org-thesis
vim-orgmode
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org-thesis | vim-orgmode | |
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8 | 14 | |
495 | 3,080 | |
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2.6 | 3.4 | |
about 2 years ago | 4 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Python | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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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
vim-orgmode
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Note taking options?
orgmode
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Multi-platform to-do list / task manager app that can sync to a self-hosted service
There's also vim-orgmode if you want to occasionally do basic org-mode things within vim.
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Is my understanding of Vim and Emacs correct?
__org-mode__ Honestly Org mode is pretty incredible. Beside it being the best tool for task management and time tracking it also enables you to do ["literate programming"](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literate_programming) with its tangle/detangle features. As a vim user I'm seriously jealous. There are plugins trying to bring org-mode to vim https://github.com/nvim-orgmode/orgmode https://github.com/jceb/vim-orgmode (unmaintained) but they can't compare to the org-mode experience in emacs, as far as I know. Also there is a plugin trying to create an org-mode alternative for neovim https://github.com/nvim-neorg/neorg
- Org-Mode for vim???
- Ready-made solution for handling markdown checklist/to do lists?
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Why did org mode invent a new markup syntax instead of just going with markdown?
Recently vim got a new package which try to implement org-mode https://github.com/jceb/vim-orgmode.
- Literate Programming akin to Emac's org-mode
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Why does org-mode have so few github stars?
Vim Org-Mode: https://github.com/jceb/vim-orgmode
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Working with Emacs and Org-Mode
I can do stuff to my Org files in Vim, but it's not really the same as Org Mode in Emacs.
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Ask HN: Looking for the good project/todo management software, even obscure ones
I haven't used it myself but there are projects out there that try to emulate Org-Mode for Vim, e.g. https://github.com/jceb/vim-orgmode.
What are some alternatives?
tufte-org-mode - An Org mode environment for producing Tufte-LaTeX books and handouts
neorg - Modernity meets insane extensibility. The future of organizing your life in Neovim.
CrossLine - CrossLine is an outliner with sophisticated cross-link capabilities in the tradition of the well-respected Ecco Pro
vimwiki - Personal Wiki for Vim
scimax - An emacs starterkit for scientists and engineers
orgmode - Orgmode clone written in Lua for Neovim 0.9+.
ox-leanpub - Org-mode exporter for Leanpub books - mirrored from GitLab
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
ox-epub - Org mode epub export
wiki.vim - A wiki plugin for Vim
literate-calc-mode.el - 🧮 Literate programming for M-x calc
obsidian-releases - Community plugins list, theme list, and releases of Obsidian.