A note on version control: At some point I putting my latex docs into a git repo, and I haven't been looking back ever since. You're able to recover your document, easily work on multiple machines and always check your repo for some things you've had in the doc at some previeous point. Just put your temp files etc in a .gitinore or so
I would say that learning code makes learning latex Easier. Compiling/packages/and documentation, are fundamental concepts in code and they all play out here.
I would tend agree although there are some differences of course. But the basic idea of writing short code and then compiling to spot errors. That habit serves one well in pretty much any language.
Agreed. I had been exposed to quite a few coding languages (Python, R, Maple) before I first used LaTeX. I attended a workshop taught by one of the lecturers in the School of Physics in St Andrews and it was definitely taught with the knowledge we at least knew a little about coding. It helps!
Sublime is bad, it's not free while Atom and VSCode are. Btw I have also seen people use VIM which is popular on Linux and it's a text editor where you navigate around with the keyboard instead of the mouse. I don't use it but it's worth mentioning
Sublime is good. It was my favorite editor during my undergrad. It's nagware so I only actually bought the license after like 10 years of use. It hits a good balance of being lightweight where atom and vscode definitely aren't while being more full featured than say notepad++ and less arcane than vim or emacs.
VSCode is not free (as in freedom) Although there's a libre version called codium or vscodium. I tried and it's pretty good if you are used to that kind of editor, it's pretty much the samr as vscode just eithout the MS branding and telemetry
This was a very useful video! I have been trying to setup Latex with Vim in WSL 2 Ubuntu with no success. This approach seems much more straightforward. Thank you.
My team and I are working on some open-sourced biology and chemistry books, and this video made things SO much easier for us. You are awesome, keep it up!
When I discovered these tools (way back in the 1990’s) I started learning TeX with the help of Donald Knuth’s “The TeXbook” and practiced writing documents with that before starting LaTeX. Raw TeX is much more low-level and doesn’t provide the uniform document styles LaTeX has, but I’m a software developer and doing it this way helped me understand how LaTeX works under the hood. The main thing I like about TeX is it’s a very stable language and well documented, unlike proprietary document formats like MS Word which seems to change every version or so and doesn’t always play nicely with 3rd-party editors.
Latex is great, but I would always recommend one to use a linux OS with vim or nvim as it just allows for greater freedom than these online latex editors.
Hi, thank you for your video. I've started using Atom for latex documentation. As soon as I run something, the PDF is being opened in the system PDF reader as well as in the atom window. Can you please let me know how to refrain from the system PDF reader?
A friend of mine swears by Mathematica when it comes to writing documents. While Mathermatica is known for equation solving and programming you can also create publishable documents with it. I've tried it and it has a 'decent' WISIWYG interface for writing that includes equations however I found it rather lacking in publication ready tools. If they're there at all they're poorly documented.
To be honest I've never heard of LyX. I was using Atom at the time because it was a free editor that I liked the flexibility of using. Now Atom has been discontinued sadly. I now use the JetBrains IDEs - programs like PyCharm for python programming and IntelliJ Idea for everything else. I'll also sometimes use Overleaf for LaTeX now as well, as long as I don't need to write anything on the go because it depends on internet access. Ultimately, it doesn't matter what editor you use - so use whatever works for you!
@@ThomasRintoul aha, now I know, you're promoting online tools 😅 ok ok, let's assume you don't know about lyx. Hope the online tools you promote pay you well for the unwavering support you provide for them.
I'm not promoting them for money. They do not pay me. It's just the tools I use - mostly with university licences Additionally, the JetBrains IDEs are offline tools
The handling of bibliographies is also incredibly tiresome in Word. Not as tiresome as formatting and numbering equations, because you only have to sort the bibliography once properly, but hardly frictionless. And images (with captions) are still... yeah. Word has come a long way, but it's still not LaTeX.
Didn't see it anywhere so for anyone wondering: utf-8 is a way if representing the text internally. If you dont specify it it may default to ASCII (i think?, don't quote me on this) Which doesn't have characters such as ü, ç, ß, etc. so they wont show up correctly. utf-8 has all those characters so it will work, nowadays comuters will usually default to more modern representations, but older languageslike LaTeX sometimes still need utf-8 manually specified.
