Copyright 2005 Peter Gacs Licensed under the Academic Free Licence version 2.1 DE-MACRO Version 1.4 - Luca Citi made it python2.7 and python3 compatible. Peter Gacs improved the parsing of \input{}, and made @ a letter in the style files. Version 1.3 - this version is much more conservative about deleting comments and inserting or deleting blank space: tries to leave in all comments, adds space only when necessary, and tries not to delete space in the main text. The motivating comments came from Daniel Webb. Version 1.2 - a syntactical bug corrected, thanks Brian de Alwis! PURPOSE This program can eliminate most private macros from a LaTeX file. Applications: - your publisher has difficulty dealing with many private macros - you cooperate with colleagues who do not understand your macros - preprocessing before a system like latex2html, which is somewhat unpredictable with private macros. PLATFORM This is a Python program, which I only have tried to run under Unix. But the Unix dependence is minimal (for example all the directory path references are platform-independent). It should be easy to adapt the program to Windows, and also to avoid command-line arguments. In case your Python is not in /usr/bin, you should change the top line (the "shebang" line) of the program accordingly. This top line uses the -O option for python (stands for "optimize"). Without it, the program may run too slowly. If you do not care for speed, a number of other complications (the database, the checking for newer versions) could be eliminated. USAGE Warning: this documentation contains "less" and "greater" signs. Important information is lost when it is displayed as html. Click directly on the README file instead! Command line: de-macro [--defs ] [.tex] [[.tex] ...] Simplest example: de-macro testament (As you see, the <> is used only in the notation of this documentation, you do should not type it.) If contains a command \usepackage{-private} then the file -private.sty will be read, and its macros will be replaced in with their definitions. The result is in -clean.tex. Only newcommand, renewcommand, newenvironment, and renewenvironment are understood (it does not matter, whether you write new or renew). These can be nested but do not be too clever, since I do not guarantee the same expansion order as in TeX. FILES .db -clean.tex -private.sty For speed, a macro database file called .db is created. If such a file exists already then it is used. If -private.sty is older than .db then it will not be used. It is possible to specify another database filename via --defs . Then .db will be used. (Warning: with some Python versions and/or Unix platforms, the database file name conventions may be different from what is said here.) For each , a file -clean.tex will be produced. If -clean.tex is newer than .tex then it stays. INPUT COMMAND If a tex file contains a command \input{} or \input then .tex is processed recursively, and -clean.tex will be inserted into the final output. For speed, if -clean.tex is newer than .tex then .tex will not be reprocessed. The dependency checking is not sophisticated, so if you rewrite some macros then remove all *-clean.tex files!