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Texstudio pdf viewer
Texstudio pdf viewer









I’m also a fan of automatic compilation, without having to trigger it with a specific key. Having said that, building from the editor can be a bit cumbersome and information sometimes gets lost. TeXstudio has a pretty decent build system, which supports multiple compilers and all the LaTeX tricks (index, bibliography etc.), including performing multiple runs when needed. Menu for basic formatiing can be handy if you’re new to LaTeX or coming back to it after a while as well. TeXstudio also bundles a standard spellchecker as well as basic syntax highlighting and autocompletion.

texstudio pdf viewer

It’s not perfect, but it lets you set up the editor to resemble IntelliJ IDEA well enough. The feature I like the most is the keyboard shortcuts – TeXstudio comes with a sensible set of defaults not too different from major Java IDEs, and allows for customization of many shortcuts as well. It’s cross-platform (Windows, Unix/Linux, BSD and OS X), open-source (GPL v2), and reasonably convenient to use. The best LaTeX editor I could find is TeXstudio. Their development is also not very active, which can cause problems when updating your IDE, and that’s just the kind of problems I don’t want to deal with. While (La)TeX plugins exist for both IntelliJ IDEA and NetBeans, they’re not very good.

texstudio pdf viewer

#TEXSTUDIO PDF VIEWER SOFTWARE#

Being a software developer, my ideal solution would be an IDE I’m used to from my day-to-day development, such as IntelliJ IDEA or NetBeans. Having a flexible editor that you feel comfortable with is important. I tried many different tools in my search for a stack that works on multiple platforms (I develop on Linux and OS X) and minimizes distractions from the content, which is what really matters. That takes a lot of time and in order to use it efficiently, you need a good environment for LaTeX development. Over the years, I wrote several hundred pages in LaTeX.









Texstudio pdf viewer