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April 18, 2017by Staff Writer
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When we first published this article back in August 2013, we had no idea how popular it would prove to be. Many thousands of people have read it since then and looked at the solutions we suggested might be viable alternatives to ‘Dreamweaver’ – possibly the Internet’s best known and most used website development tool.
Formerly owned by Macromedia, but now part of the Adobe Creative Cloud, millions of developers have used Dreamweaver to develop basic sites, while others have used it to create some of the most complex sites known to the Internet.
While Dreamweaver used to be accessible to everyone - the hobbyist right up to the web design professional - right now, it is not the cheapest of solutions. To get access to the single app, an annual plan (paid monthly) costs $19.99 per month, while a standard monthly plan costs $29.99. The cheapest it gets is an annual fee of US$239.88 per year.
While Dreamweaver has all the bells and whistles you could possibly need, the cost makes it prohibitively expensive for many. And as most designers only use a fraction of its capabilities, some might not be able to justify the expense.
But never fear… If Dreamweaver is beyond your reach there are still some great free WYSIWYG alternatives available for you to use.
To make sure you have the latest information, we’re going to revisit the five solutions we looked at back in 2013 to see what has happened to them over the last few years.
We are also going to add some more solutions that we think are also worthy of note.
1. Microsoft's Expression Web 4.0

Expression 4.0 has been pulled into Microsoft Visual Studio 2013 and the last update of the standalone solution (4.0.1460.0) was on December 20, 2012.
While a free download is still available, it seems this project has gone as far as it is likely to go. That said, it’s still free and still an excellent Dreamweaver alternative.
Expression 4.0 is very reminiscent of some of the earlier Dreamweaver versions so if you’ve been using Dreamweaver for a long time, it might prove pretty intuitive. It provides customizable toolbars and offers design and code views. Like Dreamweaver it allows you to look design and code at the same time when required.
With HTML 5 capability Expression caters for the latest design options and with a CSS Properties Palette, CSS management is relatively straightforward. Likewise, it makes light work of positioning graphics.
Currently there is no support for this free download and the tutorials that were available on the Microsoft site seem to have been removed. However, a good selection of tutorials are still available on the Internet.
2. KOMPOZER
A Mozilla project, the last stable update of KompoZer (0.7.10) was in 2007, suggesting like Expression 4.0, this project has run its course. However, also like Expression, KompoZer is still free as a download.
A fully WYSIWYG editor, KompoZer is Windows compatible and comparable to Dreamweaver except that it doesn’t allow server-side scripting. Like Dreamweaver, KompoZer allows you to create templates. And also like Dreamweaver, it’s possible to open any number of pages simultaneously.
KompoZer offers a CSS editor and an HTML validator and as a result, the sites it creates are compatible with modern browsers.
If you want a Dreamweaver alternative without all the bells and whistles, this might be an option.
3. BlueGriffon

The last update of BlueGriffon was released in February 2017 and so this project is still alive and kicking. Powered by Gecko, it is an Open Source solution billed as an “an intuitive, modern and robust application”.
The project website also describes BlueGriffon as a “next-gen Web and EPUB Editor based on the rendering engine of Firefox” with elements inherited from “famous ancestors” such as Netscape, Composer and Nvu. So, as you can see, it has a very solid pedigree.
Native standalone versions are available for Windows, MacOS X and Linux with HTML 4 and HTML 5 supported. It supports CSS 3 including 2D and 3D transformations, transitions, shadows, columns, and font features. However, some features of the latest update (BlueGriffon 2.3.1) are only available after purchasing a license, and that can cost 69.99 euros ($75) or 195 euros ($206) so you need to look carefully at what’s on offer. However, the free version is still likely to meet most people’s needs.
4. Aloha Editor

While the original version is still available, since we first looked at it Aloha Editor has morphed into Aloha Editor 2. The developers called it a day with Aloha Editor 2, but “Aloha Editor 1 is not affected by this decision and will continue to be supported and developed”.
The last stable Aloha Editor 1 release was 1.4.27 which happened 21 March 2017, so it remains pretty current.
Offering HTML5 editing it is compatible with current browsers and it features a 'floating' toolbar that alters depending on which part of your site you are working on.
It is an extremely viable Dreamweaver alternative.
5. Amaya Home Page


