detex man page on Kali

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   9211 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
Kali logo
[printable version]

DETEX(1)							      DETEX(1)

NAME
       detex - a filter to strip TeX commands from a .tex file.

SYNOPSIS
       detex [ -clnstw ] [ -e environment-list ] [ filename[.tex] ... ]

DESCRIPTION
       Detex  (Version	2.6) reads each file in sequence, removes all comments
       and TeX control sequences and writes the remainder on the standard out‐
       put.   All  text in math mode and display mode is removed.  By default,
       detex follows \input commands.  If a file cannot be opened,  a  warning
       message	is  printed  and  the command is ignored.  If the -n option is
       used, no \input or \include commands will be  processed.	  This	allows
       single file processing.	If no input file is given on the command line,
       detex reads from standard input.

       If the magic sequence ``\begin{document}'' appears in the  text,	 detex
       assumes it is dealing with LaTeX source and detex recognizes additional
       constructs used in LaTeX.  These include the \include and  \includeonly
       commands.   The	-l  option  can be used to force LaTeX mode and the -t
       option can be used to force TeX mode regardless of input content.

       Text in various environment modes of LaTeX  is  ignored.	  The  default
       modes are array, eqnarray, equation, figure, mathmatica, picture, table
       and verbatim.  The -e option can be used to specify a  comma  separated
       environment-list	 of  environments  to  ignore.	 The list replaces the
       defaults so specifying an empty list effectively causes no environments
       to be ignored.

       The  -c	option	can be used in LaTeX mode to have detex echo the argu‐
       ments to \cite, \ref, and \pageref macros.  This	 can  be  useful  when
       sending the output to a style checker.

       Detex  assumes  the  standard character classes are being used for TeX.
       Detex allows white space between control sequences and magic characters
       like `{' when recognizing things like LaTeX environments.

       If  the -w flag is given, the output is a word list, one `word' (string
       of two or more letters and apostrophes beginning	 with  a  letter)  per
       line,  and all other characters ignored.	 Without -w the output follows
       the original, with the deletions mentioned above.   Newline  characters
       are  preserved  where  possible	so  that the lines of output match the
       input as closely as possible.

       The TEXINPUTS environment variable is used to find \input and  \include
       files.	Like  TeX,  it	interprets  a  leading	or trailing `:' as the
       default TEXINPUTS.  It does not support the  `//'  directory  expansion
       magic sequence.

       Detex  now handles the basic TeX ligatures as a special case, replacing
       the ligatures with acceptable charater  substitutes.   This  eliminates
       spelling	 errors introduced by merely removing them.  The ligatures are
       \aa, \ae, \oe, \ss, \o, \l (and	their  upper-case  equivalents).   The
       special	"dotless"  characters \i and \j are also replaced with i and j
       respectively.

       Note that previous versions of detex would  replace  control  sequences
       with  a	space  character to prevent words from running together.  How‐
       ever, this caused accents in the middle of words to break words, gener‐
       ating  "spelling	 errors"  that were not desirable.  Therefore, the new
       version merely removes these accents.  The  old	functionality  can  be
       essentially duplicated by using the -s option.

SEE ALSO
       tex(1L)

DIAGNOSTICS
       Nesting	of  \input  is allowed but the number of opened files must not
       exceed the system's limit on the number of simultaneously opened files.
       Detex  ignores  unrecognized option characters after printing a warning
       message.

AUTHOR
       Daniel Trinkle, Computer Science Department, Purdue University

BUGS
       Detex is not a complete TeX interpreter, so it can be confused by  some
       constructs.  Most errors result in too much rather than too little out‐
       put.

       Running LaTeX source without a ``\begin{document}'' through  detex  may
       produce errors.

       Suggestions for improvements are (mildly) encouraged.

Purdue University		12 August 1993			      DETEX(1)
[top]

List of man pages available for Kali

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net