Hello all,
I am a inexperienced user with Geany. I primarily use it for C programming and editing latex. I am wondering if there is a way to clean the different object/ executable/ aux files created during compilation after I am done with my work.
For users familiar with texmaker I am asking for something like "clean"-button inn Geany.
Thanks for your help! -Shom
On 12-09-07 03:13 PM, Shom wrote:
Hello all,
I am a inexperienced user with Geany. I primarily use it for C programming and editing latex. I am wondering if there is a way to clean the different object/ executable/ aux files created during compilation after I am done with my work.
For users familiar with texmaker I am asking for something like "clean"-button inn Geany.
You can configure a build command and make it call "rm -f blah blah" to delete those files. Then it will show up in the Build menu and toolbar (under the button with the funny looking icon). Search the manual for "build command" for more info on setting build commands.
Usually I write a little Make file for stuff like this so that the build command just needs to call the appropriate Make file target (ie. in this case something like "make clean").
Cheers, Matthew Brush
On 08/09/12 02:20, Matthew Brush wrote:
On 12-09-07 03:13 PM, Shom wrote:
Hello all,
I am a inexperienced user with Geany. I primarily use it for C programming and editing latex. I am wondering if there is a way to clean the different object/ executable/ aux files created during compilation after I am done with my work.
For users familiar with texmaker I am asking for something like "clean"-button inn Geany.
You can configure a build command and make it call "rm -f blah blah" to delete those files. Then it will show up in the Build menu and toolbar (under the button with the funny looking icon). Search the manual for "build command" for more info on setting build commands.
Usually I write a little Make file for stuff like this so that the build command just needs to call the appropriate Make file target (ie. in this case something like "make clean").
Cheers, Matthew Brush
Geany mailing list Geany@uvena.de https://lists.uvena.de/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geany
Hi,
You could combine Matthew's suggestion with the latexmk (comes with TeXlive, I think). latexmk compiles latex files automatically, keeps track of the dependencies and can do all sorts of cleanup. One feature of latexmk that I also really love is the fact that it can run in the background and compile the latex code as soon as something changes.
Regards, Laurent
Am 08.09.2012 07:45, schrieb Laurent Hoeltgen:
You could combine Matthew's suggestion with the latexmk (comes with TeXlive, I think). latexmk compiles latex files automatically, keeps track of the dependencies and can do all sorts of cleanup. One feature of latexmk that I also really love is the fact that it can run in the background and compile the latex code as soon as something changes.
Do you have any experince how it works with bibtex and can you recommend a good howto for?
Cheers, Frank