Formatting informationA beginner's introduction to typesetting with LATEXChapter 5 — CTAN, packages, and online helpPeter FlynnSilmaril Consultants |
Contents
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This edition of Formatting Information was prompted by the generous help I have received from TEX users too numerous to mention individually. Shortly after TUGboat published the November 2003 edition, I was reminded by a spate of email of the fragility of documentation for a system like LATEX which is constantly under development. There have been revisions to packages; issues of new distributions, new tools, and new interfaces; new books and other new documents; corrections to my own errors; suggestions for rewording; and in one or two cases mild abuse for having omitted package X which the author felt to be indispensable to users. ¶ I am grateful as always to the people who sent me corrections and suggestions for improvement. Please keep them coming: only this way can this book reflect what people want to learn. The same limitation still applies, however: no mathematics, as there are already a dozen or more excellent books on the market — as well as other online documents — dealing with mathematical typesetting in TEX and LATEX in finer and better detail than I am capable of. ¶ The structure remains the same, but I have revised and rephrased a lot of material, especially in the earlier chapters where a new user cannot be expected yet to have acquired any depth of knowledge. Many of the screenshots have been updated, and most of the examples and code fragments have been retested. ¶ As I was finishing this edition, I was asked to review an article for The PracTEX Journal, which grew out of the Practical TEX Conference in 2004. The author specifically took the writers of documentation to task for failing to explain things more clearly, and as I read more, I found myself agreeing, and resolving to clear up some specific problems areas as far as possible. It is very difficult for people who write technical documentation to remember how they struggled to learn what has now become a familiar system. So much of what we do is second nature, and a lot of it actually has nothing to do with the software, but more with the way in which we view and approach information, and the general level of knowledge of computing. If I have obscured something by making unreasonable assumptions about your knowledge, please let me know so that I can correct it. Peter Flynn is author of The HTML Handbook and Understanding SGML and XML Tools, and editor of The XML FAQ. |
This document is Copyright © 1999–2005 by Silmaril Consultants under the terms of what is now the GNU Free Documentation License (copyleft). Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled The GNU Free Documentation License. You are allowed to distribute, reproduce, and modify it without fee or further requirement for consent subject to the conditions in section D.5. The author has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this document. If you make useful modifications you are asked to inform the author so that the master copy can be updated. See the full text of the License in Appendix D. |
CHAPTER
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CTAN, packages, and online help |
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The Comprehensive TEX Archive Network (CTAN) is a repository of Web and FTP servers worldwide which contain copies of almost every piece of free software related to TEX and LATEX.
CTAN is based on three main servers, and there are several online indexes available. There are complete TEX and LATEX systems for all platforms, utilities for text and graphics processing, conversion programs into and out of LATEX, printer drivers, extra typefaces, and (possibly the most important) the LATEX packages. The three main servers are:
TEX Users Group: http://www.ctan.org/
UK TEX Users Group: http://www.tex.ac.uk/
Deutschsprachige Anwendervereinigung TEX e.V. (DANTE, the German-speaking TEX Users Group); http://dante.ctan.org/
Add-on features for LATEX are known as packages. Dozens of these are
pre-installed with LATEX and can be used in your documents
immediately. They should all be stored in subdirectories of
texmf/tex/latex
named after each package.
To find out what other packages are available and what they
do, you should use the CTAN search page which includes a
link to Graham Williams' comprehensive package
catalogue.
A package is a file or collection of files containing
extra LATEX commands and programming which add new styling
features or modify those already existing. Installed package
files all end with .sty
(there may be
ancillary files as well).
When you try to typeset a document which requires a package which is not installed on your system, LATEX will warn you with an error message that it is missing (see section 4.2.3.6), and you can then download the package and install it using the instructions in section 5.2. You can also download updates to packages you already have (both the ones that were installed along with your version of LATEX as well as ones you added).
There is no limit to the number of packages you can have installed on your computer (apart from disk space!), but there is probably a physical limit to the number that can be used inside any one LATEX document at the same time, although it depends on how big each package is. In practice there is no problem in having even a couple of dozen packages active (the style file for this document uses over 30).
To use a package already installed on your system,
insert a \usepackage
command in your
document preamble with the package name in curly braces, as
we have already seen in earlier chapters. For example, to
use the color package, which lets
you typeset in colours (I warned you this was
coming!), you would type:
\documentclass[11pt,a4paper,oneside]{report} \usepackage{color} \begin{document} ... \end{document}
You can include several package names in one
\usepackage
command by separating the
names with commas, and you can have more than one
\usepackage
command.
