Thanks Nick, for the more helpful explanation than mine ;)

The function I provided is part of this file:
https://github.com/jkitchin/jmax/blob/master/ox-manuscript.el

which I have been working on for publishing scientific manuscripts. This
file provides a new export menu option that not only removes the extensions
in the latex file, but also replaces the \bibliography{} line with the
contents of the .bbl file so that you have a single, standalone tex file
for submission. There is even an export and mail option for a pdf ;)

With this library installed, you can just type: C-c C-e j m
to build your latex file with extensions removed, bibliography replaced,
and open the pdf through the regular org-mode export menu. This may be more
helpful than trying to do the steps manually as I described.

John

-----------------------------------
John Kitchin
Associate Professor
Doherty Hall A207F
Department of Chemical Engineering
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
412-268-7803
http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu



On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 1:06 PM, Nick Dokos <ndo...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Leu Zhe <lzhe...@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > Dear John,
> >
> > Thanks very much for your help.
> >
> > I have tried your code but nothing happened. However, I think it is
> close to my remand.
> >
> > I have some questions about your code:
> >
> > 1. When should this command be called?  Don't I need to call it before
> the org-latex-pdf-process?
> >
>
> As it says in the comment:
>
> "Run this from an org-buffer after you have exported it to a LaTeX file"
>
> The function assumes that you have already produced a .tex file from
> your .org file (e.g. with C-c C-e l l). Then, in your org file buffer
> you call it:
>
>     M-x ox-manuscript-remove-image-extensions RET
>
> > I am studying elisp now, but your code is really difficult for me, so
> can you help me dig in?
>
> What the function does is get the filename for the current buffer
> (i.e. the name of your org file), derive the name of the produced
> tex file, get the contents of the tex file assigned (as a string)
> to tex-contents, do a search-and-replace operation on tex-contents
> and write the result back into the tex file. The search-and-replace
> operation searches for strings that look like this:
>
>           \includegraphics[...]{foo.png}
>
> and replaces each occurrence with
>
>           \includegraphics[...]{foo}
>
> Nick
>
>
>
>

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