The last stable release of Amaya Home Page was version 11.4.4 in January 2012 so here’s another project that has reached the end of the road.
It supports HTML 4.01, XHTML 1.0, XHTML Basic, XHTML 1.1, HTTP 1.1, MathML 2.0, many CSS 2 features, and SVG, but these might be a bit dated if you need a site with a really modern design.
Amaya does though offer HTML, CSS and XML validators, validating HTML as you create your site. A tree structure is also available, as is a 'Page Preview' function.
Of all the solutions we looked at, this might now be a little dated for modern needs.
As promised here are five more great free WYSIWYG alternatives to Dreamweaver:
6. Seamonkey


Initially released in 2005, the SeaMonkey Project was around well before our original article was written, but with version 2.46 released on December 22, 2016, it has grown from strength to strength over the years.
An Open Source solution, SeaMonkey originated as a Mozilla project – that’s right, the Firefox people. It was ultimately taken over as a “community continuation” and the suite you download now includes ‘Composer’ – the tool that you use for website design.
Although Composer will be not be developed any further, it receives maintenance updates and is still a good choice, especially for anyone learning HTML for the first time.
SeaMonkey addresses areas like HTML5 and is available in 26 languages on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.
Certainly not as sophisticated as Dreamweaver, but it delivers and represents a viable option.
7. Trellian WebPage 4.2

Initially released in 2006, Trellian Webpage is another solution that remains supported and much loved.
For a free software, it is quite powerful, offering a ‘drag & drop’ interface and support for current Internet technologies.
With a user-friendly interface, Trellian Webpage boasts a built-in spellchecker. It also features easy-to-use resampling tools and allows users to easily “create search engine friendly pages”.
Another good alternative for anyone who thinks Dreamweaver might be beyond their website’s requirements.

8.
openElement

While the last stable release of openElement (version 1.47.3) was release January 21, 2014, this remains fully supported and a powerful tool.
This WYSIWYG software offers a very intuitive interface and caters for technologies like HTML5 and CSS3.
openElement is important because it focuses on enabling users to create websites with the responsive designs that look good on any device (PC, mobile, or tablet) and are vital for good SEO.
Powered by Chromium, it caters for multilingual websites and offers reusable styles and element packs.
9. Google Web Designer
Technically still in Beta (you know how Google does things), Google Web Designer is a genuinely good solution that gives you everything you want from a WYSIWYG HTML editor.
While the last release date was November 2015, it is still fully supported, and being a Google product could potentially offer an SEO edge.
Totally freeware, it offers a number of work spaces: Design View, Code View, and a Preview space that lets you look at what you have created through Chrome, Firefox, and Internet Explorer.
Another benefit of Google Web Designer is it allows you to craft Google Ads and create and edit CSS, JavaScript and XML files.
It probably offers as much as you need for your website and is therefore worth considering.
10. TOWeb


While the last version of TOWeb (version 5.29) was released late 2015, this software is still supported and maintained, and it packs a punch as far as free WYSIWYG software is concerned.
Like other solutions TOWeb has HTML 5 and CSS 3 covered, but more importantly, it also has a strong leaning towards enabling users to create ‘responsive’ website designs.
TOWeb provides a number of templates which users edit and revamp to design the responsive website they need.
While TOWeb has paid ‘premium’, ‘ecommerce’ and ‘studio’ packages available, the free version is powerful enough for most people’s needs.

TeX Resources on the Web - TeX Users Group

Additions and corrections are always welcome, please email webmaster@tug.org.

  1. FAQ and documentation:

Best Web Design Editor Mac. Dreamweaver is a titan in the WYSIWYG world. Now part of the Adobe portfolio but originally launched by Macromedia, Dreamweaver has offered WYSIWYG editing since 1997 when the web was a maze of tiled. Here’s our list of the 10 best free website builders: 1. Webnode – Modern Editor with Some Limitations 2. Wix – Excellent Business Features 3. Ucraft – Connect Your Domain for Free! Weebly – A Great Website Builder with One Downside 5. Webstarts – Access to (Almost) All Features 6. Jimdo – Website Editing Powered by AI 7. Brackets Best HTML Editors. Available for OS: Windows, Linux, and Mac. Brackets is the free open-source HTML editor to develop websites. You can easily write codes on languages like HTML, CSS, Javascript. It comes with a simple design to write codes and a sidebar to each move from one file to another.

Where to find help and documentation

Introductions to the TeX world:

  • Levels of TeX: LaTeX vs. MiKTeX.
  • The Wikipedia article on TeX.
  • What is TeX?, a collection of one-page answers by several authors.

