NAME
detex - a filter to strip TeX commands from a .tex file.
SYNOPSIS
detex
[ -clnstw ] [ -e environment-list ] [ filename[.tex] ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Detex
(Version 2.6)
reads each file in sequence, removes all comments and
TeX
control sequences
and writes the remainder on the standard output.
All text in math mode and display mode is removed.
By default,
detex
follows \input commands.
If a file cannot be opened, a warning message is
printed and the command is ignored.
If the
-n
option is used, no \input or \include commands will be processed.
This allows single file processing.
If no input file is given on the command line,
detex
reads from standard input.
If the magic sequence ``\begin{document}'' appears in the text,
detex
assumes it is dealing with
LaTeX
source and
detex
recognizes additional constructs used in
R LaTeX .
These include the \include and \includeonly commands.
The
-l
option can be used to force
LaTeX
mode and the
-t
option can be used to force
TeX
mode regardless of input content.
Text in various environment modes of
LaTeX
is ignored. The default modes are array, eqnarray, equation, figure,
mathmatica, picture, table and verbatim. The
-e
option can be used to specify a comma separated
environment-list
of environments to ignore. The list replaces the defaults so specifying an
empty list effectively causes no environments to be ignored.
The
-c
option can be used in
LaTeX
mode to have detex echo the arguments to \cite,
\ref, and \pageref macros. This can be useful when sending the output to
a style checker.
Detex
assumes the standard character classes are being used for
R TeX .
Detex
allows white space between control sequences
and magic characters like `{' when recognizing things like
LaTeX
environments.
If the
-w
flag is given, the output is a word list, one `word' (string of two or more
letters and apostrophes beginning with a letter)
per line, and all other characters ignored.
Without -w the output follows the original,
with the deletions mentioned above. Newline characters are
preserved where possible
so that the lines of output match the input as closely as possible.
The TEXINPUTS environment variable is used to find \input and \include
files. Like TeX, it interprets a leading or trailing `:' as the default
TEXINPUTS. It does not support the `//' directory expansion magic sequence.
Detex now handles the basic TeX ligatures as a special case, replacing the
ligatures with acceptable charater substitutes. This eliminates
spelling errors introduced by merely removing them. The ligatures are
\aa, \ae, \oe, \ss, \o, \l (and their upper-case
equivalents). The special "dotless" characters \i and \j are also
replaced with i and j respectively.
Note that previous versions of
detex
would replace control sequences with a space character to prevent words
from running together.
However, this caused accents in the middle of words to break words, generating
"spelling errors" that were not desirable.
Therefore, the new version merely removes these accents.
The old functionality can be essentially duplicated by using the
-s
option.
SEE ALSO
tex(1L)
DIAGNOSTICS
Nesting of \input is allowed but the number of opened files must not
exceed the system's limit on the number of simultaneously opened files.
Detex
ignores unrecognized option characters after printing a warning message.
AUTHOR
Daniel Trinkle, Computer Science Department, Purdue University
BUGS
Detex
is not a complete
TeX
interpreter, so it can be confused by some constructs.
Most errors result in too much rather than too little output.
Running LaTeX
source without a ``\begin{document}''
through detex may produce
errors.
Suggestions for improvements are (mildly) encouraged.