• @Generous1146@beehaw.org
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    165 days ago

    I’ve wasted hours of my life, trying to insert an image in a word document without word compressing it, making it illegible, only to find out that it’s impossible. I can’t even imagine anything being worse at this point

  • AnIndefiniteArticle
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    5 days ago

    Clearly flawed methodology.

    The value of LaTeX isn’t productivity when making a single document.

    The value of LaTeX is productivity when you need to reuse past work, or update it with the latest data and figures, or make a collection of similar documents.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      84 days ago

      Exactly. Give them a bunch of setup, let them set it up as normal.

      Then tell everyone to resize the second pictures and move all images from the side of the page to the right. Then see who does it first.

      • AnIndefiniteArticle
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        5 days ago

        Right.

        Do your writing in text files accompanying the image files (figures). The LaTeX code is just instructions for how to render the various text sources arrange the figures on pages to be printed or rendered as slides.

        It separates the flowing creative experience of writing and documenting what happened in the experiment from the fiddling creative experience of rendering, editing, and presentation to ensure that the text and figures line up appropriately and are on appropriate pages.

        Separating fact finding from presentation is an important barrier in the scientific method.

        • @thevoidzero@lemmy.world
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          75 days ago

          Yup. When I rerun my things, in latex I just overwrite the plots file (pdf/png) and compile latex. In word I have to find where it was and replace it there. It’s way easier on latex if you make your code just write plot files in the same location.

          • AnIndefiniteArticle
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            65 days ago

            You can use a symlink to point to the figures directory of a certain run of the code. Add git history to the mix, and now you have an auditable record of what version of the code’s output ended up in each version of the paper.

            You can be so anal and precise about everything.

            • @thevoidzero@lemmy.world
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              45 days ago

              Yup simlink is so nice. I sometimes use it for color vs monocrome plots. Change simlink and compile. Although I learned you can also use if statements in latex, I use that now.

  • @whotookkarl@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Storing text in binary formats like word docs instead of plain text like latex makes git version control unusable.

  • @Maroon@lemmy.world
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    166 days ago

    “¿Por qué no los dos?”

    I write my text in a word processor (Like Libreoffice writer) and typeset the final document in LaTeX.

    I never understood this false comparison between the two software that are essentially meant for very distinct tasks.

  • @ReversalHatchery@beehaw.org
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    75 days ago

    needs more jpeg.

    but on a serious note, how do you version control an msoffice/libreoffice document? you can’t just put it in git, the repo will get huge quickly

  • @PartiallyApplied@lemmy.world
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    115 days ago

    Word definitely has its niche.

    However, I find for many of my tasks, LaTeX or Typst just make sense. I don’t need to worry about out of date figures. I can customize styling instantly. I can track my changes with Git. Grammar checking is rough tho. lsp-like grammar checking would revolutionize my world lol.

    I can personally attest that I transitioned to LaTeX from Word, when Word wouldn’t handle equations correctly, or would crash when I had too many. It doesn’t matter if I can put out 50 word equations faster than LaTeX if I’m breaking my flow state to restart my editor.

    They overlap in their ecosystem niches but in no way is one a complete replacement for the other. LaTeX has a larger niche than Word which makes it a really safe default.

    “Nobody ever got fired for choosing React”

    • @PartiallyApplied@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I’ve done a bit more searching and it seems ltex-lsp-plus is the best out there for lsp grammar checking. It’s 1000x better than nothing, though the false negative rate is a bit high for my taste :)

  • @DannyBoy@sh.itjust.works
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    55 days ago

    I used it for resumes and assignments in school. Like others said I wasn’t trying to save time but to make things look more professional.

  • @_lilith@lemmy.world
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    85 days ago

    Maybe it takes more time because it allows more editing control over the finished product. The report of an enjoyable user experience for latex would back this up since users were able to produce what they wanted instead of being limited to using words jank as editing and just giving up or using a shitty template. Test against plain text entry I bet there is a positive correlation between limited features and total word count

  • @ezdrift@lemm.ee
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    85 days ago

    I’m imagining what it would be like to write a page long {align} in word and it’s terrifying.

  • @flora_explora@beehaw.org
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    45 days ago

    Well, duh, I obviously learned LaTeX only to be less productive and procrastinate more. And when I was getting somewhere with it, I had to switch to RMarkdown instead to be able to procrastinate even more! Imagine actually having to think about the content of your work, ugh :/