![]() I have been using SumatraPDF as my default viewer (not editor/”signer”) for quite a while, as it is way lighter than those typical one like Acrobat Reader or Foxit Reader (though i like its fill-in options very much). (See my answer for more details.) When I wanted to change some keyboard shortkeys in TeXStudio I ran into some. Make sure to use the latter form by typing it in by hand (rather than the automatical detection which strangely does not result in the format used by the rest of TeXStudio). At this point you may want to play around and try typesetting your own document. To open TeXwork go to Start > All Programs > MiKTeX > TeXwork. MiKTeX comes with a front end text editor built in, TexWork. %% END main.tex External Viewer (SumatraPDF) This happens for example for CTRL+SHIFT+ vs CTRL+SHIFT+6. With everything installed and updated the last step is to try typesetting. With the following lines in preamble (before the line \begin %. Otherwise, try your luck with external viewer. In short, if it is fine for you to change the PDF colour, I suggest go with the path of internal viewer. I had enough of interruption with this coupling and hence now switch back to use internal viewer. The exact same command worked fine at the beginning, but right now the forward search (from *.tex to the line in PDF) is buggy: works for some documents but not the other. If you want a revision history table showing the following four items, you should look at the vhistory package. However, it is not always a smooth experience. I have started dark themed LaTeX experience with external viewer. ![]() Prior to this, I was using a custom theme from pmaroco, which if I recall correctly, changes only the editor area. I guess they are adapting this colour theme from the GTK-theme in Linux desktop. It can be changed under Options -> Configure TexStudio… -> General -> Appearance -> Style, Adwaita Dark (txs) is just fine for me. ![]() The editor of my choice is TexStudio, which supports dark theme starting from v3. Obviously there are two parts to these: editor and PDF viewer. This time I will talk about customizing (darkify) $\LaTeX$ writing environment.
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