Next: Credits, 1993-1994
Nikos Drakos
Computer Based Learning Unit
University of Leeds.
November 2, 1997
This document accompanies LATEX2HTML , version 97.1.
The manuscript was updated to version 96.1, as indicated with change-bar icons, by Herbert WSwan <lanhws@expl.aai.arco.com> and converted to LATEX2e by Michel Goossens <goossens@cern.ch> . Updates and extensive revisions to the manuscript for version V96.1 rev-f, were made by Ross Moore <ross@mpce.mq.edu.au> , also incorporating suggestions from Michel Goossens .
Another major revision was required to adequately describe the new features
made possible with HTML 3.2,
and recent developments in image-generation and macro-handling.
This work was done by Ross Moore
.
Appropriate change-bar icons indicate where newly added features are described.
Warning: The contents of this document are likely to change.
It is advisable not to use links to any pages other than the first page (this page).
LATEX2HTML is a conversion tool that allows documents written in LATEX to become part of the World-Wide Web. In addition, it offers an easy migration path towards authoring complex hyper-media documents using familiar word-processing concepts, including the power of a LATEX-like macro language capable of producing correctly structured HTML tags.
LATEX2HTML replicates the basic structure of a LATEX document as a set of interconnected HTML files which can be explored using automatically generated navigation panels. The cross-references, citations, footnotes, the table-of-contents and the lists of figures and tables, are also translated into hypertext links. Formatting information which has equivalent ``tags'' in HTML (lists, quotes, paragraph-breaks, type-styles, etc.) is also converted appropriately. The remaining heavily formatted items such as mathematical equations, pictures etc. are converted to images which are placed automatically at the correct position in the final HTML document.
LATEX2HTML extends LATEX by supporting arbitrary hypertext links and symbolic cross-references between evolving remote documents. It also allows the specification of conditional text and the inclusion of raw HTML commands. These hyper-media extensions to LATEX are available as new commands and environments from within a LATEX document.
This document presents the main features of LATEX2HTML and describes how to obtain and install it, and how to use it effectively.
Generated using the LaTeX2HTML