knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>" )
Parsing LaTeX is tricky, because LaTeX macros (in LaTeX packages, or in user code) can change the parsing rules as they go.
parseLatex
is not a LaTeX interpreter (at least
mostly it isn't, but see the detailed comparison below),
so it can't do that: it uses
the same parsing rules for all code that it looks at. If you're
using a LaTeX package that uses non-standard rules, you can use
those, but they have to apply to the whole section of code
passed to parseLatex()
.
Subject to the limitation that the code only uses one
set of
rules, parseLatex
should be able to parse any LaTeX code. It
extends the base tools::parseLatex()
function in a few ways:
parseLatex::parseLatex()
function marks its output with
class "LaTeX2"
instead of "LaTeX"
, and marks each item in the
output with class "LaTeX2item"
. This allows it to print things
in a more readable way.parseLatex
package includes a large selection of functions
for extracting and modifying parts of the parsed LaTeX.More differences are listed below.
A simple demonstration is in order.
First, we use knitr
to create a LaTeX table.
library(knitr) latex <- kable(mtcars[1:2, 1:2], format = "latex") cat(latex)
Next, we parse it in parseLatex
.
library(parseLatex) parsed <- parseLatex(latex)
Printing the result would appear to duplicate the input, but in fact
it is quite different. parsed
is a list of class "LaTeX2"
. Items
in the list are of class "LaTeX2item"
. In this example, there
are only two items: the blank that knitr
puts at the beginning of
each table, and a second entry which is the whole table environment:
parsed[[1]] parsed[[2]]
"SPECIAL
" and "ENVIRONMENT
" label the types of items. The table
environment contains the environment name, and a "LaTeX2"
list
containing all the content.
If we hadn't known where we put it, we could find the table location
using find_env()
:
find_env(parsed, "tabular")
We can extract the table, and use other functions to work with it:
table <- parsed[[find_env(parsed, "tabular")]] # Get the alignment options from the content columnOptions(table) tableCell(table, 2,2) # The title counts as a row tableCell(table, 1,1) <- "Model" table
tools::parseLatex
The parser in this package is based on the one used by the base R
tools::parseLatex
function (which I also wrote, based on other
parsers in R). The output format is similar, but not compatible.
These are the main differences.
tools::parseLatex
, the result of calling
the parser is a list of items. "LaTeX2"
in this
package, and class "LaTeX"
in tools::parseLatex
.latexTag()
function
identifying the type of item. In this package the possible tags aretags <- data.frame(Tag = c("BLOCK", "COMMENT", "DISPLAYMATH", "ENVIRONMENT", "MACRO", "MATH", "SPECIAL", "TEXT", "VERB", "DEFINITION", "ERROR"), Description = c( "A block enclosed in curly braces", "A LaTeX comment", "A display math block", "A LaTeX environment", "A LaTeX macro", "An inline math block", "A non-alphabetic character", "Text (consisting of letters only)", "A verbatim environment", "A command or environment definition", "A block of items referenced in an error message"), Type = c("list", "character", "list", "list", "character", "list", "character", "character", "character", "list", "list")) knitr::kable(tags, booktabs = TRUE)
tools::parseLatex()
parser does not have the SPECIAL
;
such characters are included in TEXT
. It also doesn't
have the DEFINITION
or ERROR
tags. Definitions are treated
as regular macros, which sometimes leads to parsing errors.
Errors are always fatal.\end{document}
, just
as LaTeX does. The tools::parseLatex()
parser continues
parsing beyond that, often leading to parsing errors as
it tries to parse things that LaTeX would ignore.COMMENT
, MACRO
, SPECIAL
, TEXT
, and VERB
)
are stored as length 1 character vectors; the others are stored
as lists of items corresponding to their content. tools::parseLatex()
function
stores some lists in two levels (e.g. the content of
an environment named item
would be in item[[2]]
), while in
this package, all lists contain the content directly (e.g.
the content of that environment would be in item
itself)."LaTeX2item"
. tools::parseLatex()
does not assign a class to items."LaTeX2item"
so that individual items print nicely.verb
macros
like \Sexpr
. The tools::parseLatex()
parser assumed
there would be no braces within the macro (which is the
case for legal Sweave()
source). This parser assumes
any braces within the macro are balanced, e.g. this would
be legal:\
\
\Sexpr{1 + {x <- 2; x + 1}}
\
\
whereas unbalanced braces would not be.As mentioned above, parseLatex()
does a little bit more
than parsing. Both versions recognize LaTeX environments
and verbatim code.
The parser in this package also takes special action
when it sees the document
environment: it stops
parsing at \end{document}
. (You can use the
get_leftovers()
function to see what parts of the input
were skipped.)
It also changes the rules
a bit when it sees macros
defining things: \newenvironment
, \renewenvironment
,
\newcommand
, \renewcommand
and \providecommand
. The
arguments to these macros are parsed but not interpreted,
allowing definitions to parse without triggering
a syntax error. For example:
\newenvironment{newenv}{\begin{oldenv}}{\end{oldenv}}
The \begin{oldenv}
part of the definition shouldn't be
interpreted here as the start of an oldenv
environment,
because \end{oldenv}
isn't in the same {}
block.
One plain TeX version of these macros is \def
. It is
recognized and an attempt is made to handle it, but there's
some really arcane syntax possible with \def
. If you use
that, it probably won't be parsed properly. Stick with
simple syntax like
\def\bea{\begin{eqnarray*}}
and you should be okay.
The parseLatex::parseLatex()
parser can parse most
LaTeX inputs, but not all. To allow it to be used on
files that contain unsupported syntax, it allows "magic
comments" to be inserted to control its actions.
Several LaTeX editors support magic comments of the form
% !TEX ...
, and those were the model for parseLatex
magic comment support. There are 4 magic comments supported
in this parser:
% !parser off
This tells the parser to absorb all following
text as part of the comment, so anything that would be
classed as a parsing error is never seen.% !parser on
This tells it to resume normal parsing.% !parser verb [name]
This tells the parser
to add the name to the list of macros holding verbatim
text, i.e. the list given by the verb
argument when
parseLatex()
was called. The name should include the
backslash, e.g.\
\
% !parser verb \Sexpr
\
\
would add the default verb macro.% !parser defcmd [name]
does the same for commands like
\newcommand
.% !parser defenv [name]
does it for commands like
\newenvironment
.% !parser verbatim [name]
This tells the parser
to add the name to the list of environments holding verbatim
text, i.e. the list given by the verbatim
argument.
For example\
\
% !parser verbatim Sinput
\
\
would add one of the default verbatim environments.The parser is quite strict about the format of the magic comments. The whitespace between parts of it must be spaces, not tabs, and nothing else can appear in the comment after the magic text other than more spaces.
This is a work in progress, so if you have a use for something like this and need help, post an "issue" on the Github page: https://github.com/dmurdoch/parseLatex .
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