General TeX help:

  • TeX Frequently Asked Questions, prepared by the UK TeX Users Group.
  • Foire aux questions, a FAQ in French, prepared by GUTenberg, the French-speaking TeX users group.
  • The TeX Catalogue, a comprehensive listing of packages and tools available for TeX users.
  • texdoc.net provides online lookup of package documentation, based on the texdoc command-line program.

If you have questions not answered by the above, here are some general help resources for TeX (no guarantees, this is all done by volunteers):

  • The public mailing list support@tug.org (aka texhax). Search/browse texhax archives.
  • latex.org, a forum site for all TeX users.
  • reddit.com/r/LaTeX, a question and answer forum.
  • tex.stackexchange.com, a collaboratively edited question and answer site.
  • the newsgroup comp.text.tex.

Basic LaTeX documentation:

  • A First Set of LaTeX Resources, package recommendations for common tasks, by Jim Hefferon.
  • LaTeX Cheat Sheet, a two-page quick reference by Winston Chang.
  • Very Short Guide to LaTeX, four-page quick reference by Peter Flynn.
  • The Not So Short Introduction to LaTeX2e, by Tobias Oetiker, available in many languages.
  • LaTeX Wikibook, a guide to LaTeX.
  • The LaTeX Project home page.

CTAN (Comprehensive TeX Archive Network):

CTAN is a fundamental central point inthe TeX world. Some of its main pages:

  • historic git repository, updated daily, on texlive.info.

Fonts

  • Discussion of available fonts, both free and proprietary.
  • LaTeX Font Catalogue, by Palle Jørgensen of DK-TUG, has short samples of most fonts available in typical LaTeX installations.
  • Essential NFSS users guide by Sebastian Rahtz; see also Font selection in LaTeX by Walter Schmidt, and fontspec, a package by Will Robertson for using OpenType and other fonts in XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX using NFSS.
  • Luc Devroye's type design page, with a staggering amount of information on fonts of all kinds, samples, type designers, typography, and more.
  • The STIX web site, a project for getting mathematical characters into Unicode, and creating fonts with them. This article by Barbara Beeton explains some of the background and issues. STIX and XITS (enhanced derivative) are on CTAN.
  • Utilities for creating font support include otftotfm and otfinfo in Eddie Kohler's lcdf-typetools, autoinst in Marc Penninga's fontools wrapping lcdf-typetools, and Bob Tennent's article on using them in practice.
  • Fontname, a naming scheme for TeX fonts.
  • Michael Sharpe's 2014 TUGboat article on additions to the TeX font repertoire, including variants of Bembo, Garamond, Baskerville, and more.

General typography and typesetting:

  • Museums of typography TUG page.
  • Glossary of typographic terms, mostly in pictures, by Janie Kliever.
  • A History of Typesetting: From the Printing Press to the Digital Era, a brief and informative overview.
  • American Printing History Association.
  • The Fine Press Book Association, an organization of individuals interested in the art of fine printing, with its journal Parenthesis.
  • Type Magazine, an organization and occasional publication for people who love letterforms of all kinds.
  • Typeface design at Reading - graduate degree program in type design at the University of Reading, UK; workshops and other programs also available.

Graphics:

  • Strategies for including graphics in LaTeX documents, a tutorial in TUGboat by Klaus Höppner.
  • Graphics links on tex.loria.fr, especially Using Imported Graphics in LaTeX 2e by Keith Recksdahl, and Graphics and Colour by Patrick Daly.
  • Graphics for inclusion in electionic documents, by Ian Hutchinson. Real-world problems and discussion of getting images into a form that will import properly in (La)TeX documents.
  • Mathematical illustrations: a manual of geometry and PostScript, a book by Bill Casselman.

Indexing:

  • MakeIndex: An Index Processor for LaTeX, by Leslie Lamport.
  • xindex, Unicode-compatible index generation, in Lua.
  • Xindy, a Unicode-aware index processor designed to replace makeindex.
  • CTAN topic for indexing.

Plain TeX:

  • TeX by Topic, A TeXnician's Reference, by Victor Eijkhout (Addison-Wesley, 1992; 307pp). Available under the GFDL.
  • TeX for the Impatient, by Paul Abrahams, Kathryn Hargreaves, and Karl Berry (Addison-Wesley, 1990; 357pp). Available under the GFDL.
  • A gentle introduction to TeX, by Michael Doob (Greek translation).
  • Plain TeX documentation topic on CTAN.
  • Getting Started with Plain TeX and Summary of Commonly-Used Features of Plain TeX, by D.R. Wilkins.
  • Reference cards for AMSTeX and plain TeX, by Joseph Silverman.
  • A Beginner's Book of TeX, by Silvio Levy and Raymond Seroul (Springer Verlag, ISBN 0-387-97562-4).
  • TeX for the Beginner, by Wynter Snow (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-54799-6).
  • To proto vima sto TeX, Greek translation and enhancement of TeX starting from square one, by Dimitrios Filippou (Paratiritis Editions, ISBN 960-374-081-0, 2001).
  • Most of all, The TeXbook by Donald Knuth, the original manual for TeX, with both tutorial and (comprehensive) reference information.

