For me, I ran the following command in the folder containing Resume.tex: The first time you try to compile a document, your installation will probably have to download some packages. It’s a WYSIWYG LaTeX editor, which lets you code as little or as much as you like as you learn the ropes. If you’re new to LaTeX, consider using LyX. There are other options out there as well. It may not ask you until the second launch.įor a dedicated *TeX editor, I use TeX Shop. If the Utility asks you if you’d like to update automatically, you’ll probably want to say yes. Open TeX Live Utility, and update all packages: ⇧⌘U First, get the TeX Live Utility for a GUI package manager. Now we’ll leave the command line for a bit. This is the utility that automatically grabs packages for us. (Note: Anything using tlmgr will probably require sudo.) Update the TeX Live Package Manager tlmgr. Now let’s make things a little more user-friendly and modern. Also, if this step fails, you can open up ~/.bash_profile and add the path manually.):Įcho "export PATH="/usr/local/texlive/2016basic/bin/x86_64-darwin:$PATH" > ~/.bash_profile In the command line, type the following (Note that your path might not be the same, for example, if you have different hardware. This lets Homebrew install MacOS apps.ĭelightfully, however, the installer doesn’t tell your system where it installed things. Get Homebrew if you don’t have it already. All work is done in the terminal, unless noted otherwise. These steps start with the minimal BasicTeX installation as well as several GUI applications, and then automatically adds packages as you need them. Why isn’t this a built-in feature, or at least well-publicized? Who knows. It turns out there’s a package we can install that’ll take care of dependencies for us. You will be appalled by how many packages your little document requires.
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