Documentation can be found at https://pythonhosted.org/latex .
Allows calling LaTeX from Python without leaving a mess. Similar to the (officially obsolete) tex package, whose successor is not PyPi-installable:
min_latex = (r"\documentclass{article}"
r"\begin{document}"
r"Hello, world!"
r"\end{document}")
from latex import build_pdf
# this builds a pdf-file inside a temporary directory
pdf = build_pdf(min_latex)
# look at the first few bytes of the header
print bytes(pdf)[:10]
Also comes with support for using Jinja2 templates to generate LaTeX files.
make_env
can be used to create an Environment
that plays well with
LaTex:
Variables can be used in a LaTeX friendly way: Hello, \VAR{name|e}. Note that autoescaping is off. Blocks are creating using the block macro: \BLOCK{if weather is 'good'} Hooray. \BLOCK{endif} \#{comments are supported as well} %# and so are line comments To keep things short, line statements can be used: %- if weather is good Yay. %- endif
from jinja2.loaders import FileSystemLoader
from latex.jinja2 import make_env
env = make_env(loader=FileSystemLoader('.'))
tpl = env.get_template('doc.latex')
print(tpl.render(name="Alice"))
The base.latex
demonstrates how \BLOCK{...}
is substituted for
{% ... %}
:
\documentclass{article}
\begin{document}
\BLOCK{block body}\BLOCK{endblock}
\end{document}
Finally, doc.latex
shows why the %-
syntax is usually preferable:
%- extends "base.latex"
%- block body
Hello, \VAR{name|e}.
%- endblock
Strings from .latex
-templates can be extracted, provided your babel.cfg is setup correctly:
[jinja2: *.latex]
block_start_string = \BLOCK{
block_end_string = }
variable_start_string = \VAR{
variable_end_string = }
comment_start_string = \#{
comment_end_string = }
line_statement_prefix = %-
line_comment_prefix = %#
trim_blocks = True
autoescape = False