Overall TeX system:

  • TDS, the TeX Directory Structure standard, the common layout for TeX systems.
  • A freely available book on the TeX system: Making TeX Work, by Norman Walsh (O'Reilly, 1994; 15 chapters, 6 appendices).

LaTeX tutorials and courses:

  • Learning resources for a LaTeX beginner, a tex.stackexchange.com discussion page.
  • A simple guide to LaTeX - Step by step, short lessons with full code examples.
  • LaTeX beginners' course from UK-TUG.
  • LaTeX tutorials and information from Nicola Talbot.
  • Getting Started with LaTeX, a primer for text, math, and basic formatting.
  • Spoken (video) tutorials on LaTeX, and on XFig with math, from spoken-tutorial.org.
  • LaTeX tutorials from Andy Roberts.
  • Video tutorial series on LaTeX from sharelatex.com.
  • RUG LateX Course, by Siep Kroonenberg, including book and practice files.
  • LaTeX tutorials from TUGIndia, the Indian TeX Users Group.
  • Let's Learn LaTeX by S. Parthasarathy.

Presentations about TeX:

  • LaTeX Beginner's Course, by UK-TUG.
  • An Introduction to TeX and LaTeX, by Jim Diamond.
  • LaTeX Course, by Engelbert Buxbaum (based on Rainer Rupprecht's tex-kurs).

LaTeX templates:

All of these collections would welcome additions and corrections.

  • LaTeX_Boilerplate by Biafra Ahanonu.
  • LaTeXTemplates.com.
  • German templates by Juergen Fenn.
  • German templates by Axel Sommer.

LaTeX reference information:

  • LaTeX2e reference manual, an ongoing project to create a reference manual for LaTeX2e (help welcome).
  • The Comprehensive LaTeX Symbol List(A4, letter), by Scott Pakin.
  • DeTeXify symbol finder, by Daniel Kirsch.
  • LaTeX Math for Undergraduates cheat sheet, by Jim Hefferon.

LaTeX for particular fields:

  • Typesetting figures for computer science, by Andrew Mertz, William Slough and Nancy Van Cleave; practical packages for drawing stacks, byte fields, trees, automata, and more. (CTAN topics: comp-sci, comp-theory.)
  • LaTeX for linguists, from the CL/MT group at the University of Essex. (CTAN topic: linguistic.)

Writing new LaTeX packages, classes, and styles:

Mac
  • How to develop your own document class—our experience, by Niall Mansfield.
  • Good things come in little packages: An introduction to writing .ins and .dtx files, by Scott Pakin.
  • A model dtx file, by Joseph Wright.
  • Rolling your own Document Class: Using LaTeX to keep away from the Dark Side, by Peter Flynn.
  • Minutes in less than hours: Using LaTeX resources, by Jim Hefferon.

printed LaTeX books

  • A Guide to LaTeX2e, by Helmut Kopka and Patrick Daly (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-321-17385-6, fourth edition, 2003).
  • Learning LaTeX, by David Griffiths and Desmond Higham (SIAM, ISBN 978-0-898713-83-1, 1997, 84pp). A short example-based book covering core LaTeX and a few packages.
  • The LaTeX Companion, by Frank Mittelbach, Michel Goossens, Johannes Braams, David Carlisle, and Chris Rowley (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-54199-8, second edition, 2004).
  • The LaTeX Web Companion: Integrating TeX, HTML, and XML, by Michel Goossens, Sebastian Rahtz, Eitan Gurari, Ross Moore and Robert Sutor (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-43311-7).
  • The LaTeX Graphics Companion, by Michel Goossens, Sebastian Rahtz, and Frank Mittelbach (Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-85469-4).
  • Typesetting Mathematics with LaTeX, by Herbert Voß (UIT Cambridge, ISBN 978-1-906860-17-2, 2010, 304pp). A practical book on typesetting mathematics with LaTeX, covering many packages.
  • Typesetting tables with LaTeX, by Herbert Voß (UIT Cambridge, ISBN 978-1-906860-25-7, 2011, 240pp). A practical book on typesetting tables with LaTeX, covering many packages.
  • Digital Typography Using LaTeX, by Apostolos Syropoulos, Antonis Tsolomitis, and Nick Sofroniou (Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-387-95217-9).
  • First Steps in LaTeX, by George Grätzer (Birkhauser, ISBN 0-8176-4132-7).
  • Math into LaTeX, by George Grätzer (Birkhauser Boston and Springer Verlag New York, ISBN 0-8176-4131-9 and ISBN 3-7648-4131-9).
  • More Math into LaTeX, by George Grätzer (Birkhauser, ISBN 978-0-387-32289-6).
  • LaTeX Sources, a convenient compendium of the LaTeX2e sources. Download a collected pdf for free or buy a hardcover at cost.

