Skip to content

Install

Takashi Tamura edited this page Oct 2, 2020 · 47 revisions

Installation and basic settings

Requirements

Installation

Installing LaTeX Workshop is simple. You can find it in Visual Studio Code Marketplace, or simply run ext install latex-workshop in VS Code Quick Open (ctrl/cmd + P).

Setting PATH environment variable

Usually, you do NOT have to set PATH environment variable. TeX distributions appropriately set the variable on your system. And, LaTeX Workshop never touches the variable. If VS Code cannot find executables of TeX, it means that the setting of your system is broken. For the ways of setting environment variables on Windows, see link or link. On macOS and Linux, see the documentation by the rbenv dev team. Very detailed information is also available on stackoverflow for macOS.

If you can not fix the setting of your system, you can also override PATH with the env property of LaTeX recipes.

Settings

You can modify settings through the menu of VS Code, Preferences > Settings. You can also modify settings by directly editing settings.json. See an official doc for the location of settings.json.

You can also have different settings for each project with .vscode/settings.json at the root of each project workspace. See an official doc.

Usage

The typical usage is to open a .tex file and have a look at the TeX sidebar to access all the extension features. If you wish to use a keybinding to open the TeX sidebar, you just need to associate one with the command latex-workshop.actions.

If you prefer to access some of the most common actions through a right click menu, set latex-workshop.showContextMenu to true. Default is false.

Supported languages

In addtions to LaTeX, LaTeX-Expl3 is supported. You can change the language mode from LaTeX to LaTeX-Expl3 clicking on the language indicator, LaTeX, of the satus bar and selecting LaTeX-Expl3 from the drop-down. See an official document.

Sweave, knitr, and Weave.jl are also supported. See Building a .rnw file and Building a .jnw file for the details.

Using Docker

Starting with 1.35.0, VS Code supports Docker with Remote - Containers. LaTeX Workshop works well with the extension. Try the extension at first.

Starting with release 5.3.0, there is an experimental implementation on Docker support following the idea of @Arxisos. You can set latex-workshop.docker.enabled to true to use a docker based LaTeX distribution. The docker image to be used is defined by latex-workshop.docker.image.latex, the default value is tianon/latex. It is advised that the image is 'pre-'pulled.

@Arxisos created snippets for LaTeX binaries in docker, and @lippertmarkus had another short description on how to use Docker with LaTeX Workshop. You can set up the advanced configuration of Docker through environment variables with the env property of each recipe.

With the Docker support, compiling subfiles with the subfiles package does not work. We recommend you to use Remote - Containers, which works well.

Using WSL

Starting with 1.35.0, VS Code supports WSL through Remote - WSL. LaTeX Workshop works well with the extension.

Table of Contents

Clone this wiki locally