Href Latex

Href Latex




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\documentclass { book }
\usepackage { blindtext }
\usepackage { hyperref }

\title { Example of Hyperlinks }
\author { Overleaf }

\begin { document }

\frontmatter
\tableofcontents
\clearpage

\addcontentsline { toc }{ chapter }{ Foreword }
{ \huge { \bf Foreword }}

\Blindtext
\clearpage

\addcontentsline { toc }{ chapter }{ Dummy entry }
{ \huge { \bf Dummy entry }}

\Blindtext
\mainmatter

\chapter { First Chapter }

This will be an empty chapter

\begin { equation }
\label { eq:1 }
\sum _{ i=0 }^{ \infty } a _ i x ^ i
\end { equation }

The equation \ref { eq:1 } shows a sum that is divergent. This formula will be used later on page \pageref { second } .

\Blindtext
\clearpage

\section { Second section } \label { second }

\blindtext
\Blinddocument
\end { document }

\documentclass { book }
\usepackage { hyperref }
\hypersetup {
colorlinks=true,
linkcolor=blue,
filecolor=magenta,
urlcolor=cyan,
pdftitle= { Overleaf Example } ,
pdfpagemode=FullScreen,
}

\urlstyle { same }

\begin { document }

\tableofcontents

\chapter { First Chapter }

This will be an empty chapter and I will put some text here

\begin { equation }
\label { eq:1 }
\sum _{ i=0 }^{ \infty } a _ i x ^ i
\end { equation }

The equation \ref { eq:1 } shows a sum that is divergent. This formula
will later be used in the page \pageref { second } .

For further references see \href { http://www.overleaf.com }{ Something
Linky } or go to the next url: \url { http://www.overleaf.com } or open
the next file \href { run:./file.txt }{ File.txt }

It's also possible to link directly any word or
\hyperlink { thesentence }{ any sentence } in your document.

\end { document }

For further references see \href { http://www.overleaf.com }{ Something Linky }
or go to the next url: \url { http://www.overleaf.com }

For further references see \href { http://www.overleaf.com }{ Something Linky }
or go to the next url: \url { http://www.overleaf.com } or open the next
file \href { run:./file.txt }{ File.txt }

It's also possible to link directly any word
or \hyperlink { thesentence }{ any sentence } in you document.

If you read this text, you will get no information. Really?
Is there no information?

For instance \hypertarget { thesentence }{ this sentence } .

\hypersetup {
colorlinks=true,
linkcolor=blue,
filecolor=magenta,
urlcolor=cyan,
pdftitle= { Overleaf Example } ,
pdfpagemode=FullScreen,
}

L a T e X is a great tool for printable professional-looking documents, but can be also used to generate PDF files with excellent navigation tools. This article describes how to create hyperlinks in your document, and how to set up L a T e X documents to be viewed with a PDF-reader.

Let's start with a minimal working example, by simply importing the hyperref package all cross-referenced elements become hyperlinked.

The lines in the table of contents become links to the corresponding pages in the document by simply adding in the preamble of the document the line

One must be careful when importing hyperref : usually, it has to be the last package to be importedβ€”but there might be some exceptions to this rule.

The default formatting for links can be changed so the information in your documents is more clearly presented. Below you can see an example:

This is a complete example, it will be fully explained in the rest of the article. Below is a description of the commands related to the colour and styling of the links.

Links to a web address or email can added to a L a T e X file using the \url command to display the actual link or \href to use a hidden link and show a word/sentence instead.

There are two commands in the example that generate a link in the final document:

The commands \href and \url presented in the previous section can be used to open local files

The command \href{run:./file.txt}{File.txt} prints the text File.txt that links to a local file called file.txt located in the current working directory. Notice the text run: before the path to the file.

The file path follows the conventions of UNIX systems, using . to refer the current directory and .. for the previous directory.

The command \url{} can also be used, with the same syntax described for the path, but it's reported to have some problems.

It was mentioned before that all cross-referenced elements become links once hyperref is imported, thus we can use \label anywhere in the document and refer later those labels to create links. This is not the only manner to insert hyperlinks manually.

There are two commands to create user-defined links.

Links in a document are created having in mind a document that will be read in PDF format. The PDF file can be further personalized to add additional information and change the way the PDF viewer displays it. Below an example:

Using the command \hypersetup , described in the section styles and colours , accepts extra parameters to set up the final PDF file.

See the reference guide for a full list of options that can be passed to \hypersetup .

Makes the page numbers of index entries into hyperlinks

Makes the page numbers instead of the text to be link in the Table of contents.

Allows links to be broken into multiple lines.

Colours the text for links and anchors, these colours will appear in the printed version

Colour for bibliographical citations

Colour for links that open local files

Use small caps instead of colours for links

Acrobat bookmarks are written, similar to the table of contents.

Bookmarks are shown with all sub-trees expanded.

Colour of the box around citations in RGB format.

Colour of the box around links to files in RGB format.

Colour of the box around normal links in RGB format.

Colour of the box around menu links in RGB format.

Colour of the box around links to URLs in RGB format.

Determines how the file is opened. Possibilities are UseThumbs (Thumbnails), UseOutlines (Bookmarks) and FullScreen.

Determines on which page the PDF file is opened.


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\href - Used to make a math object into a link.
\href command is used to make a math object into a link where the argument (#1) is the clickable area.

https://www.overleaf.com/learn/latex/Hyperlinks
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