5/21/2023 0 Comments Texstudio versus texmacs![]() ![]() After explaining I used anything besides it, she looked visibly surprised as well as thankful. The second, the teacher I emailed myself with kindly asked me to teach her how I wrote that fast with LaTeX. The first, all my mates (except for the one I mentioned LyX too) took an excruciatingly long time to get their work across with LaTeX: we're speaking of a week long time, whereas I took an afternoon. We had to make two essays on my mathematics courses and at the same time I had to get an exam ready, so I would be emailing the teacher with questions typed in with "LaTeX font" so as to make the question as easy to understand as possible (my handwriting is not the best). I added a LaTeX extension, and Tabnine, and the experience has been amazing. I am already accustomed to VSCode because I need to write code on a regular basis. I'm also not a fan of the sluggish web services like Overleaf. ![]() It all started around the last two to three months. It is a good piece of software, but feels a bit dated. Hence the name 'TeXMacs' (TeX/Macsyma or Maxima) But what's even better is that TeXMacs also hands you an editing interface to Scilab (a Matlab-like tool that's free and opensource, but not freely licensed), plus an editing interface to Gnuplot, plus an editing interface to Octave and Python and other languages What this all means for the user. If this is not the right place I'd happily be pointed elsewhere). TeXmacs can handle mathematical formulas, tables, images, cross-references and citations. (First of all, I figured I would have to ask around here because that's where the scientists that make use of LaTeX usually are around. ![]()
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