Látex is a technology of the 80’s. But I would like to learn it if it is free. Thanks for the info. I tried PDF and PostScript to make graphics, but they were hard to learn. PostScript was OK but PDF was even harder because it is not a programming language like PostScript.
I did my 274-page doctoral dissertation for Rutgers University in 2000 and published 8 peer reviewed math papers from 2001 to 2012 all in MS Word + Mathtype. I began with Mathtype in 1997. I've heard of tex/latex since I entered graduate school at Rutgers in math in 1988. I have never figured out how to use them. Tried over a dozen times. That is how worthless and user-unfriendly and horrible tex/latex are.
Oh I totally agree. It's better than it used to be, but if you have to do anything with a lot of equations, figures or references, LaTeX is by far superior - particularly for long documents
A note on version control: At some point I putting my latex docs into a git repo, and I haven't been looking back ever since. You're able to recover your document, easily work on multiple machines and always check your repo for some things you've had in the doc at some previeous point. Just put your temp files etc in a .gitinore or so
One of the nicest features of overleaf, as far as i am concerned, is its tight integration to github. Get the best of all worlds.
Damn, so scientist are just programers who try to disect the overly complicated code of nature because some dude really liked the if statements
Finally! Someone who explains each line of code from the creation of the .tex file to the end. Thank you :")
A really useful tool to exist on the internet indeed. Loved everything about the video. Thanks
I would say that learning code makes learning latex Easier. Compiling/packages/and documentation, are fundamental concepts in code and they all play out here.
I would tend agree although there are some differences of course. But the basic idea of writing short code and then compiling to spot errors. That habit serves one well in pretty much any language.
Agreed. I had been exposed to quite a few coding languages (Python, R, Maple) before I first used LaTeX. I attended a workshop taught by one of the lecturers in the School of Physics in St Andrews and it was definitely taught with the knowledge we at least knew a little about coding. It helps!
Just found this video as I'm writing my undergrad thesis in astronomy, thanks a lot! Suuuper useful!
Sublime is bad, it's not free while Atom and VSCode are. Btw I have also seen people use VIM which is popular on Linux and it's a text editor where you navigate around with the keyboard instead of the mouse. I don't use it but it's worth mentioning
Hi, I use Vim with vimtex plugin and they works great! Vim with the right plugin is no worse than VSCode imo.
Sublime is good. It was my favorite editor during my undergrad. It's nagware so I only actually bought the license after like 10 years of use. It hits a good balance of being lightweight where atom and vscode definitely aren't while being more full featured than say notepad++ and less arcane than vim or emacs.
@@jgchicken2133 Have you ever tried emacs? 😂😂
@@bogdanskout3326 My professor use eMacs but I prefer Vim, its more familiar to me
VSCode is not free (as in freedom)
Although there's a libre version called codium or vscodium. I tried and it's pretty good if you are used to that kind of editor, it's pretty much the samr as vscode just eithout the MS branding and telemetry
Been looking for a video like this for a while, cheers 👍
If this man keeps at it, he's gonna be huge as a UA-camr.
This was a very useful video! I have been trying to setup Latex with Vim in WSL 2 Ubuntu with no success. This approach seems much more straightforward. Thank you.
LyX is a great LaTeX editor that makes it much easier to use.
My team and I are working on some open-sourced biology and chemistry books, and this video made things SO much easier for us. You are awesome, keep it up!
I'm so glad! This sort of thing is exactly why I made this video. So happy it was useful for you!
When I discovered these tools (way back in the 1990’s) I started learning TeX with the help of Donald Knuth’s “The TeXbook” and practiced writing documents with that before starting LaTeX. Raw TeX is much more low-level and doesn’t provide the uniform document styles LaTeX has, but I’m a software developer and doing it this way helped me understand how LaTeX works under the hood. The main thing I like about TeX is it’s a very stable language and well documented, unlike proprietary document formats like MS Word which seems to change every version or so and doesn’t always play nicely with 3rd-party editors.
Oh I basically use LaTeX for just about everything these days. It's just so much better than fighting with Word
I had the Haliday and Resnick Physics text asxa student. And Resnick was our lecturer! Great demos!
It's amazing how much more engaging lectures can be if you've got someone who can do good demos!
