• TexLive vs pdf

    From Jeff Barnett@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 27 00:51:51 2024
    sorry if I'm asking my questions in the wrong forum; if that's the case,
    please redirect me to the right place.

    I'm in the process of building new Windows 11 machines after running
    Windows 7 for about a decade. I installed MiXTeX on a new machine and
    was delighted to see that it included the TexLive editor which I have
    heard of but never used. So I tried a few line example and ran PDFLaTeX
    on it - TexLive picked up the MiXTeX compiler without any real assist
    from me. I displayed the output file then typed control-p at which time
    I was told that the TexLive viewer wasn't clever enough to print and I
    was offered a choice to use the machine (Windows) default viewer.

    Since my default, was the Adobe Reader, that choice would have the
    undesirable effect of locking the file so I could not recompile until I remembered to quit Adobe. I downloaded the Sumatra PDF program which
    more gently interacts with TeX-based systems, made it my default PDF
    handler, recompiled my example, tried to print the PDF output, got the
    same message and elected to "use the Windows default program (= Sumatra
    at this point). Happily, it printed.

    For reasons not germane to my problem, I need to have the default PDF
    handler set to The Adobe Reader. So I switched that default back to
    Adobe after closing TexLive. Next, I repeated the process of using
    TexLive to to compile my test file and display the PDF output. The only
    thing in TexLive's memory was that it was supposed to use the default
    PDF handler. Since that was now, Adobe, that's what it used. The fact
    that it was set to Sumatra the last time through was forgotten.

    So my question is obvious after this lengthy description: How do I tell
    TexLive to use Sumatra in a way that the choice will be remembered?
    --
    Jeff Barnett

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jeff Barnett@21:1/5 to Jeff Barnett on Wed Nov 27 01:07:32 2024
    On 11/27/2024 12:51 AM, Jeff Barnett wrote:

    Whoops! I meant Tex Works, not TexLive.

    sorry if I'm asking my questions in the wrong forum; if that's the case, please redirect me to the right place.

    I'm in the process of building new Windows 11 machines after running
    Windows 7 for about a decade. I installed MiXTeX on a new machine and
    was delighted to see that it included the TexLive editor which I have
    heard of but never used. So I tried a few line example and ran PDFLaTeX
    on it - TexLive picked up the MiXTeX compiler without any real assist
    from me. I displayed the output file then typed control-p at which time
    I was told that the TexLive viewer wasn't clever enough to print and I
    was offered a choice to use the machine (Windows) default viewer.

    Since my default, was the Adobe Reader, that choice would have the undesirable effect of locking the file so I could not recompile until I remembered to quit Adobe. I downloaded the Sumatra PDF program which
    more gently interacts with TeX-based systems, made it my default PDF
    handler, recompiled my example, tried to print the PDF output, got the
    same message and elected to "use the Windows default program (= Sumatra
    at this point). Happily, it printed.

    For reasons not germane to my problem, I need to have the default PDF
    handler set to The Adobe Reader. So I switched that default back to
    Adobe after closing TexLive. Next, I repeated the process of using
    TexLive to to compile my test file and display the PDF output. The only
    thing in TexLive's memory was that it was supposed to use the default
    PDF handler. Since that was now, Adobe, that's what it used. The fact
    that it was set to Sumatra the last time through was forgotten.

    So my question is obvious after this lengthy description: How do I tell TexLive to use Sumatra in a way that the choice will be remembered?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Holger Schieferdecker@21:1/5 to All on Thu Nov 28 10:15:26 2024
    I'm not familiar with TeXworks. In the settings I didn't find an option
    to configure an external viewer.

    Does it help if you open your PDF document with Sumatra before working
    with TeXworks?

    You could also switch to another editor like TeXstudio or TeXnicCenter.

    TeXstudio[1] features an integrated PDF viewer, but can also be
    configured to use an external one like Sumatra. It is under active
    development.

    The development of TeXnicCenter[2] more or less stopped, but I use it
    without problems. It can also be configured to work with Sumatra.

    Holger

    [1] https://www.texstudio.org/
    [2] https://www.texniccenter.org/


    Am 27.11.2024 um 08:51 schrieb Jeff Barnett:
    sorry if I'm asking my questions in the wrong forum; if that's the case, please redirect me to the right place.

