NAME
muse-compile.pl -- format your muse document using Text::Amuse
SYNOPSIS
muse-compile.pl [ options ] file1.muse [ file2.muse , .... ]
This program uses Text::Amuse to produce usable output in HTML, EPUB, LaTeX and PDF format.
By default, all formats will be generated. You can specify which format you want using one or more of the following options:
- --html
-
Full HTML output.
- --epub
-
Full EPUB output.
- --bare-html
-
HTML body alone (wrapped in a
div
tag) - --tex
-
LaTeX output
- --zip
-
Pack the tex, the source and the html with the attachments in a zip file.
-
PDF output.
- --slides
-
PDF output. Extension is .sl.pdf and it is a Beamer PDF. File .sl.tex is left in place.
Please note that the muse file must say that the slides are required. The header for that is
#slides
set to a value other than empty,0
,no
,false
. - --sl-tex
-
Produce the beamer LaTeX file, using the same rule above.
- --a4-pdf
-
PDF imposed on A4 paper, with a variable signature in the range of 40-80
- --lt-pdf
-
As above, but on Letter paper.
- --ttdir
-
The directory with the templates. Optional and somehow discouraged for normal usage.
- --webfontsdir
-
For EPUB output, embed the fonts in that directory.
In this directory the program expects to find 4 fonts, a regular, an italic, a bold and a bold italic one. Given that the names are arbitrary, we need an hint. For this you have to provide a file, in the very same directory, with the specifications. The file must be named
spec.txt
and need the following content:E.g., for Droid fonts:
family Droid Serif regular DroidSerif-Regular.ttf italic DroidSerif-Italic.ttf bold DroidSerif-Bold.ttf bolditalic DroidSerif-Bold.ttf size 10
The four TTF files must be placed in this directory as well. The formats supported are TTF, OTF and WOFF.
The
family
andsize
specs are optional. - --output-templates
-
Option to populated the above directory with the built-in templates.
- --log <file>
-
A file where we can append the report failures
- --no-cleanup
-
Prevent the removing of the status file. This is turned on if you use --recursive, to prevent multiple runs to compile everything again.
- --extra key:value
-
This option can be repeated at will. The key/value pairs will be passed to every template we process, regardless of the type, even if only the built-in LaTeX template support them.
The input is assumed to be UTF-8 (if you pass non-ascii characters). The values, before being passed to the templates, are interpreted as Text::Amuse strings. This normally doesn't have any side effects for simple strings, while for text this has the sane behaviour to escape special characters and to permit inline markup.
Example:
muse-compile.pl --extra site=http://anarhija.net \ --extra papersize=a6 --extra division=15 --extra twoside=true \ --extra bcor=10mm --extra mainfont="Charis SIL" \ --extra sitename="Testsite" \ --extra siteslogan="Anticopyright" \ --extra logo=mylogo \ --extra cover=mycover.pdf \ --extra opening=any \ file.muse
See muse-compile.pl --help --verbose for the full description of meaning of these options.
- --recursive <directory>
-
Using this options, the target directory and a recursive compiling is started, finding all the .muse files without a newer status file, and compiling them accordingly to the options.
No target files can be specified.
- --dry-run
-
For recursive compile, you can pass this option to just list the files which would be compiled.
- --luatex
-
Use lualatex instead of xelatex.
- --purge
-
Purge old files before compiling. Not supported for recursive compilation.