Oops, so that was a misunderstanding. It's more of a philosophy. The tagging in latex is quite predictable and it makes it easy to write a script to transform it to a workiable org that can then be fine-tuned. What you may find in the Internet is a program to convert svg's into basic TiKZ that will need some fine-tuning afterwards.
best, /PA On Sat, 19 Jul 2025 at 01:40, David Masterson <dsmaster...@icloud.com> wrote: > > Pedro Andres Aranda Gutierrez <paag...@gmail.com> writes: > > > Answers inline, > > > > On Fri, 18 Jul 2025 at 01:48, David Masterson <dsmaster...@icloud.com> > > wrote: > >> > >> Pedro Andres Aranda Gutierrez <paag...@gmail.com> writes: > >> > >> > my experience (and possibly .2 cents) > >> > > >> > 1. LaTeX2Org > >> > > >> > I needed to go that path for a couple of manuals when I started lecturing > >> > and it was generally feasible with AWK/Python. I got my .org file, fixed > >> > it and could continue on the Org path. > >> > >> Do you have a reference for that? > > > > More than a reference, what I have is a lot of previous coding. I > > started with Emacs on a Sun workstation where we captured the > > schematics for some circuit boards and had to develop a script to get > > the connections list and print it out in format that could be used by > > the people who were wire-wrapping the prototype boards for testing. > > I probably would've used AWK/Bash. > > No, what I meant was what was LaTeX2Org and is it still available? A > search of the Internet didn't turn it up. > > -- > David Masterson -- Fragen sind nicht da, um beantwortet zu werden, Fragen sind da um gestellt zu werden Georg Kreisler Sagen's Paradeiser, write BE! Year 1 of the New Koprocracy