    I'm in the process of building new Windows 11 machines after running
    Windows 7 for about a decade. I installed MiXTeX on a new machine and
    was delighted to see that it included the TexLive editor which I have
    heard of but never used. So I tried a few line example and ran PDFLaTeX
    on it - TexLive picked up the MiXTeX compiler without any real assist
    from me. I displayed the output file then typed control-p at which time
    I was told that the TexLive viewer wasn't clever enough to print and I
    was offered a choice to use the machine (Windows) default viewer.

    Since my default, was the Adobe Reader, that choice would have the undesirable effect of locking the file so I could not recompile until I remembered to quit Adobe. I downloaded the Sumatra PDF program which
    more gently interacts with TeX-based systems, made it my default PDF
    handler, recompiled my example, tried to print the PDF output, got the
    same message and elected to "use the Windows default program (= Sumatra
    at this point). Happily, it printed.

    For reasons not germane to my problem, I need to have the default PDF
    handler set to The Adobe Reader. So I switched that default back to
    Adobe after closing TexLive. Next, I repeated the process of using
    TexLive to to compile my test file and display the PDF output. The only
    thing in TexLive's memory was that it was supposed to use the default
    PDF handler. Since that was now, Adobe, that's what it used. The fact
    that it was set to Sumatra the last time through was forgotten.

    So my question is obvious after this lengthy description: How do I tell TexLive to use Sumatra in a way that the choice will be remembered?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jeff Barnett@21:1/5 to Holger Schieferdecker on Thu Nov 28 11:22:05 2024
    The only problem with the TeXworks PDF display app is that it can't
    print! Thanks for you suggestions - I'll take a look at them to see if
    they are useful.
    Jeff

    On 11/28/2024 2:15 AM, Holger Schieferdecker wrote:
    I'm not familiar with TeXworks. In the settings I didn't find an option
    to configure an external viewer.

    Does it help if you open your PDF document with Sumatra before working
    with TeXworks?

    You could also switch to another editor like TeXstudio or TeXnicCenter.

    TeXstudio[1] features an integrated PDF viewer, but can also be
    configured to use an external one like Sumatra. It is under active development.

    The development of TeXnicCenter[2] more or less stopped, but I use it
    without problems. It can also be configured to work with Sumatra.

    Holger

    [1] https://www.texstudio.org/
    [2] https://www.texniccenter.org/


    Am 27.11.2024 um 08:51 schrieb Jeff Barnett:
    sorry if I'm asking my questions in the wrong forum; if that's the
    case, please redirect me to the right place.

    I'm in the process of building new Windows 11 machines after running
    Windows 7 for about a decade. I installed MiXTeX on a new machine and
    was delighted to see that it included the TexLive editor which I have
    heard of but never used. So I tried a few line example and ran
    PDFLaTeX on it - TexLive picked up the MiXTeX compiler without any
    real assist from me. I displayed the output file then typed control-p
    at which time I was told that the TexLive viewer wasn't clever enough
    to print and I was offered a choice to use the machine (Windows)
    default viewer.

    Since my default, was the Adobe Reader, that choice would have the
    undesirable effect of locking the file so I could not recompile until
    I remembered to quit Adobe. I downloaded the Sumatra PDF program which
    more gently interacts with TeX-based systems, made it my default PDF
    handler, recompiled my example, tried to print the PDF output, got the
    same message and elected to "use the Windows default program (=
    Sumatra at this point). Happily, it printed.

    For reasons not germane to my problem, I need to have the default PDF
    handler set to The Adobe Reader. So I switched that default back to
    Adobe after closing TexLive. Next, I repeated the process of using
    TexLive to to compile my test file and display the PDF output. The
    only thing in TexLive's memory was that it was supposed to use the
    default PDF handler. Since that was now, Adobe, that's what it used.
    The fact that it was set to Sumatra the last time through was forgotten.

    So my question is obvious after this lengthy description: How do I
    tell TexLive to use Sumatra in a way that the choice will be remembered?


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Flynn@21:1/5 to Jeff Barnett on Sat Nov 30 22:02:27 2024
    On 27/11/2024 08:07, Jeff Barnett wrote:
    On 11/27/2024 12:51 AM, Jeff Barnett wrote:

    Whoops! I meant Tex Works, not TexLive.

    So my question is obvious after this lengthy description: How do I
    tell TexWorks to use Sumatra in a way that the choice will be
    remembered?

    I think this is a question for the TeXWorks people.

    Peter

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)