Hi my name is Tom Faulkenberry and I am a mathematical psychologist and professor at Tarleton State University in Stephenville, Texas. My talk is about using something that's kind of old, a lot of people don't think about it any more, with something new, like Emacs Org-mode. Particularly I'm going to talk about using FoilTeX in Emacs Org-mode. So first I want to give you a little bit of background about what this is and why you would want to do it. As you can see I have some things available for you on a GitHub repo. The address you can see up here, is https://github.com/tomfaulkenberry/orgFoils with the F capitalized. So if you go there you'll see this README and it kind of tells the story, I've been using Emacs for a long time and even before that I was using LaTex in my graduate studies in mathematics.

Now with the advent of Org-mode many of us know that we are able to combine the efficiency of using an Emacs workflow, and particularly the markdown language that's provided by Org-mode, with the mathematical type setting power of LaTeX, and so there are standard ways to export Org-mode into LaTeX-type documents. Particularly this works for presentations, and of course I'm a professor so I make a lot of presentations, both at conferences as well as for classes that I teach. Now I found that Org-mode did this very nicely, as long as you were willing to use the ?Beamer? class, so if I wanted to make things that were horizontally oriented and use the standard color schemes in ?Beamer? then Org-mode export works fine for that. But I have to admit I longed for simplicity of old days of using LaTeX, where we made slides for - okay I'm going to date myself here - but we made slides for overhead projectors that were in a portrait orientation, and they just didn't have a lot of decoration on them.

They kind of got to the point, they showed some mathematics, they showed some things, and that was about it.

Well those were made back in those days using something called the FoilTeX package, I've provided a link here on this README. You can see if we go to the package for FoilTeX it hasn't been updated since 2008, and even before that it went six years between updates. This is not by any means an active development package. Rather it is something that is old, it is archival but it is still distributed with the full installation of LaTeX. So back to the point, why do we care about this? Well, it's a pretty simple way of making presentations, but Org-mode won't do it without a little bit of hacking. So the point of this presentation is to show you that it can be done, to show you that you can actually make very nice presentations for both conferences as well as teaching notes, and teaching slides, with just a little bit of work on your .emacs file. So before I show you how that works, and it's all documented here on the GitHub repo, I want to just demonstrate it in action, so I'm going to flop over to Emacs real quick. Here is a document, there is a copy of this document in the GitHub repository that I mentioned about, so as you can see it does seem to follow the structure of a standard Org-mode document.

At the top we have some header matter that I will explain in just a second, and then we have these lists that begin with asterisks, and if we tab them you can see that there's text underneath these. These sections, if you will, will each turn into separate pages on my lectures notes. So I've got several, this is for about a two hour long course, so how does it turn into a pretty document that I can then take to my course with me?

Well it works just like any standard Org-mode to LaTeX export. We type C-c C-e which then provides us with this export menu, and as we can see here to export to LaTeX and then a resulting PDF file I can type l and then o and I do that and it will generate my LaTeX file as well as open it for me and we'll see that pop up. Okay. And let me go to the very beginning. This is what it looks like. Let me scroll or zoomout a little bit so you can see the full page. So these are in portrait orientation, I use my lecture like this because usually I'm giving a lecture on an, not an overhead, but a document camera where I'll take the paper with me and I'll have some things written but I'll also have some space to write additional things throughout the class. So sort of a hybrid between a chalk talk if you will and a formal presentation.

And so as you can see this is nicely done with some readable fonts, using LaTeX type type-setting, so it's really good for mathematical content, and I found it's just a really clean way of doing things. So that's what it looks like. So the question is how do you do this, how do you generate this and get your Org-mode and Emacs set up to work this way. Well I detail this in the GitHub repository. There are two things you need to do to make this work. First is you need to edit your .emacs file to include this codeblock. So this codeblock is, I'll show you on my .emacs file, it doens't really matter where it goes, I usually put it somewhere in the middle. Let me open that just real quick for you.

My .emacs file's got some stuff in it and if we go down to about right here you can see that code chunk is right here. So that code chunk is what it takes to make that exporting that I demonstrated work. You can see it here it basically does two things. First is it defines a Foils class, that you can call in the Org document, and then it maps your section header, that asterisk, to the FoilTeX command which is Foil head. So if you type all of this in your .emacs and then reload that you will be able to then turn the example Org mode document into a nice set of lecture notes. The other thing that you need to include, is you need to include a document header.

Now this is kind of a barebones header, I will say that strictly speaking, not everyone of these things is required, for example, you do not need this \usepackage{amsmath} , unless you are using some fonts or things that are in that package.

Another thing is this little bit of LaTeX command, this makes it to where my paragraphs don't indent, which for presentations and lecture slides I prefer. There are also some class options, I do mine portrait, but if I'm giving a presentation at a conference those are usually done via computer projector, so I would turn that into landscape. And also this 17-point font you see, that's the size that works nicely for me, but there are other font sizes available in FoilTeX that you can use. All of those are detailed in the FoilTeX manual which I've provided a link to for you here.