TeX - LaTeX Asked by user50492 on May 31, 2021
I collaboratively edit documents in Google Docs. Unfortunately, there are no LaTeX macros/wrappers I know of for Google Docs. So, editing a TeX file on Google Docs is like going back to the old days when you had to edit LaTeX in plan text.
Does anybody know of a LaTeX wrapper for Google Docs/Drive?
Unfortunately, LaTeX Lab has been declared deprecated by its developers. This seems to be a results of Google's massive API changes in recent versions of Google Docs. There is a vast number of LaTeX-Lab-like wrappers for Google Docs whose developments has ceased due to that fact.
If you want to have integration with Google Docs you may want to use LaTeX Lab (offline). From the Google Code project site:
LaTeX Lab is deprecated
LaTeX Lab is an open source implementation of a web based LaTeX editor for Google Docs.
Some other popular online editors are:
Answered by Henri Menke on May 31, 2021
As of September 2019 the site is not reachable anymore (the name does not exist: https://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/weavr.co.uk)
Following from the @aaron terse answer, I have been using http://weavr.co.uk/...
Pros
Cons
Answered by neilireson on May 31, 2021
For all math equations typeset in MathJax/LaTeX, the Auto-Latex Equations add-on for Google Docs is free and works brilliantly. It simply replaces all your math with high-quality images of the equation.
All you have to do is type an equation within delimiters, like $$55 + sqrt{5}$$ and it can be rendered in super high quality at whatever time you like by rendering all the equations in your document. If you mess up, you can always undo one or all the equations.
You can get it for free at the Google Docs add-ons store.
Answered by John Targaryen on May 31, 2021
Also check out Authorea. From what I understand it is similar to Overleaf and ShareLatex mentioned by @HenriMenke above.
Answered by champost on May 31, 2021
I love Weavr, and use it extensively. However, in Ubuntu 14.04, if you have fully working texlive installation, you can also "roll your own" so to speak by using a script. Mine, which I called "glatex.sh", looks like this:
#!/bin/bash
wget -O $2.tex "https://docs.google.com/document/export?format=txt&id=$1";
bom-remove.sh $2.tex;
latexmk -pdf -f -interaction=nonstopmode $2.tex;
xdg-open $2.pdf
The bom-romove script is set out in this post bom_remover It is necessary because gdocs downloads with a "bom" included, which LaTeX will choke on.
Make both bom-remove script and glatex script executable (chmod +), and then either put them both in /usr/local/bin or put an alias to each there.
To use: a) Make a google doc, share it as a link and copy the link id b)on the command line, type your script's name, the link id, and a name for your local file, then Enter
This will then download the google doc, name it and compile it as tex file, produce a like named pdf file and then pop up evince with the pdf loaded. To refresh when the google doc is changed run the script again.
Credit for the idea goes to Using GoogleDocs as Team editor for Latex-files
For those who might want to use a "beeline reader" effect, I adapted @phg's solution which is in LuaLaTeX. To do this I made 4 bash script files, two for black/red/blue beeline, and 2 for just black.
The reason for the black script files is that the header cannot be in the LuaLaTeX file containing the text, your header has to be set out in a separate document that calls "beegradients.tex" which I wrote into the bash script files texscript.sh (black) and color-texscript.sh (red/black/blue). These have to be used with glatex-beeline.sh and color-glatex-beeline.sh in order to work. If I didn't make a black color version of the files, I would have to cut and paste the header from color-texscript.sh to my document in order to allow it to compile. It seemed easier to just make a "beelines" version in black instead.
Please note that for some reason I had to make links to beegradients.lua and beegradients.tex and those links had to be present in my compilation directory.
To create "beelines" pdf's make sure all the *.sh files are in a system wide directory, (eg, /usr/local/bin), fire up your terminal type
color-glatex-beeline.sh <google doc id> <any-filename-you-want> (for red/black/blue text)
and it will produce a *.tex and a *.pdf and then pop up the pdf in evince pdf viewer.
For the black version of the same document do the same thing using glatex-beeline.sh
I have only tested this on Linux.
The scripts are set up expecting a file named "abbrev.tex" containing "abbrevs" package abbreviations. The
letmaybe@space@xspace
corrects for a bug that mis-spaces commas after abbreviations. LuaLaTeX complains about this, but I don't know what to do about that.
Answered by A Feldman on May 31, 2021
The g(math) plug-in works really well for me.
It has a simple interface where you can enter some LaTeX code and then insert it as an image into your Google Doc. This with suggestive formatting makes adding LaTeX to your Google Doc a breeze.
Answered by CGTheLegend on May 31, 2021
Disclaimer: This is official account of Docx2LaTeX
We have just launched a Google Docs-add on which combines power of LaTeX and ease of a word processors and cross-referencing too.
Here are features provided by Docx2Latex add-On
Add-On Link: Docx2Latex Google Docs Add-on
Watch Demo: Short Demo
Answered by Docx2Latex on May 31, 2021
As of Oct 2019, Google's new equation editor (Insert -> Equation) supports rudimentary LaTeX commands, for e.g., _ (underscore) will get you to subscript mode, sum gets converted to summation sign etc. This was good enough for me.
Answered by Samik R on May 31, 2021
Exist also EquatIO - Math made digital, from Chrome web store, where it is possible to create easily mathematical equations, formulas and quizzes.
I remember that EquatIO it is free for 30 days, with unlimited access to all features. After this time it requires a licensing subscription.
For Google Suite there is also Math Equations
Answered by Sebastiano on May 31, 2021
I also like the idea to work collaboratively using LaTeX using web resource. I do not think you can do much with GoogleDoc - you need to redo a lot in Google doc to create an article.
However, you can also use HandWiki (https://handwiki.org). It's a wiki, similar to Wikipedia, but you can export your wiki to a Latex documents (including equations, figures, tables and even BibTeX citations)
Answered by W.Wolver on May 31, 2021
I wrote a Google Docs add-on called Articul8. It allows you to incorporate LaTeX equations into your Google Doc, as well as to export the document to TeX (images included, cross-references intact). You can render the document locally or upload to an online service (e.g. Overleaf).
I'd be very happy to hear how this works out for people, and for any suggestions!
Answered by Yuval on May 31, 2021
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