Takaaki Kato wrote:
Oh, thanks for the info. Amazing that an otherwise competent text editor should lack such essentials. BTW, the information in the URL above differs a bit from what my copy of TextMate (1.5.6) shows: the "View Source as PDF" is in the Latex bundle rather than the Source bundle. Where's the best place to get pdfsync and pdflatex?
I think some bundles have changed over time. I think what you have is recent. If you download every bundle update via subversion, that's the latest. I have no experience with latex, so somebody else will hopefully chime in. Make sure that some bundles have Help in the bundle, which is not available in Help menu in the menu bar. LaTeX bundle has a very long help file.
Gack: I don't think you want to be grabbing latex just to get some printing functionality in place! If you're interested in producing beautiful technical documents on the other hand...
The link mentioned earlier in this thread *is* out of date: the "Typeset and View (PDF)" command in the latex bundle almost certainly isn't what was being referred to: it is --unsurprisingly-- only useful on a latex source file. I do have a recollection of some printing scripts being developed using "enscript", a formatting utility that comes with OS X. Here's one that lingers in my bundle, and occasionally proves useful. Make a new command with... ======================================================================= Save: Current File Command(s): #!/bin/bash # close stderr exec 2<&- # set options here enscript_opt="-2Gr --line-numbers -o -" tempfile="/tmp/texmate-print.$$.pdf" # note: "$$" is the current pid pstopdf_opt="-i -o $tempfile" # create the pdf and open it enscript $enscript_opt | pstopdf $pstopdf_opt open $tempfile rm $tempfile
Input: Entire Document Output: Discard =======================================================================
You'll probably want to play with the enscript options to get the output to your liking, but it's very malleable.
Cheers, Paul