On a Mac, you can of course just open up a terminal, cd
to the directory where you keep the TeX file, and issue
while true; do sleep 5; latex -halt-on-error filename.tex; done
and have the DVI file open in a viewer that watches for (and reloads on) changes. The one-liner runs latex
continuously with 5 second break between runs (the -halt-on-error
options prevents the incantation from getting stuck if you saved a file with errors). You can also swap in pdflatex
instead.
This solves half of your problem. The other half has to be dealt with by your editor of choice. You need to set it up to automatically save the file every x seconds, and how to do that depends on the editor at hand.
Now, that one-liner I gave above is quite ugly and resource wasting, since it makes no sense to re-compile if no changes are made (Edit: See this comment below for a much better way to avoid this problem). So you can do something like
while true; do sleep 2; if [ filename.tex -nt filename.log ]; then latex -halt-on-error filename.tex; fi; done
which watches for changes to the TeX file (signaled by the fact that filename.tex
is more recently modified than filename.log
) and compile when necessary (with a possible two seconds delay).
Short of a WYSIWYG, I am not quite sure how you can achieve full real-time solution. Compiling the code takes usually a short amount of time (1 or 2 seconds, or more if the file is large). So if you are looking for a solution that calls the LaTeX compiler, it probably shouldn't try to do it more often than once every 5 or 10 seconds. So you won't be able to immediately see what you typed in the DVI window. Also, if the editor autosaves the file in a spot where you are halfway typing a command, then the source won't compile.
With LaTeX I feel that the better idea is "compile-on-saves", where the human initiates the saving of the file (as compared to "automatically saving and compiling in the background). For that, modern editors can generally support hot-keys where saving and compiling is mapped to one keystroke. In vim
I map F2 to compile and F4 to call XDVI.
The website you point to is using MathJax to render the LaTeX. If you don't mind using a browser, then you can simply download MathJax, unpack the zip file, go into the test subfolder and open sample-dynamic.html
in your browser. This is effectively an equation editor. You can make a custom web page to cater to your needs.
Note: As it is this requires you to hit the return key to render. That should be simple enough to alter. Grabbing the equation as a PNG could be a little more complex to achieve.
Best Answer
I have two strong recommendations:
TeXworks: if you like it quick and easy, it's usually already installed by MiKTeX and TeX Live, so just try.
TeXnicCenter: if you would like to work with a complex LaTeX editor with project management and a lot of features, toolbars and output options.
Further LaTeX editors for Windows are listed here: Distributions, Editors and Viewer for Windows.