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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T21:05:34+00:00 2026-05-15T21:05:34+00:00

I’m trying to generate some LaTeX code which from thereon should generate PDF documents.

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I’m trying to generate some LaTeX code which from thereon should generate PDF documents.
Currently, I’m using the Django templating system for dynamically creating the code, but I have no idea on as how to move on from here. I understand that I could save the code in a .tex file, and use subprocess to run pdflatex for generating the PDF. But I had so much trouble escaping the LaTeX code in “plain” Python that I decided to use the Django templating system. Is there a way that I could somehow maybe pipe the output produced by Django to pdflatex? The code produced is working properly, it’s just that I do not know what to do with it.

Thanks in advance

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T21:05:35+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:05 pm

    I was tackling the same issue in a project I had previously worked on, and instead of piping the output, I created temporary files in a temporary folder, since I was worried about handling the intermediate files LaTeX produces. This is the code I used (note that it’s a few years old, from when I was still new to Python/Django; I’m sure I could come up with something better if I was writing this today, but this definitely worked for me):

    import os
    from subprocess import call
    from tempfile import mkdtemp, mkstemp
    from django.template.loader import render_to_string
    # In a temporary folder, make a temporary file
    tmp_folder = mkdtemp()
    os.chdir(tmp_folder)        
    texfile, texfilename = mkstemp(dir=tmp_folder)
    # Pass the TeX template through Django templating engine and into the temp file
    os.write(texfile, render_to_string('tex/base.tex', {'var': 'whatever'}))
    os.close(texfile)
    # Compile the TeX file with PDFLaTeX
    call(['pdflatex', texfilename])
    # Move resulting PDF to a more permanent location
    os.rename(texfilename + '.pdf', dest_folder)
    # Remove intermediate files
    os.remove(texfilename)
    os.remove(texfilename + '.aux')
    os.remove(texfilename + '.log')
    os.rmdir(tmp_folder)
    return os.path.join(dest_folder, texfilename + '.pdf')
    

    The dest_folder variable is usually set to somewhere in the media directory, so that the PDF can then be served statically. The value returned is the path to the file on disk. The logic of what its URL would be is handled by whatever function sets the dest_folder.

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