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unorde.red | ||
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niemczuk.tech
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| | | | | Usually when working on data I use octave (when it comes to statistics) and C or Python (when it comes to other data). In the end, however, it all comes down to presenting the data. And here I always use like most people gnuplot and matplotlib. | |
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perrotta.dev
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| | | | | (via Andrej Bauer from University of Ljubljana, adapted): \documentclass[12pt]{beamer} \usepackage{pgfpages} %\setbeameroption{hide notes} % Only slides %\setbeameroption{show only notes} % Only notes \setbeameroption{show notes on second screen=right} % Both % Give a slight yellow tint to the notes page \setbeamertemplate{note page}{\pagecolor{yellow!5}\insertnote}\usepackage{palatino} \title{How to make Beamer slides with notes} \author{Thiago Perrotta\\Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro} \date{\sm... | |
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cyberchris.xyz
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| | | | | Introduction This post will be a brief tour on writing (work/university) assignments in org-mode, with the goal of producing a nicely typesetted PDF document without having to use much LaTeX. Everything mentioned will also apply to Emacs in general, but Doom Emacs comes with all the features I mention. Prerequisites Basic knowledge of org-mode, LaTeX (if math required), and Emacs. (Very) Quick Org-Mode Primer Org-mode is a plain-text hierarchical markup language. | |
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proto.garden
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