TeX on Windows?
John C Frain
frainj at gmail.com
Tue May 25 16:39:32 CEST 2021
Have you tried PROTEXT (http://tug.org/protext/). This is a relatively
easy-to-install package that can be downloaded as a zip file (about 1.1
GB). It contains Miktex and Texstudio, a GUI for Tex which is currently
being maintained (see https://www.texstudio.org/), The entire package is
installed with a single setup.exe file. It can be loaded onto a USB key
and run from there. I have not installed it recently but there was a time
when I used to distribute it on a DVD to beginners and no one had any
problems installing it.
John C Frain
3 Aranleigh Park
Rathfarnham
Dublin 14
Ireland
www.tcd.ie/Economics/staff/frainj/home.html
mailto:frainj at tcd.ie
mailto:frainj at gmail.com
On Tue, 25 May 2021 at 12:25, Philip Taylor <P.Taylor at hellenic-institute.uk>
wrote:
> Dr Alan Litchfield wrote:
>
> [Download the iso image and] mount it onto your computer.
>
>
> Not possible under Windows 7, Alan, unless additional software is
> installed. But to Bob :
>
> I have been happily using PCTeX all these years, and will continue to do
> so but it seems like PCTeX has left us in the past two years since I
> communicated with someone there at the company. Does anyone know what
> happened to them? https://www.pctex.com/ website seems abandoned
> Is there any other for pay product to replace it?
>
>
> Pass. Although I used to pay for TeX back in the Kellerman & Smith days,
> I have not done so since then, and have never paid for a PC version. Many
> years ago the late, great, Sebastian Rahtz persuaded me to switch to TeX
> Live, and I have never looked back. In the past I would use the network
> installer, or download and burn the ISO, or download and mount the ISO, but
> these days I use Rsynch to fetch the installation suite and install from my
> local copy. The real problem is that TeX Live is not a Windows product —
> it is a generic product that has to support $2^n+1$ variant operating
> systems (how many different ways can you spell "Linux" ?), and as a result
> the documentation too has to be generic, which is distinctly sub-optimal.
>
> I am certain that together the TeX user community will be able to assist
> you, but some background information will be vital, and it will almost
> certainly take several iterations before we achieve complete success. So,
> questions :
>
> 1. Exactly which operating system are you running
> 2. Are you able to access your computer as am administrator
> 3. Do you have fast Internet access from your computer ? (where
> "fast" => better than 10Mbps) ?
>
> And to my fellow TeX and Windows users — given that one can install (for
> example) Windows 7 from a USB stick, using the Microsoft Windows USB/DVD
> download tool
> <https://www.microsoft.com/en-GB/download/details.aspx?id=56485>, has
> anyone investigated whether an analogous methodology could be used to
> install TeX Live from a USB stick for people such as Bob who lack a DVD
> reader ?
> --
> *Philip Taylor*
>
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