LaTeX is a tool for creating beautiful writing, or a torture device that drives
users to the brink of madness every time they see bad spacing for the rest
of their lives. One of the two. Despite origins that can be traced back four
decades, it remains one of the best typesetting programs around. Many of its
guides, however, haven’t aged as well. This short book will get you started with
LaTeX without bogging you down in arcana that lost its relevance back in the 90s.
An up-to-date version should be available at
https://assets.bitbashing.io/modern-latex.pdf
-
Install LuaLaTeX, a modern, Unicode-aware version of LaTeX.
On Linux, this is usually as simple as installing your distro’s TeX Live
package, e.g.,texlive-base
ortexlive-core
.
The same package should also provide thelatexmk
script.
(See below) -
Check out the
online
branch of the source repository,
which is optimized for digital display instead of a printed book.
Changes include even margins, centered page numbers, a lack of blank pages
between chapters, and so on. -
Change the fonts as-needed.
The official version of this book is typeset with Garamond Premier,
Neue Haas Grotesk, URW Futura, Drive Mono, Noto, and (of course) Latin Modern.
In the likely case that you don’t have all of these typefaces,
change thefontspec
commands (e.g.,setmainfont
, etc.) appropriately,
then modify or remove the colophon at the back of the book. -
Build the book using
latexmk -lualatex -latexoption=-halt-on-error modern-latex.tex
Note that
latexmk
will run LuaLaTeX multiple times, since
TeX generates cross references in one pass, then links them in a second.If you can’t use
latexmk
for some reason, you can manually invokelualatex -halt-on-error -shell-escape modern-latex.tex
until it no longer warns,
“Label(s) may have changed. Rerun to get cross-references right.”
…is welcome!
Please issue pull requests on this book’s Github page,
or contact the author via matt
Enjoy!