Nicely summarized, Matthias. To follow-up on Robby's suggestion and my own petty needs, is there a way to get scribble to generate a "minimal pdf", instead of a whole page?
For instance, from the following code: #lang scribble/manual @(require scribble/eval) @def+int[ (define add (λ (n) (λ (m) (+ m n)))) (define add2 (add 2)) (add2 5) ] can I get a correct-size pdf to include (as a figure) in a latex document? I guess I'm asking for the --pdf equivalent of --latex-section. That would then address my need directly (including nice looking scheme code in papers), without going into the (indeed) hairy issues with latex. -- Éric On Jun 23, 2011, at 6:28 PM, Matthias Felleisen wrote: > > Don, you're right. Latex is the assembly language here, > and you should be able to patch in the results of an > open compiler wherever you want. I did this kind of thing > all the time in my innocent youth (Pascal -> 6809 asm) and > 'it worked.' The reason it worked is because I (or perhaps > the mentor who showed me) lacked the imagination of doing > more than pretty straightforward things. Matthew has provided > you with just enough for these scenarios. > > Eli, you're wrong. When people initially request such things > they don't think of all possible bad scenarios. Let them play > with it. Most of the time, it may just work and it's what they > need. > > Eli, you're also correct. In principle, the latex linker is > so impoverished that things will break sooner or later. And > someone has already sent in a minor correction concerning the > ordering of files. BUT, the person could figure out the fix > and he was happy, so let it be. > > > > > On Jun 23, 2011, at 6:17 PM, Eli Barzilay wrote: > >> Yesterday, Don Blaheta wrote: >>> It seems likely that at some point I might have wanted to shift over >>> to writing Scribble from scratch. I may yet do that. But it's >>> going to be a lot harder to make that decision if I can't first dip >>> in my toe and make it work with my existing installed base. It's >>> especially hard if I'm not yet sure Scribble can do everything I >>> want it to and thus might be required to abandon the effort >>> half-done. And it's not such a strange request (like "why can't >>> Scribble work with MS Word" would be), since LaTeX is *precisely >>> what Scribble generates*. >> >> But the problem is exactly that it is latex -- a language where you >> can't include a whole document in some sane encapsulated way like: >> >> \newscope{\include{somefile}} >> >> Instead, you need to merge the prefix and suffix requirements of both, >> which is never easy. So while Matthew made it possible to get the >> parts separately from scribble, my guess is that if you have some >> non-trivial setup for your own latex, then it will be difficult to use >> it, or maybe even impossible. (Given that some latex packages just >> don't work with others, leading to annoying breakages.) >> >> It could probably generate more generic latex output, to the point >> where it could be embedded more conveniently in random latex files. >> It's probably even possible to just start from >> scribble/latex-render.rkt and slowly water it down. But that would >> require a heavy cost in terms of lost typesetting features. >> >> So I think that while Robby's suggestion to concatenate PDFs could >> sound like he was trying to avoid the question, it was really a good >> advice since PDFs are essentially these nice encapsulated chunks of >> text that you can easily glue together. >> >> -- >> ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) Eli Barzilay: >> http://barzilay.org/ Maze is Life! >> _________________________________________________ >> For list-related administrative tasks: >> http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users > > _________________________________________________ > For list-related administrative tasks: > http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users > _________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users