texstudio
DPS-LaTeX
texstudio | DPS-LaTeX | |
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25 | 1 | |
2,606 | 1 | |
1.5% | - | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
7 days ago | almost 3 years ago | |
C++ | TeX | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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texstudio
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Problems Installing Tex Live 2023
LaTeX itself does not come with GUI. Some distributions add a dedicated editor, which might have an icon. Documents are compiled in a terminal or via editor that uses terminal commands under the hood. You could install an editor of your choice e.g. TeXStudio or TeXWorks.
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Advice to write a PhD thesis using LaTeX?
Installation on a mac is pretty easy using the mactex package. Then for the editor itself I like TexStudio. Overleaf has the advantage of included backup and collaboration tools; if you use a local file don't forget to set up a back up/versioning system.
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Please help me get started with LaTex on Mac
If you are interested in working locally (not in web interface like e.g. Overleaf) then I will suggest MacTeX + TexStudio.
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TexStudio - git integration for easy committing?
All I found was this: https://github.com/texstudio-org/texstudio/issues/340
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I've got a problem
does the compilation with pdfLaTeX work? Do you use an instance of MiKTeX recently updated? A note about the GUI used would complement a problem report. If you use e.g., TeXStudio, then you already have a preview of the compiled document to monitor the advance of your work. You still can setup the program to open an external pdfviewer (e.g., sumatra) for a subsequent detailed inspection, print to paper of the pdf, etc. later.
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Lyx export ODF using mk4ht
Depending on the complexity of the project ahead, consider an editor which writes plain .tex files because LyX' own (default) format adds a layer of complexity. Perhaps you are/become comfortable with vim or Emacs (which takes some time get familiar for both) and their extensions for LaTeX, perhaps TeXmaker or TeXStudio (both freely available and cross-platform) is an option for you if you know that there are programs around to import e.g., spreadsheet data easier into a .tex than the manual import. While your mileage may vary, it is not that hard -- have a look at learnlatex.org.
- Blip: A tool for seeing your Internet latency
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Ask HN: What LaTeX editor do you use?
I use TeXstudio [1], which is really good with tables, and supports macros which tremendously help speed up the writing process.
When writing for group projects, we use Overleaf. Its Git feature also makes it possible to write locally in TeXstudio and then push the changes to Overleaf.
[1] https://www.texstudio.org/
[2] https://www.overleaf.com/
- TeXstudio – A LaTeX Editor
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Writing software, documents in separate files can be linked in a single document and reorganized, while still getting total word count
For Latex are several GUIs like TexStudio, TeXnicCenter, TeXworks or Overleaf (Webbased). But I understand that Latex looks quite complicate. If you are familiar with coding or even simple HTML you are good to go. Your idea with CSS etc sounds way more complicated than just use Latex with it's powerful features.
DPS-LaTeX
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Ask HN: What LaTeX editor do you use?
I made good experiences with VScode + LaTeX Workshop extension. Here is an example project that should be fully set up.
https://github.com/uibk-dps-teaching/DPS-LaTeX
However, I also do want to state that I ditched LaTeX completely by now since there is just too much headache involved. I am sticking with Markdown and HTML+CSS for the most part; weasyprint is really helpful when I have to generate PDFs.
What are some alternatives?
miktex - the MiKTeX source code
SwiftLaTeX - SwiftLaTeX, a WYSIWYG Browser-based LaTeX Editor
texlab - An implementation of the Language Server Protocol for LaTeX
Intro-to-LaTeX - Introduction to LaTeX (Spring 2022)
openoffice - Apache OpenOffice
lazygit - simple terminal UI for git commands
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
LiteIDE - LiteIDE is a simple, open source, cross-platform Go IDE.
blip - A tool for seeing your Internet latency. Try it at http://gfblip.appspot.com/
LibreOffice - Read-only LibreOffice core repo - no pull request (use gerrit instead https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/) - don't download zip, use https://dev-www.libreoffice.org/bundles/ instead
tortoisegit - Windows Explorer Extension to Operate Git; Mirror of official repository https://tortoisegit.org/sourcecode