(La)TeX Advocacy:

  • LaTeX publicity leaflet by Peter Flynn.
  • The beauty of LaTeX, a short comparison of typesetting quality in TeX and Microsoft Word, by Dario Taraborelli.
  • WYSIWYG Word Processors, Allin Cottrell's entertaining article with a strong bias for LaTeX and against word processors.
  • GNU TeXmacs: A free, structured, wysiwyg and technical editor, an article by Joris van der Hoeven demonstrating why structured WYSIWYG editing is possible and desirable.
  • An argument for learning LaTeX: The benefits of typesetting and beyond, by Evan Wessler, discussing the benefits of LaTeX apart from aesthetics.

The TeX Family in 2009 article is available online, originally published in AMS Notices magazine.

See also the list of TeX journals and publications, and the AMS lists of TeX resources and TeX-related publications.

Free TeX implementations

Some notable TeX implementations that are entirely, or least primarily, free software:

  • TeX Live is a distribution provided by most TeX user groups which supports many Unix systems, MacOSX, and Windows.
  • MacTeX, TeX Live with additions and easy installation for MacOSX.
  • MiKTeX, an independent distribution for Windows with a flexible package manager.
  • proTeXt, MiKTeX with additions and a thorough installation guide for Windows.
  • KerTeX, from Thierry Laronde, a TeX kernel system.
  • Knoppix, a live GNU/Linux system on a bootable CD that includes TeX.
  • TeX-FPC, from Wolfgang Helbig, change files for TeX to work with Free Pascal compiler, along with installation scripts.
  • Wallstone Creativity Desktop, a large free software collection for dealing with documents, photos, video, project planning, and more; includes (La)TeX.

If you want to inspect Knuth's original sources for educational or other such purposes, without any of the scaffolding and enhancements that have come to surround them in current systems, you can get them from Stanford; all the material is also mirrored on CTAN.

TeX engines and extensions

  • e-TeX(extended TeX). Required by current LaTeX, incorporated in all common executables except tex itself (run etex for plain e-TeX). e-TeX manual.
  • pdfTeX, a TeX extension which can directly produce PDF output as well as DVI. Incorporates e-TeX.
  • XeTeX (FAQ), a TeX implementation support for Unicode and system fonts.

Packages and programs

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LaTeX, biggest and most widely used TeX macro package.

ConTeXt, Hans Hagen's powerful, extensive TeX macro package; a serious contender for those wanting a production-quality publishing system. Integrated support for XML, MetaPost, and much more. The ConTeXt Garden Wiki is a good place to start. Also, Aditya Mahajan writes regular introductory ConTeXt articles for TUGboat: fonts, tables, tables II, indentations, Unicode/OpenType math, conditional processing (modes). paper setup, images. Dave Walden has also written on ConTeXt: Trying ConTeXt and A bigger experiment.

Editors

Free editors and front-ends (see also vendors below):

  • Atom, a cross-platform text editor and its LaTeXTools plugin.
  • GNU Emacs and especially its AUC-TeX package.
  • Kile for KDE/Linux.
  • LaTeX Editor (LEd) for Windows.
  • LyX for Windows and X, a well-developed front end for TeX.
  • SciTe for Windows and X, a free source code editor.
  • Sublime Text, a sophisticated general text editor, free for evaluation, and its LaTeXTools plugin.
  • Texmaker, cross-platform.
  • TeXStudio, cross-platform.
  • TeXnicCenter for Windows, an integrated environment for LaTeX composition.
  • TeXShop, a widely used free software TeX front end for MacOSX.
  • TeXworks, a cross-platform front-end with an ease-of-use philosophy similar to TeXShop, an integrated PDF viewer, source/output synchronization, and more.
  • Vim with Vim-LaTeX, a comprehensive TeX suite.
  • Winshell for Windows; this is a zero-cost but proprietary editor.
  • MAPS 46 (2015) contains reviews of TeXShop, Textmate, TeXworks, TeXstudio, and SciTE.

