For me, I think the most satisfactory way that I found was opening the PDF file that is originally generated by LaTeX n MS Word (not old versions, let's say 2016 and newer). This will help to get the layouts of the file including tables, equations, ..etc.
For me, I think the most satisfactory way that I found was opening the PDF file that is originally generated by LaTeX n MS Word (not old versions, let's say 2016 and newer). This will help to get the layouts of the file including tables, equations, ..etc.
I agree with Ali, but you will lose many of the formatting of the text. But if you mostly need the content the procedure to import the pdf will be the easiest way. And as Ali mentioned you must have at least version 2013 of MS Word, better a newer version.
I have never seen this process produce a satisfactory result. You may have some success using the LaTeX -> PDF -> Word route, but for complex tables etc. you will spend so much time fixing up the formatting it probably is not worth it.
One possible solution is latex2html or similar- you could try importing the result of that in Word, it might lose less formatting than PDF import. There are some other alternatives which might do a better job with the equations listed here: