open group), }
(end group), &
(table column separator), #
(parameter specifier), %
(comment character), _
(subscript), ^
(superscript), ~
(non-breakable space), $
(mathematics mode).
except
-
Lists the characters that should be excluded from encoding. By default no special characters are excluded, but it may be useful to specify
except = "\\{}"
to allow the input string to contain LaTeX commands such as"this is \textbf{bold} text"
. use_textcomp
-
By default the
latex_encode
filter will encode characters with the encodings provided by thetextcomp
LaTeX package (for example the Pounds Sterling symbol is encoded as\textsterling{}
). Settinguse_textcomp = 0
turns off these encodings.
table()
The table()
function provides an interface to the LaTeX::Table
module.
The following example shows how a simple table can be set up.
[%- USE Latex;
data = [ [ 'London', 'United Kingdom' ],
[ 'Berlin', 'Germany' ],
[ 'Paris', 'France' ],
[ 'Washington', 'USA' ] ] );
text = Latex.table( caption = 'Capitol Cities',
label = 'table:capitols',
headings = [ [ 'City', 'Country' ] ],
data = data );
-%]
The variable text
will hold the LaTeX commands to typeset the table and can be further interpolated into a LaTeX document template.
DIAGNOSTICS
Most failures result from invalid LaTeX input and are propagated up from LaTeX::Driver, LaTeX::Encode or LaTeX::Table.
Failures detected in this module include:
OUTPUT_PATH is not set
-
an output filename was specified but the
OUTPUT_PATH
configuration option has not been set.
DEPENDENCIES
- Template
-
The Template Toolkit.
- LaTeX::Driver
-
Provides the logic for driving the LaTeX programs.
- LaTeX::Encode
-
Underpins the
latex_encode
filter. - LaTeX::Table
-
Underpins the
table
function.
INCOMPATIBILITIES
The latex
filter was distributed as part of the core Template Toolkit distribution until version 2.15 (released in May 2006), when it was moved into the separate Template-Latex distribution. The Latex
plugin must now be explicitly to enable the latex
filter.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
The paths to the latex, pdflatex and dvips should be pre-defined as part of the installation process of LaTeX::Driver (i.e. when you run perl Makefile.PL
for that package). Alternative values can be specified from Perl code using the program_path
class method from that package, but there are deliberately no options to specify these paths from TT code.
AUTHOR
Andrew Ford <a.ford@ford-mason.co.uk> (current maintainer)
Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org> http://wardley.org/
The original Latex plugin on which this is based was written by Craig Barratt with additions for Win32 by Richard Tietjen. The code has subsequently been radically refactored by Andrew Ford.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1996-2006 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright (C) 2006-2014 Andrew Ford. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright (C) 2014-2016 Chris Travers. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO
Template, LaTeX::Driver, LaTeX::Table, LaTeX::Encode
latex2dvi(1), latex2pdf(1) and latex2ps(1) (part of the LaTeX::Driver
distribution)