Latexer is a package to help you with your every day LaTeX needs. It does reference, citation and environment autocompletion on the fly or at the touch of a keystroke.
- Typing in
\ref{
,\eqref{
or any control sequences that ends inref{
- Deleting anything so that the left of the cursor reads
\ref{
,\eqref{
, and the like. E.g. deleting the word 'something' from\pageref{something}
Latexer will automatically scan your document to find your bibfiles. For example, if your document contains the command \bibliography{mybib1.bib, mybib2}
, latexer will find and then scan through the files named mybib1.bib
and mymbib2.bib
to get the citations. Additionally, Latexer will look for BibTeX files given in the current file of the form \addbibresource
and \addglobalbib
.
You can also specify bibfiles using a YAML metadata block at the top of your document. If you choose to write in Markdown on RMarkdown, Latexer will automatically look for the bibliography
key in your YAML and scan any files specified for citations.
- Typing in
\cite{
,\textcite{
,\citet{
,\citet*{
,\citep{
or\citep*{
. You can also write something in square brackets before, e.g.\cite[Theorem 1]{
. - Deleting anything so that the left of the cursor reads
\cite{
,\textcite{
,\citet{
,\citet*{
,\citep{
or\citep*{
, e.g. deleting the word 'something' from\cite{something}
Pandoc-style Citation Triggers
- Typing
[@
or[-@
to begin a pandoc-style citation - Typing
@
or-@
after semicolon-delimited references in a pandoc-style citation, for example:[@ref1; @
and[@ref3; also see @ref4; @
You can edit from the preferences window which parameters you would like to search the bibliographies by. The default is title,author
, but you can specify whichever search fields you like. For example, key,year
will search for an entry entries by its key, i.e. @key{...}
and the year it was published.
- Having an unmatched
\begin{env_name}
or\[
in the line above.
For multifile support, from the child files use %!TEX root = mainfile.tex
to point to the root file.
You can switch off any of the autocompletions in the settings menu. If you prefer a manual approach you can bind keys as follows. First go to Atom>Open Your Keymap
and then paste the following, choosing whatever key binding you find convenient:
'atom-text-editor':
'cmd-alt-o': 'latexer:omnicomplete'
'cmd-alt-r': 'latexer:insert-reference'
'cmd-alt-c': 'latexer:insert-citation'
This package only provides autocompletion. If you want the full LaTeX experience then I would recommend getting the language-latex package for syntax highlighting, and the latex or the latex-plus package for compiling LaTeX documents. You can also view pdf documents from within Atom by installing the pdf-view package.