Converters from LaTeX to PC Textprocessors - Overview Up to the Up to Converters from LaTeX to PC Textprocessors - Overview Switch conversion direction: Author: Wilfried Hennings (texconvfaq 'at' gmx.de), this page last updated on June 30, 2011 The url of this page is I maintain these pages because I need converters between LaTeX and PC Textprocessors for my work and I want to share the information with others who need it. Because I maintain them in my spare time (uh, what is spare time?), I can not answer individual questions. This list is as good or as bad as its support, and it needs YOUR support to update and supplement this list. Please supplement if you know more and/or better ones. There are some more converters on the CTAN sites, but the following seem to be most promising for conversion to and from the current versions of wordprocessors. Neither correctness nor completeness is guaranteed.
Word2TeX is a Word to LaTeX converter designed in order to use with. Instead of inputting LaTeX commands, you can simply use Equation Editor (or MathType) in. Translates documents to LaTeX2e, LaTeX2.09, AMS-LaTeX formats.
All opinions mentioned (if any) are my own. Please send corrections, enhancements and supplements (auch in deutscher Sprache) to the following address: texconvfaq 'at' gmx.de Note that this FAQ list contains information about converters ONLY between LaTeX and PC word processors. Converters to and from other formats may have own FAQ lists - e.g.
See the link for converters to and from HTML. For the impatient, here is a of the most recent converters. General Remarks Before looking for a converter, stop and think about a principal question: What do you want to be converted in which way? Do you want to convert the document structure, i.e. A heading should remain a heading, a list should remain a list etc., no matter how it will look like in the target format? Or do you want to convert the appearance, i.e. How it looks like, no matter how it is represented in the target format?
Or do you want a mixture of both? For using SGML as an intermediate format, you would have to specify the translation rules yourself (as far as I understood). This makes sense, and explains why different people have very different opinions about which converter best fits their needs: They simply have different demands and expectations on what should be converted and how. So, not only practically there is no converter which is good for everyone and every purpose, but this is even principally impossible because there are no well-defined requirements which a converter should meet. An additional problem is that TeX/LaTeX can be extended by an unlimited number of macros. Unless the converter contains a full-scale TeX system, it can at best support the publicly available macro commands, not the ones privately written by individual users. Practically you can expect that it supports the standard LaTeX commands and perhaps a few more widely used packages.
The only converter which uses a full-scale TeX system is TeX4ht. So keep this in mind when looking through the following list of converters, try yourself and decide what you need. There are several ways to convert. To illustrate these, let me restrict it to the Microsoft Word case: • directly type or paste LaTeX code into Word • use a Word import filter • use a Word macro: load LaTeX file as plain text, then search for LaTeX markup and replace the markup by formatting, special characters and equations. • use an external converter: • LaTeX -> RTF, then use Word's own RTF import, • LaTeX -> HTML, then use Word's internet assistant or built-in html converter, • maybe other external format(s). Yu gi oh the dawn of destiny xbox iso download. The converters being most complete and currently maintained / supported are: - a shareware LaTeX import filter for MS Word - a shareware LaTeX import filter for MS Word - a free standalone LaTeX -> RTF converter for PC, Macintosh and Unix, - a free LaTeX to html or XML converter for PC and Unix produces html which is good for loading into Word.