Do2pdf
sudo apt install do2pdf
# macOS brew install pandoc highlight sudo apt install pandoc highlight 2. Basic Usage Convert a Stata do-file to a PDF report:
do2pdf script.do --lang stata → Check that your do-file contains plain text and not binary content. Try converting with: do2pdf
do2pdf my_analysis.do Output: my_analysis.pdf in the same directory. do2pdf my_analysis.do -o output/script_report.pdf 3. Common Options | Option | Description | |--------|-------------| | -o <file> | Output PDF file path | | --style <style> | Syntax highlighting style (e.g., github , monokai , tango ) | | --line-numbers | Add line numbers to the code | | --title "My Title" | Set document title | | --author "Name" | Set author metadata | | --toc | Include a table of contents | | --template <file> | Use a custom LaTeX/HTML template | | -f | Force overwrite existing PDF |
Example:
git clone https://github.com/<relevant-repo>/do2pdf # adjust URL if known cd do2pdf make && sudo make install do2pdf often wraps pandoc and highlight . Install them first:
pandoc my_script.do -o test.pdf If that fails, the issue is with do2pdf 's wrapper; use pandoc directly. Use pandoc directly with syntax highlighting: sudo apt install do2pdf # macOS brew install
→ Install highlight: same method as above.
brew install do2pdf
If you are referring to a different do2pdf (e.g., a custom script or from another software ecosystem), please clarify. The most common usage is for Stata do-files . 1. Installation On macOS (Homebrew):