Online references for other TeX-related software:

  • Word-processor-to-LaTeX converters (and back the other way).
  • MetaPost.
  • Metafont tutorial.
  • Word Hy-phen-a-tion by Com-put-er, Frank Liang's thesis describing TeX's hyphenation algorithm, as implemented via the patgen program.

Packages and programs for making slide presentations:

  • Comparison of screen presentation systems, mostly (La)TeX-based, by Michael Wiedmann.
  • Beamer, by Till Tantau; see also CTAN directory. A nice Beamer by example tutorial is available for getting started.
  • seminar (slides in LaTeX), notes by Denis Girou (including bug list and FAQ)
  • IguanaTeX, a free software package for inserting LaTeX equations into PowerPoint.
  • texpoint, an add-in for Microsoft PowerPoint and Word to enable use of LaTeX.
Packages and programes for dealing with graphics

Packages and programs dealing with graphics.

  • graphics and graphicx, the core LaTeX packages.
  • bmpsize, Heiko Oberdiek's package for finding bitmap bounding boxes; supports most bitmap formats.

PSTricks graphics:

  • PSTricks home page, a widely-used graphics package, maintained by Herbert Voß.

PGF/TikZ graphics:

  • PGF/TikZ home page, a second widely-used graphics package, by Till Tantau.
  • Graphics with PGF/TikZ, an article by Andrew Mertz and William Slough using graduated examples.
  • TikZ examples.
  • KtikZ, a graphics editor for TikZ.
  • PGFplots, LaTeX package for creating plots in two and three dimensions.
  • PGFplots examples.
  • Many other PGF/TikZ packages are available.

Xy-pic graphics:

  • Xy-pic, a third widely-used graphics package, by Kristoffer Rose and Ross Moore, specializing in commutative diagrams.
  • xy-pic tutorial in Portuguese, by Carlos Campani.

Other programs for creating graphics:

  • asymptote, a MetaPost replacement with a C++-like syntax and floating-point numerics, by Andy Hammerlindl, John Bowman, and Tom Prince.
  • ePiX, Andy Hwang's C++-based graphics language.
  • Eukleides, geometry diagrams with output in pstricks, including graphical frontend
  • Inkscape, a multi-platform graphics editor based on SVG.
  • IPE, a multi-platform graphics editor.
  • LaTeXPiX, Windows program that generates LaTeX pictures.
  • MetaPost, the derivation of Metafont for technical drawings and PostScript output.
  • TeXCAD, a Windows program for drawing or retouching LaTeX {picture}s; distributed under the GPL.
  • TpX, a TeX drawing tool for Windows.
  • Xfig, a comprehensive drawing tool for Unix with many options for (La)TeX and Metafont/MetaPost.

Formats and large macro packages:

  • AMS-TeX and AMS-LaTeX , the American Mathematical Society's TeX packages
  • EDMAC, Dominik Wujastyk and John Lavagnino's package for typestting critical editions in plain TeX
  • Eplain, extended plain format
  • LaTeX 3, new work from the LaTeX developers (news).
  • The REVTeX package
  • Shyster, James Popple's case-based legal expert system which produces LaTeX output.

DVI drivers:

  • dvips, Tom Rokicki's widely-used dvi to PostScript driver
  • xdvi, Paul Vojta's widely-used DVI previewer for the X window system.
  • xdvik, the Kpathsea variant of xdvi.
  • dvipdfmx, extended version of Mark Wicks' original DVI to PDF converter, by Shunsaku Hirata and Jin-Hwan Cho.
  • dvisvgm, for conversion to the W3C SVG (scalable vector graphics) format.
  • dvii, for looking at DVI files and summarizing the contents (fonts, specials, etc.), by Adam H. Lewenberg.

PDF viewers (concentrating on free software):

  • For Unix:
    • xpdf, a standalone PDF viewer and companion utilities.
    • Impressive, intended for doing slide presentations with several custom features.
    • GNU gv, a simple front-end to Ghostscript.
    • Evince, a document viewer for PDF (based on poppler), PostScript, DVI, and more.
    • GGV (Gnome Ghostview), a Ghostscript front-end for the Gnome window manager. It has been decommissioned and is no longer developed.
    • Okular, universal document viewer based developed by KDE. Okular works on multiple platforms, including but not limited to Linux, Windows, Mac OS X, *BSD, etc.
    • Ghostscript itself. Besides viewing, Ghostscript can distill PostScript to PDF (and to various image formats, bounding boxes, and many other things).
  • For Windows: Sumatra PDF, free software based on xpdf.
  • There is also the proprietary (though zero-cost) Adobe (Acrobat) Reader.