Some packages allow optional settings in square
brackets. If you use these, you must give the package its
own separate \usepackage
command, like
geometry shown below:
\documentclass[11pt,a4paper,oneside]{report} \usepackage{pslatex,palatino,avant,graphicx,color} \usepackage[margin=2cm]{geometry} \begin{document} \title{\color{red}Practical Typesetting} \author{\color{blue}Peter Flynn\\Silmaril Consultants} \date{\color{green}December 2005} \maketitle \end{document}
(Incidentally, this is a rather crude way to do colours in titling on a once-off basis: if it's for a repeatable style we'll see in Chapter 9 how it can be automated and kept out of the author's way.)
Many packages can have additional formatting specifications in optional arguments in square brackets, in the same way as geometry does. Read the documentation for the package concerned to find out what can be done.
Exercise 12. Add colour
Use the color package to add some colour to your document. Stick with primary colours for the moment.
Use the geometry package to change the margins.
Reprocess and print your document if you have a colour printer (monochrome printers should print it in shades of grey).
CMYK and RGB are not the only colour models. Uwe Kern's xcolor package defines half a dozen, and includes facilities for converting colour values from one model to another.
To find out what commands a package provides (and thus
how to use it), you need to read the documentation. In the
texmf/doc
subdirectory of your
installation there should be directories full of
.dvi
files, one for every package
installed. These can be previewed or printed like any other
DVI file (see
section 4.3.1). If your installation
procedure has not installed the documentation, the DVI files can all be downloaded from
CTAN.
Before using a package, you should read the documentation carefully, especially the subsection usually called ‘User Interface’, which describes the commands the package makes available. You cannot just guess and hope it will work: you have to read it and find out.
See the next section for details of how to create the
documentation .dvi
file for additional
packages you install yourself.
Exercise 13. Read all about it
Find and view (or print) the documentation on the geometry package you used in the example ‘Add colour’ in section 5.1.1.
Investigate some of the other package documentation files in the directory.
Once you have identified a package you need and haven't already got (or you have got it and need to update it), use the indexes on any CTAN server to find the package you need and the directory where it can be downloaded from.
What you need to look for is always two
files, one ending in .dtx
and the other in .ins
. The first is a
DOCTEX file, which combines the package program and its
documentation in a single file. The second is the
installation routine (much smaller). You must
always download both
files.
If the two files are not there, it means one of two things:
Either the package is part of a much larger bundle which you shouldn't normally update unless you change version of LATEX;1
or it's one of a few rare or
unusual packages still supplied as a single
.sty
file intended for the now
obsolete LATEX 2.09.2
Download both files to a temporary directory. If you use
Windows, keep a folder like C:\tmp
or
C:\temp
for this; Mac and Linux systems
already have a /tmp
directory.
color.dtx
and
color.ins
for the
color package because it
forms part of the graphics
bundle, which is installed on all LATEX systems
anyway. Such packages change very rarely, as they
form part of the core of LATEX and are very
stable. In
general you should never try to update these
packages in isolation..dtx
and
.ins
pair of files
first.There are four steps to installing a LATEX package:
Run LATEX on the .ins
file.
That is, open the file in your editor and process it as
if it were a LATEX document (which is it), or if you
prefer, type latex
followed by the
.ins
filename in a command window
in your temporary directory.
This will extract all the files needed from the
.dtx
file (which is why you must
have both of them present in the temporary directory).
Note down or print the names of the files created if
there are a lot of them (read the log file if you want
to see their names again).
Run LATEX on the .dtx
file
twice. This will create a .dvi
file
of documentation explaining what the package is for and
how to use it. Two passes through LATEX are needed in
order to resolve any internal crossreferences in the
text (a feature we'll come onto later). If you
prefer to create PDF then run
pdfLATEX instead. View or
print this file in the usual manner (see section 4.3).
While the documentation is printing, move or copy the files created in step 1 from your temporary directory to the right place[s] in your TEX local installation directory tree — always your ‘local’ directory tree, a) to prevent your new package accidentally overwriting files in the main TEX directories; and b) to avoid your newly-installed files being overwritten when you next update your version of TEX.
Type | Directory (under
texmf-local/ )
|
Description |
---|---|---|
.cls |
tex/latex/base | Document class file |
.sty |
tex/latex/packagename |
Style file: the normal package content |
.bst |
bibtex/bst/packagename |
BIBTEX style |
.mf |
fonts/source/public/typeface |
METAFONT outline |
.fd |
tex/latex/mfnfss | Font Definition files for METAFONT fonts |
.fd |
tex/latex/psnfss | Font Definition files for PostScript Type 1 fonts |
.pfb |
/fonts/type1/foundry /typeface |
PostScript Type 1 outline |
.afm |
/fonts/afm/foundry /typeface |
Adobe Font Metrics for Type 1 fonts |
.tfm |
/fonts/tfm/foundry /typeface |
TEX Font Metrics for METAFONT and Type 1 fonts |
.vf |
/fonts/vf/foundry /typeface |
TEX virtual fonts |
.dvi |
/doc | package documentation |
.pdf |
/doc | package documentation |
others | tex/latex/packagename |
other types of file unless instructed otherwise |
‘The right place’ sometimes causes
confusion, especially if your TEX installation is old
or does not conform to the TEX
Directory Structure (UNDEFINED ACRONYM). For a TDS-conformant system, this is either
a) for LATEX packages, a suitably-named
subdirectory of
texmf-local/tex/latex/
3; or b) a suitably-named subdirectory of
texmf-local/
for files like
BIBTEX styles which are not just for LATEX but can
be used in other TEX systems.
