org-ref
org-thesis
org-ref | org-thesis | |
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27 | 8 | |
1,339 | 495 | |
- | - | |
7.6 | 2.6 | |
9 days ago | about 2 years ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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org-ref
- Google Scholar PDF Reader
- Jupyter and org-mode in scimax [video]
- [Latex] Jabref vs. Zotero vs. org-ref – welches bevorzugen Sie und warum?
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Replace Jupyter with Emacs Org Mode: Unleash the Power of Literate Programming
I love org mode for scientific writing (especially with org-ref [0]) but it’s just not very convenient for collaborative projects because there are very few emacs users (in my field at least). Overleaf has been workable in my experience, but I still get pushback sometimes.
A diff-aware org-latex import would be amazing for this actually, like if pandoc could do tex -> org but align all the code blocks / generated figures
[0]: https://github.com/jkitchin/org-ref
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Org package recommendations for Cross Referencing
Hi All, I'm a long time user of the org-ref package for writing academic documents in org and exporting to PDF via LaTeX.
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Why use Emacs for LaTeX instead of Overleaf?
Do you have experience with org-ref? If so, would you be able to help me out and tell me why you prefer Citar? It looks very interesting.
- doi-utils.el --- DOI utilities for making bibtex entries
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Replicating Zotero-connector functionality in Emacs … without Zotero!
doi-utils, part of org-ref, has functions to add bib entries from DOIs.
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Would org-mode allow me to do this?
Sorry, I'm not using org-ref myself yet. However, I think it pretty much addresses your use-case.
- Preferred Citation Management and Knowledge Management Tools?
org-thesis
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Is emacs the answer?
I have used Org mode in tandem with LaTeX for displaying inline statistical equations when taking notes for data science topics and have found it works very well, although I am by no means a LaTeX expert. I have, however, read where Ph.D students have used Org mode to write their theses using LaTeX.
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Org: Include but only headers?
Check out https://github.com/dangom/org-thesis
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Writing papers/thesis in org with a barebone config
Not barebones, but I would consider looking at scimax, which is an emacs configuration that likely is similar to your work flow. You can also look to PhD theses written in org-mode and shared on github, there are a few with sensible configurations you might want to just copy.
- Text snippets for use in multiple documents?
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org-mode equivalent of asciidoc tags?
The include has the ability to specify lines. Here is an article I saved that goes into how this could be used for a thesis and reuse parts for journal articles. That sounds similar to your use case. https://github.com/dangom/org-thesis
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Emacs org-mode examples and cookbook (2017)
As a sibling parent mentioned, you can tag an element by inserting it into it's own heading and adding the :ignore: tag.
I feel this functionality is overlooked, and it is in my opinion one of the most powerful features implemented in org, as it allows you to add "meta" groupings to your org document without any effect on the content.
Without the :ignore: tag, there is a strict semantic relation between org-mode document headings, as physically indicated by the * at the beginning of a line, and the corresponding hierarchical level of the heading's content.
With the :ignore: tag, however, you separate content from form. Headings with :ignore: work just as headings for your file.org document: you can search for headings, link to them, add IDs and properties and whatever else you can do with headings. But when you export your document, the heading no longer exists and thus has no impact on the hierarchical level of its content.
Why is this interesting? Well, because if content is separated from form, we can build things where the same content assume multiple forms depending on whatever context we define.
I used this in combination with other org-mode tags, "#+exclude_tags" and "#+include" directives to build my Ph.D. thesis with org mode and have my thesis chapters be exportable both as thesis chapters as well as standalone publications. Shameless plug: https://github.com/dangom/org-thesis
It should be straightforward to extend the idea to presentations and other formats as well.
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Where shall I go next? Please give me some guidance you Yodas of emacs.
https://github.com/dangom/org-thesis (org mode phd solution) https://write.as/dani/writing-a-phd-thesis-with-org-mode (explaining his solution)
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Can we use Org mode to write books and generate EPUB and MOBI files?
I wrote my thesis with org mode and wrote about it here: https://write.as/dani/writing-a-phd-thesis-with-org-mode. Repo here: https://github.com/dangom/org-thesis
What are some alternatives?
citar - Emacs package to quickly find and act on bibliographic references, and edit org, markdown, and latex academic documents.
tufte-org-mode - An Org mode environment for producing Tufte-LaTeX books and handouts
helm-bibtex - Search and manage bibliographies in Emacs
vim-orgmode - Text outlining and task management for Vim based on Emacs' Org-Mode
sioyek - Sioyek is a PDF viewer with a focus on textbooks and research papers
CrossLine - CrossLine is an outliner with sophisticated cross-link capabilities in the tradition of the well-respected Ecco Pro
citeproc-org - Renders Org-mode citations in CSL styles using citeproc-el.
scimax - An emacs starterkit for scientists and engineers
dendron - The personal knowledge management (PKM) tool that grows as you do!
ox-leanpub - Org-mode exporter for Leanpub books - mirrored from GitLab
ox-pandoc - Another org-mode exporter via pandoc.
ox-epub - Org mode epub export