I think this approach is quite insane in this situation, as native solutions also exist - as the OP also mentioned.Īs you generate the reports from R, it might be the less painful to rewrite some function you use in the reporting process and update those to be able to run in odfWeave. I am now editting this answer to suggest Pandoc as I find Pandoc is kept up to date, works well, and I like the flexibility to choose from many more input and output file types.Īll answers above suggested to use some converter from tex/pdf file to the wanted file format, that is why I try to give an n-th proposal. : Originally I suggested the use of latex2rtf instead of Pandoc. I've put a set of demo documents in a Github repository which may be helpful.
#Tex2word reviews pdf#
My test PDF documents sometimes pass automated testing in Adobe Acrobat. I have been working (slowly) on using the pdfcomment package to add tooltips and modifying the accessibility package so that documents are accessible. The one thing that is still causing trouble is 508-compliance.
#Tex2word reviews how to#
#Tex2word reviews free#
What is a reliable, efficient, and preferably free process? I don't need to go back from MS Word to LaTeX.I need to export this reliably into Open Office or MS Word format: this includes mathematical formulas, table formatting, and quality figures).I have a LaTeX document with text, tables, and figures.
However, when I collaborate with others, I sometimes need to provide a document in Open Office / MS Word format. This is then included into a LaTeX document either using input or Sweave ( see here for details). I use R to analyse the data and export tables, figures, and text. I often have to write up reports based on the analysis of some data.