LateX is very popular to write academic and scientific papers. It has a great support for mathematical formulas and every formatting option conceivable. I love it because it allows you to write papers using only your keyboard (no need for clicking 20 times to find the option in a menu). It’s written as code, and then compiled into whatever format you’d like to use (pdf, etc)
undefined> In my academic work in France iymt was quite popular (at least in computer science & Mathematics field). But it was like 7 years ago, not sure about the current state of affairs.
You “compile” papers into a camera-ready final form. It handles like page references, figure numbering, citations, etc. There’s also a rich package system for extending features. Most people use it for its math typesetting features, which is now a fairly common way to write math expressions (mathjax, word’s equation editor can understand latex, markdown). More fun, you can write your own macros and have some pretty rich commands and features.
Latex is very common in math and physics departments, and somewhat common in CS and ECE departments. It’s still mostly for academic writing (papers and books), although because its plain-text and scriptable, its pretty nice for other types of documentation where you can bring in tons of things via a makefile.
Is this popular? Never heard of this before.
LateX is very popular to write academic and scientific papers. It has a great support for mathematical formulas and every formatting option conceivable. I love it because it allows you to write papers using only your keyboard (no need for clicking 20 times to find the option in a menu). It’s written as code, and then compiled into whatever format you’d like to use (pdf, etc)
undefined> In my academic work in France iymt was quite popular (at least in computer science & Mathematics field). But it was like 7 years ago, not sure about the current state of affairs.
Hmmm interesting, might check it out later
Gotta love bots riddling this platformed too lol
You “compile” papers into a camera-ready final form. It handles like page references, figure numbering, citations, etc. There’s also a rich package system for extending features. Most people use it for its math typesetting features, which is now a fairly common way to write math expressions (mathjax, word’s equation editor can understand latex, markdown). More fun, you can write your own macros and have some pretty rich commands and features.
Latex is very common in math and physics departments, and somewhat common in CS and ECE departments. It’s still mostly for academic writing (papers and books), although because its plain-text and scriptable, its pretty nice for other types of documentation where you can bring in tons of things via a makefile.