VSCode-LaTeX-Inkscape
inkscape-figures
Our great sponsors
VSCode-LaTeX-Inkscape | inkscape-figures | |
---|---|---|
6 | 2 | |
259 | 520 | |
- | - | |
6.7 | 0.0 | |
5 months ago | about 2 years ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
VSCode-LaTeX-Inkscape
-
Come in if you are using VSCode.
Years ago, I turned the whole set-up into VSCode and documented them here. Some extensions I used are really powerful and even the author of LaTeX-Workshop doesn't know them, e.g., Hypersnips (according to here). It's now over years and most of the functionalities are stable, so maybe it's a good time to promote it here and popularize this incredible workflow inspired by Gilles Castel.
-
Is it worth learning LaTeX for live notetaking?
First of all, I'm still sad that we lost Gilles Castel in 2022, RIP. I myself implemented Gilles Castel's solution in VSCode in this repo, and took ~10 rigorous notes (each around 100 pages) in class, and I'm happy with the result. Some post-production is needed, but I only use my free time to do so. Hence it's all fine. After you get proficient, you can literally do everything in real time, as I'm currently doing. I think it's essential to understand your tool well if you're going to work with it in the next decades (I'm assuming this for you, but if you're not, then nevermind), hence some investment is not meaningless.
-
Survey: your LaTeX editor
As a CS student, I and my friend think it's probably a good idea to create a brained-new LaTeX-focus editor, which solves the above problems and with modern UI (yep, I know texmacs can pretty much do all the jobs I mentioned, but hey, it's almost 20 years old now) design and relatively user-friendly learning curve. Hence, I'm here to ask you guys what's exactly the problems you have with your currently LaTeX editors, with your personal environment (like OS, Editor, additional (special) configuration). Here is mine, as a starting point. I would like to hear any of your comments, suggestions, and opinions, since this little project is still in the discussion stage, nothing is decided!
inkscape-figures
-
A workflow mixing VSCode + LaTeX + Inkscape.
Since some of the underlying tools like inkscape-figures-manager and inkscape-shortcut-manager are specific to Linux and macOS (even worse, while the former does support macOS, the latter only support Linux, hence I need to write new scripts with macOS specific tool to achieve the same functionality), so sadly, windows users are left behind...
- Emacs' org-mode gets citation support
What are some alternatives?
inkscape-shortcut-manager - Inkscape shorcut manager
rebiber - A simple tool to update bib entries with their official information (e.g., DBLP or the ACL anthology).
inkstitch - Ink/Stitch: an Inkscape extension for machine embroidery design
inklayers - inklayers is a command line program that exports layers from an SVG file. It can be used to create slide shows by editing a single SVG file.
quiver - A modern commutative diagram editor for the web.
latex-snippets - Vim + LaTeX snippets setup
SciencePlots - Matplotlib styles for scientific plotting
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
nuage_org_demo
InkRasterPerspective - Apply perspective transformations to raster images inside Inkscape (no need to use an external software such as GIMP or Krita).
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
chemacs2 - Emacs version switcher, improved