* Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) @ 2015-06-08 16:39 Xebar Saram 2015-06-08 21:16 ` M ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-08 16:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: org mode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1301 bytes --] Hi all Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific coding skills..basically non ;-)) and having been using orgmode for a year or two now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me greatly such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my bibliography (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild success. unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and lack of coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its potential and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia from all aspects. i am looking for 2 things really: 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or detailed examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless email i would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other people organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail best Z [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1529 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-08 16:39 Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-08 21:16 ` M 2015-06-09 5:13 ` Xebar Saram 2015-06-09 9:49 ` Alan Schmitt 2015-08-26 14:17 ` Anders Johansson 2 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: M @ 2015-06-08 21:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs orgmode-mailinglist > > > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode@gnu.org> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? > Tips or a good guides sought after :) > > Hi all > > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific coding > skills..basically non ;-)) and having been using orgmode for a year or two > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc > > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me greatly > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my bibliography > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild > success. > > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and lack of > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its potential > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia from > all aspects. > > i am looking for 2 things really: > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or detailed > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) > > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless email i > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other people > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) > > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail > > best > > Z Dear Xebar, I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already show some very interesting examples: http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 Did you have a look at those? Kind regards Martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-08 21:16 ` M @ 2015-06-09 5:13 ` Xebar Saram 2015-06-09 7:00 ` Holger Wenzel 0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-09 5:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: M; +Cc: emacs orgmode-mailinglist [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2536 bytes --] Dear Martin Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that thanks again , looking forward to hearing from other colleagues in the orgmode community best z On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151@web.de> wrote: > > > > > > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com> > > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 > > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode@gnu.org> > > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty > viewpoint)? > > Tips or a good guides sought after :) > > > > Hi all > > > > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific coding > > skills..basically non ;-)) and having been using orgmode for a year or > two > > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc > > > > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me > greatly > > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my > bibliography > > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda > > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild > > success. > > > > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and > lack of > > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its > potential > > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia > from > > all aspects. > > > > i am looking for 2 things really: > > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or > detailed > > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) > > > > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper > > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless > email i > > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other > people > > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) > > > > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail > > > > best > > > > Z > > Dear Xebar, > > I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already > show some very interesting examples: > > > http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear > ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 > > Did you have a look at those? > > Kind regards > > Martin > > > > > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3587 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-09 5:13 ` Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-09 7:00 ` Holger Wenzel 2015-06-09 13:21 ` John Kitchin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Holger Wenzel @ 2015-06-09 7:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode Hi Xebar, Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > Dear Martin > Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that > I'd start with: http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- mode-for/ follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in this list. Cheers, Holger > z > > > On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: > > > > > > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> > > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 > > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> > > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? > > Tips or a good guides sought after :) > >> Hi all > > > > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific coding > > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two > > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc > > > > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me greatly > > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my bibliography > > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda > > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild > > success. > > > > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and lack of > > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its potential > > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia from > > all aspects. > > > > i am looking for 2 things really: > > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or detailed > > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) > > > > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper > > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless email i > > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other people > > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) > > > > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail > > > > best > > > > Z > > Dear Xebar, > I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already > show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear > ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 > Did you have a look at those? > Kind regards > Martin > > > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-09 7:00 ` Holger Wenzel @ 2015-06-09 13:21 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-10 1:57 ` windy 0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: John Kitchin @ 2015-06-09 13:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Holger Wenzel; +Cc: emacs-orgmode you might also enjoy our youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo And this one on using org-mode in teaching: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for org-mode. My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it later if you need to. Consider getting the book at https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a lispy language, and it is a fun read. Buy the org-mode book: http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. yes, it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read anywhere anytime. Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just do one thing a day. Every day. You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! Best wishes, Holger Wenzel writes: > Hi Xebar, > > > > Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: > >> >> >> Dear Martin >> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google > research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on > either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a > holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to > hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >> > > > I'd start with: > > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- > mode-for/ > > follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in > this list. > > Cheers, > > Holger >> z >> >> >> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >> > >> > >> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty > viewpoint)? >> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >> >> Hi all >> > >> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific > coding >> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >> > >> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me > greatly >> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my > bibliography >> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >> > success. >> > >> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and > lack of >> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its > potential >> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia > from >> > all aspects. >> > >> > i am looking for 2 things really: >> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or > detailed >> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >> > >> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless > email i >> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other > people >> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >> > >> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >> > >> > best >> > >> > Z >> >> Dear Xebar, >> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? > client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >> Did you have a look at those? >> Kind regards >> Martin >> >> >> >> >> >> -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-09 13:21 ` John Kitchin @ 2015-06-10 1:57 ` windy 2015-06-10 13:49 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-10 18:51 ` Eric S Fraga 0 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: windy @ 2015-06-10 1:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Kitchin; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Holger Wenzel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 5082 bytes --] Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment or revise your article once again and again. However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal with the problem ? 