scimax
Dotfiles
scimax | Dotfiles | |
---|---|---|
19 | 4 | |
997 | 27 | |
- | - | |
6.1 | 4.1 | |
about 1 month ago | 11 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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scimax
- Scimax: An Emacs starterkit for scientists and engineers
- Jupyter and org-mode in scimax [video]
- Testing different Emacs distros easy way in Emacs 29/30
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Switched to Emacs a week ago, really thrilled so far. Looking for help on a few (somewhat advanced) questions.
Scimax should have out of box setup for bibliography, references etc. Anyway, regardless of what you use Emacs for, one step a time, would be my recommendation. Just start using it and solve problems as you experience them. It is better to add a single thing at a time when you need it, than to add 1000 different things because you think you will need them, and then not know what you have or what causes a problem.
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Embed excalidraw in Emacs?
https://github.com/wdavew/org-excalidraw is close. I discovered you can install Excalidraw from Chrome, and then it is like a local program. That is pretty amazing in itself. org-excalidraw indeed offers an org-link and way to make an excalidraw file from emacs, edited natively in an external excalidraw window. The svg preview does not work though if you use freehand lines in your image, and I was unable to install the npm packages on my Mac for some uninteresting reason related to DNS, but it did work in a node docker image. I find writing in excalidraw less advanced than in tools like Notability or PDFExpert. There are some artifacts in excalidraw from smoothing, or dangling pixels that I don't love. I forgot I had previously used https://github.com/lepisma/org-krita. Krita is a full drawing program, and this integrates into org-mode with image previews nicely. I am not that skilled in using it, and as a full drawing program, it has a learning curve. I wrote https://github.com/jkitchin/scimax/blob/master/scimax-inkscape.el to integrate inkscape into org-mode. It works, but I find inkscape slow to open, and I am not that skilled in using it.
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Emacs and knowledge management for scientists
Maybe give scimax a go?
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Emacs as org-mode interpreter - standalone, batch mode?
Anyway, if you want something geared toward scientific usage, there is Scimax by J. Kitchin. There may be some others, but I am not aware off.
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emacs distributions without evil?
Apart from the ones already mention, John Kitchin's science-focused Scimacs is also an option.
- Preferred Citation Management and Knowledge Management Tools?
- How it goes with me learning orgmode
Dotfiles
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Emacs and knowledge management for scientists
For describing my workflow very briefly (not as well as Sonke Ahrens in the aforementioned book, but I will try), I try to follow the main points of Zettelkasten. Whenever you learn something, take notes about it. Make the notes brief, but very descriptive. Give it a large title describing everything contained in it so you can find it easier later. If its too large, split it into multiple files, so the note is atomic (meaning it can no longer be separated into multiple files). If you don't have time to write a note correctly, make a fleeting note about it to remind you and write it later. Densely link your notes with one another. Thinking about the connections between notes is sometimes half the work of writing it. This way, I never lose information. If I need something later down the line, I can always search with org-roam-node-find, as I use very descriptive titles as I mentioned. If not, there is also grep, which if you are not aware is a text editing utility that allows for searching all your notes. There are many grep tools in Emacs (i.e. counsel-rg being the one I use personally). For more explanation, you can check my literate org-mode config.
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Write research paper notes/summaries in emacs
There is definitely a way to do this in Citar which should be mentioned in the wiki if you read through it (and if there is not the author of the package is very helpful in general) but I do not know what that is. This way, when you select a bibtex entry it will automatically create a note with the title being the title of the article, automatically associate the entry with its pdf and ready org-noter for use to annotate it. Its a very streamlined and automated way to work with this system of packages that I highly recommend. For more info on this, you can also look at my literate config for notetaking which naturally has a lot as I take tons of notes. Link to it is here.
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How do you take university notes with org-mode?
For more info on my workflow, you can check my config over on github. This part is specific to my org roam, references and general note taking workflow, so you won't have to look for the relevant parts. Its a literate config and I explain some things more than I do here. If this all interests you I suggest giving it a check. I also couldn't recommend Ahrens' book more. Its an incredible read for academics of every science as its really applicable everywhere imo.
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Any way to get a "start button"?
Also if something is not clear here you can check out my full i3 config over on github.
What are some alternatives?
.emacs.d - Emacs backup of mine
menutray - An application menu through a GTK+ tray status icon.
.spacemacs.d - My spacemacs config files. For spacemacs source, see https://github.com/capsulecorplab/spacemacs
tempel - :classical_building: TempEl - Simple templates for Emacs
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
org-noter - Emacs document annotator, using Org-mode
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
helm-bibtex - Search and manage bibliographies in Emacs
citar - Emacs package to quickly find and act on bibliographic references, and edit org, markdown, and latex academic documents.
dotemacs - My emacs configuration.
org-roam-bibtex - Org Roam integration with bibliography management software