‘Suitably-named’ means sensible and
meaningful (and probably short). For a package like
paralist, for example, I'd call
the directory paralist
.
Often there is just a .sty
file
to move but in the case of complex packages there may be
more, and they may belong in different locations. For
example, new BIBTEX packages or font packages will
typically have several files to install. This is why it
is a good idea to create a subdirectory for the package
rather than dump the files into
misc
along with other unrelated
stuff.
If there are configuration or other files, read the documentation to find out if there is a special or preferred location to move them to.
Finally, run your TEX indexer program to update the package database. This program comes with every modern version of TEX and is variously called texhash, mktexlsr, or even configure, or it might just be a mouse click on a button or menu in your editor. Read the documentation that came with your installation to find out which it is.
This last step is utterly essential, otherwise nothing will work.
Exercise 14. Install a package
Download and install the paralist package (which implements inline lists).
The reason this process has not been automated widely is that there are still thousands of installations which do not conform to the TDS, such as old shared Unix systems and some Microsoft Windows systems, so there is no way for an installation program to guess where to put the files: you have to know this. There are also systems where the owner, user, or installer has chosen not to follow the recommended TDS directory structure, or is unable to do so for political or security reasons (such as a shared system where she cannot write to a protected directory).
The reason for having the
texmf-local
directory (called
texmf.local
on some systems) is to
provide a place for local modifications or personal updates,
especially if you are a user on a shared or managed system
(Unix, Linux, VMS, Windows NT/2000/XP, etc.) where you may
not have write-access to the main TEX
installation directory tree. You can also have a personal
texmf
subdirectory in your own login
directory. Your installation must be configured to look in
these directories first, however, so that any updates to
standard packages will be found there
before the superseded copies in the
main texmf
tree. All modern TEX
installations should do this anyway, but if not, you can
edit texmf/web2c/texmf.cnf
yourself.
There is an example in this appendix.
The TEX Directory
Structure (TDS) is documented at http://www.tug.org/tds/. I find it useful to
make the directory structure of
texmf-local
the same as that of
texmf
. Examine the subdirectories of
texmf/tex/latex/
for examples. For
updates of packages which came with your LATEX
distribution (as distinct from new ones you are adding
yourself), you can then use the same subdirectory name and
position in texmf-local/...
as the
original used in texmf/...
.
If you want to create the entire subdirectory structure ready for use, you can do it under Unix with the following commands:
cd /usr/TeX/texmf find . -type d -exec mkdir -p /usr/TeX/texmf-local/{} \;
If you are using Microsoft Windows, you can download
Cygwin, which provides you with
the standard Unix tools in a shell window. The above command
should also work on a Mac running OS X. In all cases,
if your installation directory is not
/usr/TeX
, you need to substitute the
actual paths to your texmf
and
texmf-local
directories.
The indexes and documentation files on CTAN are the primary online resource for self-help on specific packages, and you should read these carefully before asking questions about packages.
For general queries you should read the Frequently-Asked Questions (FAQ) document so that you avoid wasting online time asking about things for which there is already an easily-accessible answer.
The FAQ is managed by the UK TEX Users Group and can be found at http://www.tex.ac.uk/faq/ .
Another support resource is the mailing list texhax@tug.org. Again, feel free to ask questions, but again, try to answer the question yourself first (and say what you've tried in your message).
The TEX Users Group, as well as most local user groups, maintains a web site (http://www.tug.org) with lots of information about various aspects of the TEX system. See this appendix for information on joining TUG.
The Usenet newsgroup comp.text.tex is the principal forum for other questions and answers about LATEX. Feel free to ask questions, but please do not ask frequently-asked questions: read the FAQ instead. The people who answer the questions do so voluntarily, unpaid, and in their own time, so please don't treat this as a commercial support service.
To access Usenet news, type the following URI into your browser's
‘Location’ or
‘Address’ window:
news:comp.text.tex
(if your browser
doesn't support Usenet news properly, change it for one
that does, like Mozilla), or download one of the many free newsreaders.4