pandoc-goodies
.config
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pandoc-goodies | .config | |
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2 | 24 | |
207 | 270 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.0 | |
9 months ago | 17 days ago | |
HTML | Lua | |
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.
pandoc-goodies
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Custom syntax highlighting in quarto doc code chunks
1) Pandoc uses KDE .theme files (JSON) to map a style (color, face, ...) to the various "roles" a piece of your code can have (keyword, operator, property, ...). Check this to learn more about those theme files. You can use this boilerplate as a base to create your custom theme. Refer to this guide for more details about which keys in the .theme file correspond to which parts of the code.
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Latex confusion with Pandoc and Templates
GitHub.html5 for html template (to send by email) (this one https://github.com/tajmone/pandoc-goodies/blob/master/templates/html5/github/GitHub.html5)
.config
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Stumped: Why does starting a line (in LaTeX) yield errors?
If anyone knows what might be going on, I would greatly appreciate the help. You can find my config here (working on the lua branch). Also happy to post bits a pieces.
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VimTeX v2.6
u/benbrastmckie has documented some efforts here and here:
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What LaTeX editor would you suggest?
A good and relatively easy option is to use VS Code, but why not go in for the very best, especially if this is your livelihood? Here are the reasons I put together in in support of using NeoVim.
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LaTeX for Students — my simple, pragmatic quickstart video
Hey nice work! This is a bit of a different direction, but perhaps appealing to a similar audience of academics looking to learn how to use some of the digital power-tools of our age. Although I don't spend any time explaining how to write in LaTeX or Markdown, I've put together a bunch of resources describing how to install and customise my configuration of NeoVim for writing LaTeX and Markdown, etc. Anyhow, hope this is of interest.
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Is there an online markdown editor that syncs and is cross platform?
I use Git to push and pull changes to free GitHub repositories. You can do this from multiple machines, as well as inviting multiple collaborators. I do all of this inside Vim which I also use to write in Markdown and LaTeX to keep things streamlined, but you could use LazyGit in the terminal plus whatever program you are writing Markdown in, hopping between the two. I provide details for how this goes here. You can find my config here and details using Pandoc to convert between file formats here.
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Help me pick a Markdown writing app?
No way! Who knows where that project will go, and you're stuck with whatever they give you. It's all about future proof free and open source software. Plus it's better anyways to develop your own workflow, with only the features that you want inside of [Vim]{https://github.com/benbrastmckie/.config}, and a whole ecosystem of plugins to choose from. Not to mention the power of modal editing, and so much more.
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Why Vim?
I use Vim for writing LaTeX, so not super standard, but here are the resources I've amassed.
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LaTex Mac getting started help
Vim definitely requires some customisation to feel like a comfy IDE for LaTeX, which is just what I've tried to put together here. Hope this helps!
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Templates + Scripts for University Students
As for templates, you can find what I make use of in my config here. I've adapted them from various other people. Not sure how useful these will be to you. The truth is, there are loads of templates out there just a google search away. Although it could be nice to dump them all in a single location with standard formatting, etc., in practice, it's not too difficult to poke around a bit until one finds a template that works for them, adapting it from there. But feel free to make use of what I've assembled however you like.
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I love you all
Maybe this is too much all at once, but if you love writing LaTeX, you may also love working in Vim to write LaTeX. Here is a video channel devoted to promoting the use of both of these tools together for academic writing, and here is a post describing my motivations a bit. You can find more resources on my repo.
What are some alternatives?
tufte-markdown - Use markdown to write your handouts or books in Tufte style.
scripting_course - :notebook: Books, reference guides and resources on Regular Expressions, CLI one-liners, Scripting Languages and Vim.
scrivomatic - A writing workflow using Scrivener's style system + Pandoc for output…
pandoc-latex-template - A pandoc LaTeX template to convert markdown files to PDF or LaTeX.
betterbib - :green_book: Command-line tools for bibliographies.
skylighting - A Haskell syntax highlighting library with tokenizers derived from KDE syntax highlighting descriptions
texwork-template - Template for collecting all your LaTeX into a monorepo
syntax-highlighting - Syntax highlighting Engine for Structured Text and Code.
dotfiles
dotfiles - Dotfiles managed by chezmoi
octo - Build your knowledge base [Moved to: https://github.com/voracious/octo]