Original author(s) | TeX Users Group |
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Developer(s) | Karl Berry |
Initial release | 1996 |
Stable release | 2011 / July 20, 2011 |
Development status | Active |
Operating system | AIX, FreeBSD, HP-UX, IRIX, Linux, Mac OS X, OpenBSD, Solaris, Windows |
Available in | English, Simplified Chinese, Czech/Slovak, French, German, Polish, Russian, Serbian |
Type | TeX distribution |
License | LaTeX Project Public License (LPPL), GPL (Version 2) |
Website | http://www.tug.org/texlive/ |
TeX Live is a TeX distribution which is the replacement of its no-longer supported[1] counterpart teTeX.[2] It is now the default TeX distribution for several Linux distributions such as Fedora,[3] Debian,[4][5] Ubuntu[6] and Gentoo[7]. Other Unix operating systems like OpenBSD[8], FreeBSD[9] and NetBSD[10] are also converting from teTeX to TeX Live.
The project was originally started by Sebastian Rahtz in 1996 in collaboration with the TeX users groups worldwide, including the TeX Users Group. Today, it is maintained by Karl Berry.
Up to version 2009, TeX Live could be run directly, or “live”, from a CD ROM, from a DVD ROM, or from any other mobile device, hence its name. As from TeX Live 2010 it was no longer possible to run the distribution from the TeX Collection DVD due to restrictions in storage space. TeX Live follows the TeX Directory Structure.
Since the 2009 release, the editor TeXworks is included for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X as well as the vector graphics language Asymptote.[11]
For Mac OS X there is MacTeX[12] which comprises TeX Live as well as some additional tools for using TeX on the Mac, most notably the editor TeXShop.
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