I just checked that, but this is not quite what I expected, the script seems only to run latex+bibtex, and it did not create the table of contents properly, so this is not the equivalent of the texify command, I'm afraid.
Thank you very much for your help here, the function of that option was not very clear to me before :-)___________________________http://fmeneguzzi.blogspot.com
Message: 2
Date: Thu, 12 Feb 2009 14:22:15 +0100
From: Pierre Riteau <pierre.riteau@gmail.com>
Subject: [TxMt] Re: "Texify" script in LaTeX bundle
To: TextMate users <textmate@lists.macromates.com>
Message-ID: <2C5EA38A-66B4-4B98-B662-7E2E8DF21C91@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed; delsp=yes
On 12 f?vr. 09, at 14:04, Felipe Rech Meneguzzi wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I've searched the texmate documentation for the latex bunde and
> then list archive but did not find any query towards this
> functionality, so I am posting my suggestion here.
> I've recently moved to the mac from working in windows and was
> quickly convinced by a friend to use textmate both for programming
> and LaTeX editing. In the LaTeX department, I have noticed that
> there is no shortcut to execute this sequence of commands: latex +
> bibtex + latex + latex. In the windows incarnation of LaTeX, mikTeX
> has an executable that does this, but I believe this is easily done
> by a script under MacOS. It would not be extremely hard to create a
> script to do this, and smart it up by checking for the existence of
> a bbl file and comparing its date with the source files in a
> textmate project and decide on the most efficient sequence of
> commands.
> I would greatly appreciate it if (assuming people liked the idea,
> of course) someone with more experience in textmate could add this
> functionality, otherwise I may have to learn how the bundles work
> and try to do it myself.
Use Latexmk.pl? (see LaTeX bundle preferences)
--
Pierre Riteau
--
___________________________