Thanks, MikTex did the trick 


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On Friday, December 19, 2014 Stuart Jarvis <jar...@kde.org> wrote:
Hi, >> 

On 18 Dec 2014, at 19:41, S Annan <sayn...@aol.com> wrote: >> i installed kde 
for windows but found that kile does not have a lot >> of the essential 
binaries; particularly LaTeX and TeX. Am i doing >> something wrong? >> On 
2014-12-19 11:44, Bastiaan Veelo wrote: > I don’t use Kile, but isn’t Kile just 
an editor? You can get a TeX > distribution from MikTeX. I did this a couple fo 
years back for my partner (she was on Windows 7; she'd used Kile a little on my 
Linux machine and liked it). As Bastiaan said, MikTeX was the solution - I 
don't remember the details, but I think we just did a fairly complete install* 
of MikTeX and then (possibly) had to point Kile to the relevant files in Kile's 
configuration dialogs. It wasn't perfect - line returns got inserted (or 
removed?) in the text on save (Windows thing, I guess) though not in the 
generated PDF output so it wasn't a big deal - but it worked well enough for 
her to complete her 200+ page PhD, illustration-heavy, thesis with minimal 
pain. We never got live previews working. She used jabref as the BibTeX manager 
rather than KBiBTeX. I think we had installation issues with KBibTeX, but I'm 
not sure. Was a long time ago so might be better now and I personally much 
prefer KBibTeX. Good luck! Stu * I think we first tried installing particular 
components, but kept finding bits we needed and had missed, so in the end 
ticked just about everything. 

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