Excalibur, the LaTeX-aware spell checker for Mac.
OpenOffice math plugin that allows writing LaTeX formulas in OpenOffice documents.
PerlTeX, Perl programming plus TeX typesetting.
PerlTeX: Defining LaTeX macros using Perl, an article by Scott Pakin, author of PerlTeX.
Programming with PerlTeX, an article by Andrew Mertz and William Slough using graduated examples.
ProofCheck, a system for writing mathematical proofs in a directly (La)TeXable format.
PyTeX, Python programming plus TeX typesetting.
stepTeX, porting the famous NeXTStep TeX previewer
preview-latex, WYSIWYGish in-line previews right in your Emacs source buffer
texd, TeX as a daemon with a callable interface, written in Python.
TeXmacs, a WYSIWYG editor for typing technical and mathematical text.
TeXamator, free software in Python/Qt4 to create and manage exercise sheets, packaged for several distros and translated to several languages.
TeXoMaker, free software for teachers to create and manage exercise sheets in LaTeX.
MathType and the Equation Editor in MS Word. MathType is a WYSIWYG equation editor that outputs TeX.
Label & card printing resources with TeX and LaTeX, a discussion of packages to print labels, envelopes, etc.

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Multi-lingual typesetting in scripts and languages around the world:

  • Ekushey typing system—Bengali for Microsoft Word, a GPL-licensed add-on for Word 97/2000/XP that enables Bengali typing. It has an export to TeX option, meaning that it can be used either as a conversion tool or as a WYSIWYG Bengali TeX editor.
  • CSTeX, LaTeX and plain TeX support for Czech and Slovak users, including special fonts.
  • Japanese LaTeX (Platex) and related tools for pdf authoring by Young Joon Moon, as part of a self-initiated project to guide Japanese learners and Japanese to master kanji (Japanese/Chinese characters) with minimal effort.
  • Hóng-Zì, a project to create Chinese Metafonts. Contributors encouraged.
  • Using GNU/Linux and LaTeX to create Japanese language documents.
  • Japanese directory on CTAN.

TeX web projects

  • Online LaTeX previewer, by Troy Henderson.
  • TeX4ht, (La)TeX and more with hypertext, originally written by Eitan Gurari. It supports LaTeX to HTML and XML, including MathML, as well as OpenOffice and other formats.
  • LaTeXML, converter from LaTeX to XML, HTML, and EPUB (see also wikipedia page).
  • LaTeX2HTML translator to create Web pages from LaTeX documents. See also the introductory article.
  • tex2page, Scheme-based TeX-to-HTML conversion for TeX and LaTeX.
  • HeVeA. A LaTeX to HTML translater, written in objective Caml.
  • tth, a TeX to HTML converter.
  • MediaWiki to LaTeX, compiling MediaWiki pages to LaTeX and PDF. Both an online converter and full downloadable source are available.
  • Wikipublisher supports customized typesetting of web pages for print, using LaTeX.

More web-related projects:

  • neutriNote, a free Android app: “In a nutshell, an all-in-one preservation of written thoughts, be those text, math (LaTeX), rich markdown, drawings, etc., in fully searchable plain text.”
  • Authorea is an online collaboration tool supporting LaTeX, Markdown, and most web formats, including revision control.
  • Mathapedia, authoring of interactive math textbooks and graphics in real-time. Video tutorial.
  • HyperTeX, original conventions for TeX hypertext.

Supporting (La)TeX equations within HTML, etc.:

MathJax, JavaScript engine with output using CSS and web fonts or SVG.
mimetex.cgi, equation typesetting for web pages via a cgi script.
GtkMathView for TeX-quality formatting of MathML, by Luca Padovani.
Formula Freehand Entry System (FFES), a pen-based equation editor.
InftyReader, OCR for equations with LaTeX output.
mathurl, render LaTeX to an image and generate a short url for use in email, IM, etc.

