Bonus: this class almost(!) gives you a tagged PDF that passes automated testing for tags (the fabled 508 compliance). See for a demo of a class that gives you a file that can be converted with latex2rtf to. rtf are caused by optional packages and environments that are not supported. This is because a lot of problems with conversion from. As I wrote in Hide output, but maintain the cross-references, my solution has been to put a very tight cap on the packages that are used when creating a tex document that you know will be converted. rtf that then gets converted, rather than going through pandoc. I've had a fair amount of luck with going to word documents using latex2rtf to create an. We hope to make version 5.5 of Scientific Word available in the future. When the open source project for Scientific Word is established, an announcement will be made here. If you are set on using pandoc, the simplest solution may be to just identify environments and packages that cause trouble - and then not use them, or just type the offending stuff directly in to MS Word. Since both Scientific WorkPlace and Scientific Notebook contain the proprietary computer algebra system MuPAD, they cannot be made open source. I gave up on pandoc for almost exactly the same reasons you listed. ![]() The tables are in their own separate tables.tex file, which I include using the \include$ The manuscript includes title page, figures, tables, equations (inline and in their own align environment), footnotes, bibliography, and an annex. The reason for having to convert to MS Word is I'm submitting the manuscript to an academic journal and they only accept MS Word (I know.) ![]() tex file, and I need to convert it to MS Word. I have a typical scientific manuscript in a LaTeX.
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