Readme for HaTeX-3.6.0.1
HaTeX ReadMe
HaTeX
is the LaTeX syntax implementation done in Haskell.
Check a list of examples of usage in the examples directory.
A good starting point may be simple.hs.
Run the script using the main
function.
Installation notes
To install HaTeX
, use cabal-install.
$ cabal update
$ cabal install HaTeX
This will install the latest official release (recommended). If you want to try a newer version, use git to clone the code contained in this repository.
$ git clone git@github.com:Daniel-Diaz/HaTeX.git
$ cd HaTeX
$ cabal install
However, note that the API may be unstable and is subject to any kind of change. The package version follows the Package Versioning Policy, so it is unlikely to suffer from API breakages if you follow it too when importing the library.
HaTeX User's Guide
The HaTeX User's Guide lives here... and is also done in Haskell! It is free source and anybody can contribute to it. Doing so, you will help current and future users!
A downloadable version (not necessarily the last version, but most likely) can be found here. To be sure that you are reading the last version, go to the github repository of the guide and follow instructions to build it. It is fairly easy.
Contributing
To contribute to HaTeX, please, visit our code repository in GitHub:
https://github.com/Daniel-Diaz/HaTeX
TODO list
- Add more examples.
- More testing on the parser (See #15).
- Add more documentation.
- BibTeX support.
Packages to be implemented
- fancyhdr
- geometry
Related projects
- TeX-my-math: Experimental library to ease the production of mathematical expressions using HaTeX.