Latex is great, but I would always recommend one to use a linux OS with vim or nvim as it just allows for greater freedom than these online latex editors.
Oh, is % for comments? Because you just plopped in "% some text" without explaining it not far into the video
Hi, thank you for your video. I've started using Atom for latex documentation. As soon as I run something, the PDF is being opened in the system PDF reader as well as in the atom window. Can you please let me know how to refrain from the system PDF reader?
You should do an update but using VSCode.
Hey Thomas, just started to learn latex. Thanks for this awesome video!
Hey dude Thank you for making this video. for whatever f****ing reason my physics program didnt teach us anything about LaTeX in undergrad.
A friend of mine swears by Mathematica when it comes to writing documents. While Mathermatica is known for equation solving and programming you can also create publishable documents with it.
I've tried it and it has a 'decent' WISIWYG interface for writing that includes equations however I found it rather lacking in publication ready tools. If they're there at all they're poorly documented.
I started learning LATEX to prepare my resume.
Set it up in my windows machine with VScode
what is the switches on the keyboard?
They are Cherry MX Browns
Great breakdown. Subscribed.
As a Mac user I use TeXShop. TeXMaker which runs on both Mac and PC is also good but I prefer TeXShop.
Any reason that you don't use Lyx software? may be you're promoting that online tool? just curious
To be honest I've never heard of LyX. I was using Atom at the time because it was a free editor that I liked the flexibility of using. Now Atom has been discontinued sadly. I now use the JetBrains IDEs - programs like PyCharm for python programming and IntelliJ Idea for everything else. I'll also sometimes use Overleaf for LaTeX now as well, as long as I don't need to write anything on the go because it depends on internet access.
Ultimately, it doesn't matter what editor you use - so use whatever works for you!
@@ThomasRintoul aha, now I know, you're promoting online tools 😅 ok ok, let's assume you don't know about lyx. Hope the online tools you promote pay you well for the unwavering support you provide for them.
I'm not promoting them for money. They do not pay me. It's just the tools I use - mostly with university licences
Additionally, the JetBrains IDEs are offline tools
Did you continue using Atom after it’s depreciation?
I moved on from it to using JetBrains IDEs like Idea Ultimate and Pycharm with an educational license. Sad to see it getting archived though
overleaf or vim tex is what I use.
Word has become quite good at equations, the looks. The numbering of equations in Word is always a problem, though.
also the best ide on the market by far
The handling of bibliographies is also incredibly tiresome in Word. Not as tiresome as formatting and numbering equations, because you only have to sort the bibliography once properly, but hardly frictionless. And images (with captions) are still... yeah.
Word has come a long way, but it's still not LaTeX.
Didn't see it anywhere so for anyone wondering: utf-8 is a way if representing the text internally. If you dont specify it it may default to ASCII (i think?, don't quote me on this) Which doesn't have characters such as ü, ç, ß, etc. so they wont show up correctly. utf-8 has all those characters so it will work, nowadays comuters will usually default to more modern representations, but older languageslike LaTeX sometimes still need utf-8 manually specified.
I'm sorry but can anyone read what he's typing?
yes, that is easy
Bro atom is deprecated it will disappear soon
I know. This video is a couple years old now. It was nice while it lasted. The rest of the video is still accurate though.
Látex is a technology of the 80’s. But I would like to learn it if it is free. Thanks for the info. I tried PDF and PostScript to make graphics, but they were hard to learn. PostScript was OK but PDF was even harder because it is not a programming language like PostScript.
I did my 274-page doctoral dissertation for Rutgers University in 2000
and published 8 peer reviewed math papers from 2001 to 2012 all in MS Word + Mathtype.
I began with Mathtype in 1997. I've heard of tex/latex since I entered graduate school at Rutgers in math in 1988.
I have never figured out how to use them. Tried over a dozen times.
That is how worthless and user-unfriendly and horrible tex/latex are.
As a ms word user (and it's good), the equations are worst with MS Word. TBH it's sh!!t
Oh I totally agree. It's better than it used to be, but if you have to do anything with a lot of equations, figures or references, LaTeX is by far superior - particularly for long documents
It's a very useful video! Thank you for making this video.💯❤
Too long of an intro. Cut it short, and waste less time.