Our struggle with Word and LaTeX in formatting journal submissions and academic assignments led us to build Typeset. We realised that no one had designed a platform that was dedicated to meet the needs of people like you, who generate billions of pieces of academic work each year. We found that Word and Google Docs are unstructured and need constant re-editing and re-formatting, while LaTeX is too hard for most researchers. Typeset intends to be the perfect bridge - ease of intuitive writing and collaboration, with the rigor and power of LaT
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Based on our record, vimtex should be more popular than Typeset. It has been mentiond 51 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I use vimwiki almost daily, but it's not professional use, just daily notes and organizing my life. I started using zim but I found I really missed writing/editing with vim. Then I found vimwiki. There are things I'm not super happy about with it. I saw that /u/lervag (love his vimtex plugin) released a wiki plugin and I was/am interested in it, but I have so much in my wiki right now that I don't want to deal... Source: 11 months ago
Definitely get vimtex and set it up so you can view the compiled document in one window, and your notes in the other. Get used to vim a bit with some vim tutorial (there are a bunch out there), and have latex shortcuts you use in all your documents. Source: 11 months ago
I do think VSCode is a great tool and I recommend it frequently to people, but I still want to set the record straight here. Yes, vim is obviously limited in the sense that as a CLI app it doesn't draw it's own PDF or HTML windows, that's fair. But it can remote control your favorite PDF viewer or browser for roughly the same functionality. I'm currently writing my thesis using vimtex and it's quite smooth. And... Source: about 1 year ago
Obsidian is limited by its use of markdown files. You can use Overleaf, Vimtex, or LaTeX workshop on VS Code to render your tex documents. Source: about 1 year ago
Some language-specific plugins like vimtex also include their own text objects. Source: about 1 year ago
Try SciSpace to search for journal articles. It uses AI to summarize all the key components of the research papers that come up in your search query. Just don't copy/paste the summaries into your assignment because they'll get flagged as AI content. Source: 5 months ago
If you're currently subscribed to ChatGPT Plus, then you can also use ResearchGPT for free: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-bo0FiWLY7-researchgpt. It is a collaboration between SciSpace (typeset.io) and OpenAI. Promised to give accurate citations and information (I only use the free SciSpace version so I'm not sure how great their new product is). Source: 5 months ago
- https://typeset.io/ Do any of you have any experience with these tools? Jenni ai seems interesting, I guess. - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
Discover, Create, and Publish your research paper | SciSpace by Typeset ( https://typeset.io/ ). Source: 11 months ago
Two other tools I didn't have a chance to try for academic research papers is scholarcy.com and https://typeset.io/ (called SciSpace). Source: 12 months ago
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