LaTeX

Basically, you can choose some slides from an opened .tex file to copy. It also has the function to see which graphics files are included in the selected files, so you know which ones to copy. Here is the Github link: https://github.com/Atreyagaurav/beamer-quickie The PDF pages are shown using the SyncTeX (if available) so that you can visually choose the slides as long as there is a single .tex source file, (might still work without synctex for simple cases). I've made it on Linux, so it hasn't been tested in windows. You probably will need to compile gtk on Windows if you want to make it work. So if someone is really interested let me know, I can give instructions. Even in linux you'll need to install dependencies.

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github.com

Several improvements and updates have been made, hope you like it ❤️

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Project link https://github.com/Anmnv/eBook

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I was wondering if anyone here knew how to create a "curly" apostrophe in LaTeX without having to type out the unicode character for it. I know that the csquotes package is an option, but this only appears to allow making curly single and double quote pairs. I don't want quotes. I want a curly, *single* apostrophe. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

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Very glad to see this community here. Does it welcome posts also about other TeX flavours such as XeTeX or LuaTeX etc? (Maybe this can be explained explicitly in the sidebar?)

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I was reading an old TUGboat article about "sensible defaults" where the author set `\tolerance` to 250 and no `\emergencystretch` or `\hfuzz`. Now, my columns usually end up being around 55-65 characters wide, which isn't that wide, but in any longer text I'm lucky if I can stay under badness 1000 in underfull `\hbox`s. Some of those can be hyphenated or otherwise manipulated away, but 250 is hard to reach. Is this just me? I'm curious where you usually land with \tolerance and badness? (For comparison maybe also mention the width of your paragraphs?)

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I have recently found that I don't have to alter my base .tex files when I write a report, take notes etc like I use to. I'd like to upload them on a repo since at this point I think they might actually be of help to somebody. I have been using *LaTeX* for a few years started on Lyx, moved on to Overleaf and finally I now use Texmaker. All this to say I am not overly familiar with styles/classes etc. Is there any standard practices I sould know when sharing a template? Do i need to seperate the preable for example? Is there anything like a `requirements.txt` file for the packages? Or is a single .tex file the norm? I'd like to have something usable up for anyone that might run into the same issues.

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Any major breakthroughs to cheer? Headaches to vent about? Is there a package you're glad to have discovered or hope you'll never see again?

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Anyone have recommendations for how best to make a packet of circle-the-word puzzles? I'll be using fairly short (5 letters?) English words around various themes as part of an activity packet for elementary-school-aged children. Thanks in advance.

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A perennial question each graduation cycle is how to create signature blanks for thesis and dissertation signature pages. There are many approaches available. How would you go about it? (Or how *did* you go about it?)

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I see this and one other LaTeX community in my searches ( !LaTeX@lemmy.ml ) In any case, I'm looking forward to a new community for asking and answering casual and long-form LaTeX questions.

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