- IrritableOcelot ( @IrritableOcelot@beehaw.org ) 14•10 months ago
I want to use it, but if I’m going to commit to learning a new system for my work, I need to know that 1) it will remain open source (like LaTeX), 2) its going to remain maintained, 3) it has a robust package library, 4) it has to understand bibtex. I dont think typst has committed to the first, its not mature enough for 2 or 3, and I cannot for the life of me figure out how to automate translation between bibtex and their funky format.
- Treczoks ( @Treczoks@kbin.social ) 6•10 months ago
Spot on.
Maybe add a 5) needs to be able to export to LaTeX. It might be nice and easy to write in typst, but you’ll sooner or later hit the wall of “We accept submissions in Word and LaTeX only.”
- IrritableOcelot ( @IrritableOcelot@beehaw.org ) 1•10 months ago
Thats very true, I hadn’t thought of that.
- Cwilliams ( @Cwilliams@beehaw.org ) 1•10 months ago
Some universities only accept word now days 💀
- Treczoks ( @Treczoks@kbin.social ) 1•10 months ago
Don’t tell me they won’t accept LaTeX in the real sciences!!! I can understand that the bla-bla courses would want Word, as LaTeX would probably make their brains melt. But math or physics with Word? Yuck…
- IrritableOcelot ( @IrritableOcelot@beehaw.org ) 1•10 months ago
Most universities won’t accept a latex file, but I’ve never seen anyone have an issue with PDFs in the sciences.
Wow, your considerations are invaluable for my next steps in this topic, thank you very much
- Danny M ( @dannym@lemmy.escapebigtech.info ) 4•10 months ago
I love it; it’s been my replacement for LaTeX ever since I’ve hears about it on hacker news
- Aatube ( @Aatube@kbin.social ) 3•10 months ago
Can it run doom?
- jagot ( @jagot@programming.dev ) 3•10 months ago
Without having tried typst myself, I would still recommend learning LaTeX, if you’re ever looking to publish in a scientific journal; most journals accept submissions in either Word (which in my mind is a very painful tool to use, especially when it comes to typesetting and equations) or LaTeX. They then typically convert the input to some internal format, but are probably unlikely to add support for new formats.
If you only ever intend to write documents for your own purposes, use whichever format you like the best; I personally use Emacs Org-mode and LaTeX export.
To me the syntax feels very strange but I adapt to a lot of things. Does anyone have experience with it and already a more profound opinion?
Markdown is already a very easy interface to latex and html. And latex has been there since forever.
- Danny M ( @dannym@lemmy.escapebigtech.info ) 4•10 months ago
the syntax is more powerful than markdown, the whole idea of with blocks and the ability to have more complex layouts is great
- saplyng ( @saplyng@kbin.social ) 2•10 months ago
I’ve been really happy with it; I’ve been using it for templating reports at work for months now. I’ve just started experimenting with using jinja to pretemplate my template lol.
I’ll probably continue down that track to try and automate my workflow away so I can focus on less tedious things, but after you get used to the box encapsulation it becomes fairly easy to work with!