best latex compiler on linux

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  • Tectonic automatically downloads support files so you don’t have to install a full LaTeX system in order to start using it. If you start using a new LaTeX package, Tectonic just pulls down the files it needs and continues processing. The underyling “bundle” technology allows for completely reproducible document compiles

  • Tectonic has sophisticated logic and automatically loops TeX and BibTeX as needed, and only as much as needed. In its default mode it doesn’t write TeX’s intermediate files and always produces a fully-processed document.

  • The tectonic command-line program is quiet and never stops to ask for input.

  • Thanks to the power of XeTeX, Tectonic can use modern OpenType fonts and is fully Unicode-enabled.

  • The Tectonic engine has been extracted into a completely self-contained library so that it can be embedded in other applications.

  • Tectonic has been forked from the old-fashioned WEB2C implementation of TeX and is developed in the open on GitHub using modern tools like the Rust language.

  • Tectonic can be used from Github Actions to typeset your documents whenever a change to them is made:

user@host $ tectonic paper.tex
Running TeX ...
note: warnings were issued by the TeX engine; use --print and/or --keep-logs for details.
Running BibTeX ...
Rerunning TeX because bibtex was run ...
Rerunning TeX because "paper.aux" changed ...
Rerunning TeX because "paper.aux" changed ...
Running xdvipdfmx ...
Writing paper.pdf (383521 bytes)
Skipped writing 3 intermediate files (use --keep-intermediates to keep them)
user@host $

About the name

The name of the project is “Tectonic,” spelled and pronounced like a regular word because it is one. Enough with the cutesy obscurantism. In cases where the name might lead to ambiguities, it should be expanded to “Tectonic typesetting.”

If you’re feeling expansive, you can interpret the name as suggesting a large change in the TeX world. Or you can think of it as suggesting a salubrious offering for weary TeX users. Either way, the root of the word does go back to the ancient Greek τέκτων, ”carpenter,” which Donald Knuth — the creator of TeX and a devout Christian — might appreciate.