Yet more:
Markup Shredder, document conversion from HTML to PDF using TeX.
ASTER demo (spoken mathematics)
EquPlus: Science and Math Equations, displaying code for science and math equations in TeX, MathML, and MathType, including constants, symbols, and SI units.
Verbosus is an online LaTeX editor (free to use), including PDF generation.
tbookdtd, XML DTD for LaTeX documents, and HTML generation

Related software:

  • MINSE: a math polymediator
  • MathFlow, a replacement for WebEQ.
  • LiveMath: an interactive math plug-in from MathMonkeys which replaces MathView
  • Communicating Math with Hypertext: archive of resources for scientific web site design and management.

If you are interested in math and XML, look info MathML, the proposal for math on the Web, and a standard DTD.

BibTeX and bibliographies

  • Basics: BibTeX home page and CTAN package page.
  • BibTeX 101, an introduction to BibTeX by Oren Patashnik (TUGboat 19:2).
  • Massive bibliography collection, from Nelson Beebe, including bibnet and the TUG bibliography archive, both mirrored on tug.org.
  • Tame the BeaST: The B to X of BibTeX, a comprehensive BibTeX manual by Nicolas Markey.
  • BibDB, a BibTeX Database Manager (DOS and Windows) by Eyal Doron.
  • Bibfilex, a cross-platform manager for BibLaTeX specifically.
  • BibLaTeX: bibliographies completely in LaTeX, using BibTeX or Biber for sorting.
  • ebib, BibTeX database manager for Emacs.
  • JabRef, Java-based GUI for managing BibTeX databases.
  • Pybliographer, a BibTeX tool which can be used for searching, editing, reformatting, etc. It provides Python classes, has a graphical GNOME interface, and references can be inserted directly into LyX (version 1.0.x running on the GNOME desktop.
  • RefTeX, for handling references with GNU Emacs.

Commercial and shareware TeX vendors and projects

The AMS TeX pages have a list of Commercial TeX implementations. This list includes many additional shareware and otherwise nonfree packages and projects.

Applied Symbols, OpenType Computer Modern and Unimath, an OpenType math font.
CMacTeX for Macintosh, by Tom Kiffe
DiffDoc, shareware for comparing html, pdf, and other documents.
GrindEQ Math Utilities, for importing/exporting (AMS)(La)TeX documents to/from Microsoft Word.
LaTeXBase, online collaborative writing and publishing.
Mackichan Software, Inc. sells Scientific Word for Windows and Mac, a WYSIWYG program using TeX in the background.
Overleaf for collaborative writing and publishing.
Personal TeX Inc. sells and supports a complete TeX product for Windows.
OzTeX for the Macintosh, by Andrew Trevorrow, released as freeware.
True TeX is a TrueType based TeX for Windows.
VTeX includes a TeX IDE, visual tools, HTML, PDF, PS and SVG backends, and many math and text fonts.
WinEdt, a very powerful TeX editor and shell for Windows.
word2tex, shareware from Chikrii Softlab for converting Word documents to LaTeX and from LaTeX to Word.
Y&Y was a TeX system for Windows; they're out of business now, but their web pages are still available here.

Publisher-provided TeX and LaTeX styles

See also the excellent pages on Journals Accepting Manuscripts written using LaTeX by Gabriel Valiente.

A number of publishers provide ready-made style packages.

  • AAAI Press: How to Obtain AAAI Macros and Templates (LaTeX and Bib)
  • American Chemical Society: Preparing and Submitting Manuscripts.
  • American Mathematical Society: Author Packages for Publishing with the AMS (AMS-TeX and AMS-LaTeX).
  • Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics: ACP - Manuscript preparation: Technical instructions for LaTeX.
  • Cambridge University Press: The Journal of Functional Programming (LaTeX)
  • Elsevier Science Publishers: Elsevier LaTeX package (LaTeX).
  • IEEE Publications: IEEE information for authors (LaTeX).
  • Reviews of Modern Physics: LaTeX Macros for Compuscript Submissions
  • SIAM Publications: SIAM TeX resources (TeX, LaTeX and AMS-TeX).
  • Springer Verlag (now including Kluwer): Welcome to Authors

Scholarly and publishing organizations:

  • Assoc. of Learned and Professional Society Publishers (European)
  • Humanities books typeset with TeX by Tseng Books.

Publicity

  • Calendar

Miscellaneous

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  • Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders - proofread OCR'd text of public domain books a page at a time, when you have time. All books are distributed freely. Includes math books, which are done using TeX.
  • How modern mathematics emerged from a lost Islamic library, a BBC article by Adrienne Bernhard.
  • Thanks to Ulrik Vieth, historic TeX files and distributions (with several mirrors). An overview article by Ulrik is available. Also available is the SAIL archive for Stanford material in the years 1977-1990.

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