From b86df4b1fa657c359a0ceca160c801c0c486cb33 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Blendoit Date: Sat, 12 Sep 2020 13:21:50 -0700 Subject: org-latex-pdf-process in literate config file. --- blendoit/blendoit-init.org | 43 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------ blendoit/blendoit-init.pdf | Bin 118502 -> 120207 bytes 2 files changed, 31 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) (limited to 'blendoit') diff --git a/blendoit/blendoit-init.org b/blendoit/blendoit-init.org index 8422964..aadb00c 100644 --- a/blendoit/blendoit-init.org +++ b/blendoit/blendoit-init.org @@ -7,18 +7,16 @@ #+INCLUDE: ~/.emacs.d/templates/documents/general.org_title #+LATEX: \begin{abstract} -GNU Emacs is most often used as a text editor. -The utmost level of customization is afforded by enabling the user -to rewrite \textit{any} part of the source code and observe the editor's -modified behaviour in real time. Since its inception in 1984, GNU Emacs -has grown to be much more than a full-featured, high-productivity -text editor---new \textit{modes} have been written to interact with -hundreds of file formats, including \texttt{.txt}, \texttt{.pdf}, -\texttt{.jpg}, \texttt{.csv}, and \texttt{.zip} just to name a few. -This configuration file itself was written in \textit{Org mode}, -a collection of functions enabling the harmonious mixing of code -and comments in view of publication: -this is the endgame of \textit{literate programming}. +GNU Emacs is most often used as a text editor. The utmost level of +customization is afforded by enabling the user to rewrite \textit{any} part of +the source code and observe the editor's modified behaviour in real time. Since +its inception in 1984, GNU Emacs has grown to be much more than a +full-featured, high-productivity text editor---new \textit{modes} have been +written to interact with hundreds of file formats, including \texttt{.txt}, +\texttt{.pdf}, \texttt{.jpg}, \texttt{.csv}, and \texttt{.zip} just to name a +few. This configuration file itself was written in \textit{Org mode}, a +collection of functions enabling the harmonious mixing of code and comments in +view of publication: this is the endgame of \textit{literate programming}. #+LATEX: \end{abstract} * Introduction @@ -390,6 +388,27 @@ format: *** LaTeX export +We'll be compiling our documents with LuaTeX. This will afford us some +future-proofing, since it was designated as the successor to pdfTeX by the +latter's creators. + +First, we define the command executed when an Org file is exported to +LaTeX. We'll use =latexmk=, the Perl script which automagically runs binaries +related to LaTeX in the correct order and the right amount of times. + +Options and why we need them: +- ~-shell-excape~ :: required by minted to color source blocks +- ~-pdflatex=lualatex~ :: we use lualatex to generate our PDF +- ~-interaction=nonstopmode~ :: go as far as possible without prompting user + for input + +#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (setq org-latex-pdf-process + '("latexmk -pdf -f \ + -pdflatex=lualatex -shell-escape \ + -interaction=nonstopmode -outdir=%o %f")) +#+END_SRC + We customize the format for org time stamps to make them pop in our exported LaTeX documents. diff --git a/blendoit/blendoit-init.pdf b/blendoit/blendoit-init.pdf index 1f28bb5..cbea260 100644 Binary files a/blendoit/blendoit-init.pdf and b/blendoit/blendoit-init.pdf differ -- cgit v1.2.3