[OS X TeX] preferred tool for presentations
Herbert Schulz
herbs at wideopenwest.com
Tue Dec 19 17:50:02 CET 2006
On Dec 19, 2006, at 1:47 AM, Oliver Buerschaper wrote:
>>> If you want to move away from tex-based tools, you may try Keynote.
>>> You can import latex math very easily by cut-and-paste from a pdf
>>> file.
>>
>> I'm surprised no one has recommended this yet. Keynote is cheap,
>> exceedingly easy to use, and makes terrific presentations. Using
>> TeXShop you can select an equation from a PDF file and drag it
>> directly into your presentation (great for preparing a presentation
>> quickly from an existing paper) or use the excellent little app
>> LaTeXiT to render LaTeX math code into a little PDF graphic that you
>> can likewise drag into your presentation:
>
> Actually I wouldn't recommend this combination at all if you need
> to typeset anything but simple formulas!
>
> True, you can always render the equations externally and then paste
> them into Keynote but this has serious downsides:
>
> 1. alignment of these equations among themselves and with the rest
> of the text is a nightmare
> 2. building up equations (or slides) step by step is next to
> impossible without glyphs dancing about wildly
> 3. once you pasted an equation it's no longer editable
> ...
Howdy,
I agree with point 1. Alignment is a bit of a pain but using the
arrow keys moves in small increments.
I've overcome point 2 by the liberal use of \phantom{} so that all
spacing remains constant. The duplicating the slide, selecting the
graphic and dragging the version without some phantoms makes the
additions appear without changing any alignment.
Point 3 is not correct! I can drag the image back to LaTeXiT and re-
edit the equation; LaTeXiT seems to embed the LaTeX code as a comment
in the pdf file. Sigh... when LinkBack worked in Keynote 2 you could
simply double click the equation and it would open in LaTeXiT for
editing.
Good Luck,
Herb Schulz
(herbs at wideopenwest.com)
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