PythonTeX
Execute Python and other code in LaTeX documents, or typeset it with syntax highlighting
PythonTeX executes code in LaTeX documents and allows the output to be included in the original document. It supports Python as well as Bash, JavaScript, Julia, Octave, Perl, R, Raku (Perl 6), Ruby, Rust, and SageMath. PythonTeX also provides syntax highlighting for typeset code in LaTeX documents via the Pygments syntax highlighter.
See pythontex_quickstart.pdf to get started, and pythontex_gallery.pdf for examples of what is possible with PythonTeX. PythonTeX is included in TeX Live and MiKTeX and may be installed via the package manager. See pythontex.pdf for detailed installation instructions if you want to install the current development version, or just use the installation script for TeX Live and MiKTeX.
The depythontex utility creates a copy of a PythonTeX document in which all code has been replaced by its output. This plain LaTeX document is more suitable for journal submission, sharing, or conversion to other document formats. See pythontex_gallery.html and the accompanying conversion script for an example of a PythonTeX document that was converted to HTML via depythontex and Pandoc.
Example
LaTeX document doc.tex:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{pythontex}
\newcommand{\pymultiply}[2]{\py{#1*#2}}
\begin{document}
\begin{pycode}
print("Python says ``Hello!''")
\end{pycode}
$8 \times 256 = \pymultiply{8}{256}$
\end{document}
Compiling under Windows: pdflatex -interaction=nonstopmode doc.tex
pythontex doc.tex
pdflatex -interaction=nonstopmode doc.tex
Compiling under other operating systems: pdflatex -interaction=nonstopmode doc.tex
pythontex.py doc.tex
pdflatex -interaction=nonstopmode doc.tex
Output: Python says “Hello!”
8 × 256 = 2048
Notice that there is a three-step compile process. This is what makes possible commands like \pymultiply that use Python or other languages internally. You may want to configure your LaTeX editor with a shortcut for running pythontex or pythontex.py, or configure your LaTeX build system to run pythontex or pythontex.py.
Citing PythonTeX
If you use PythonTeX in your writing and research, please consider citing it in any resulting publications. The best and most recent paper is in Computational Science & Discovery (doi:10.1088/1749-4699/8/1/014010). You may also cite the paper in the 2013 SciPy proceedings.
License
LPPL for LaTeX code and BSD 3-Clause for Python code.