It also sets up the outliner to work well with LaTeX parts, chapters, etc. All of the essential construcs are available by keyboard and by menu. Yes, there is a steep learning curve for non-emacs folks, but Auctex gives a really good LaTeX environment. I will add another vote for Emacs + Auctex + Reftex. If you think I should give another chance to one of the programs above I'll glad read your reasons. Maybe I'm being a bit restrictive, I know, but any suggestions are wellcome. I'm trying to use texclipse plugin for eclipse, and I find it pretty good, but eclipse consumes a lot of resources in my laptop so I'd rather use another solution. If not, find another editor for Linux (not WYSIWYG).
If I can get properly running LeD with Wine this would be my ideal solution. So after this long story, this is what I would like to know: I tried to use LeD in Ubuntu with Wine, but the controls don't respond often and it gets hung up frequently. Winefish has still a long way to go in my opinion). I tried also Kile and winefish, but I chose Texmaker over them (Kile is not much better than texmaker, and it's a KDE application -I'm using Gnome. Texmaker is ok to edit files or create documents based on single files, but it doesn't have project features, or the possibilities to create documents from templates. I can't find a latex editor for Linux which equals the features of LeD in Windows.
#Kile latex editor windows windows
I'm trying now to reduce my Windows usage to a minimum, and I have a little problem here. I've used Latex to write my thesis, using Miktex + LeD in windows and Tetex + texmaker in Ubuntu.