"Philip A. Viton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> > I think that no matter what you choose, you'll have problems with > equations, which will probably be converted to some kind of image, not > Word's eq editor format. > > Your best bet might be to check out latex2rtf on CTAN, and see if the > equation situation is any better than this. Otherwise, you might try > Eitan Gurari's tex4ht: the main advantage of this is that it attempts > to provide for translattion of the base latex file to several output > formats, including HTML, xhtml+mathml, and OpenOffice which may be > Word-compatible, but I'm not sure of this. > > Of course, if your text doesn't contain (many) equations, then all > this is pretty academic, and html is probably your best bet. A very > fast and easy-to-use solution here is Hevea. (TeX4ht is more flexible, > but also harder to get running). > > Tex4ht: http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/~gurari/TeX4ht/mn.html > > Hevea: http://para.inria.fr/~maranget/hevea/ > > > ------------------------ > Philip A. Viton > City Planning, Ohio State University > 190 W. 17th Ave,Columbus OH 43210 > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > Scientific Word should be able to import a LaTeX document, export to RTF, and export the equations as Word Equation Editor objects. There's a free trial version. (Don't use it myself, but a co-author does.) -- Paul ************************************************************************* Paul A. Rubin Phone: (517) 432-3509 Department of Management Fax: (517) 432-1111 The Eli Broad Graduate School of Management E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Michigan State University http://www.msu.edu/~rubin/ East Lansing, MI 48824-1122 (USA) ************************************************************************* Mathematicians are like Frenchmen: whenever you say something to them, they translate it into their own language, and at once it is something entirely different. J. W. v. GOETHE
