When your paper/report is getting too large it becomes a little complicated/frustrated to maintain it in one big file.
It's possible to split a big .tex file and setup a hierarchical file tree with a small portion of the text on each file.This is achieved using the \include directives.
There are three main LaTeX commands that manage multiple input files.
If you want to get another layer of simplifications, it's possible to just use \input in the sub-files.
[1] http://www.kfunigraz.ac.at/~binder/texhelp/ltx-165.html
It's possible to split a big .tex file and setup a hierarchical file tree with a small portion of the text on each file.This is achieved using the \include directives.
There are three main LaTeX commands that manage multiple input files.
- \includeonly which specifies a list of files that will be included by the \include command. If this command exists and file in \include is not listed here, it will not be included
- \include as it's name says, it include a file in a new page. Used with \includeonly, it can include files selectively. Note: This command can't be nested
- It's equivalent to \clearpage \input{file} \clearpage
- \input This is the most simple include scheme and it is equivalent tot a plain C's #include
So your big file
\section{foo}can be simplified as
% lot of text, figures and equations
\section{bar}
%lot of text and subsections>
\include{foo}where there is a foo.tex an bar.tex sub-files containing the section text.
\include{bar}
If you want to get another layer of simplifications, it's possible to just use \input in the sub-files.
[1] http://www.kfunigraz.ac.at/~binder/texhelp/ltx-165.html