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: you might also enjoy our youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo And this one on using org-mode in teaching: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for org-mode. My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it later if you need to. Consider getting the book at https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a lispy language, and it is a fun read. Buy the org-mode book: http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. yes, it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read anywhere anytime. Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just do one thing a day. Every day. You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! Best wishes, Holger Wenzel writes: > Hi Xebar, > > > > Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: > >> >> >> Dear Martin >> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google > research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on > either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a > holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to > hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >> > > > I'd start with: > > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- > mode-for/ > > follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in > this list. > > Cheers, > > Holger >> z >> >> >> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >> > >> > >> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty > viewpoint)? >> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >> >> Hi all >> > >> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific > coding >> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >> > >> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me > greatly >> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my > bibliography >> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >> > success. >> > >> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and > lack of >> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its > potential >> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia > from >> > all aspects. >> > >> > i am looking for 2 things really: >> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or > detailed >> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >> > >> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless > email i >> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other > people >> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >> > >> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >> > >> > best >> > >> > Z >> >> Dear Xebar, >> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? > client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >> Did you have a look at those? >> Kind regards >> Martin >> >> >> >> >> >> -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 6482 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 1:57 ` windy @ 2015-06-10 13:49 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-10 14:14 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-10 18:51 ` Eric S Fraga 1 sibling, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: John Kitchin @ 2015-06-10 13:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: windy; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Holger Wenzel Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want them to help you. You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. windy writes: > Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment or revise your article once again and again. > > However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal with the problem ? > > > > > > > > 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: > > you might also enjoy our youtube video: > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo > > And this one on using org-mode in teaching: > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w > > and > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 > > See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for > org-mode. > > My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took > me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned > by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger > problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and > emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some > time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it > later if you need to. Consider getting the book at > https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will > make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't > about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a > lispy language, and it is a fun read. > > Buy the org-mode book: > http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. yes, > it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read > anywhere anytime. > > Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just > do one thing a day. Every day. > > You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes > a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize > your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! > > Best wishes, > > Holger Wenzel writes: > >> Hi Xebar, >> >> >> >> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >> >>> >>> >>> Dear Martin >>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google >> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on >> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a >> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to >> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>> >> >> >> I'd start with: >> >> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >> mode-for/ >> >> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in >> this list. >> >> Cheers, >> >> Holger >>> z >>> >>> >>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>> > >>> > >>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >> viewpoint)? >>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>> >> Hi all >>> > >>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >> coding >>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >>> > >>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me >> greatly >>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >> bibliography >>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >>> > success. >>> > >>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >> lack of >>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >> potential >>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia >> from >>> > all aspects. >>> > >>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >> detailed >>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>> > >>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless >> email i >>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >> people >>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>> > >>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>> > >>> > best >>> > >>> > Z >>> >>> Dear Xebar, >>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>> Did you have a look at those? >>> Kind regards >>> Martin >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 13:49 ` John Kitchin @ 2015-06-10 14:14 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-10 20:58 ` Titus von der Malsburg 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos 1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-10 14:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Kitchin; +Cc: Holger Wenzel, emacs-orgmode, windy I found a happy medium working in Org, exporting to LaTeX, and then using Pandoc to convert to Word. I would send the Word and always the canonical PDF version in case some equations got messed up. This requires manually incorporating the tracked changes from Word, but I've never been a fan of just clicking "accept" on changes anyway, and don't mind the manual re-integration of comments. -k. On 2015-06-10 at 09:49, John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> wrote: > Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want > them to help you. > > You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand > writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the > LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work > with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, > and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. > > windy writes: > >> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment or revise your article once again and again. >> >> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal with the problem ? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >> >> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >> >> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >> >> and >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >> >> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >> org-mode. >> >> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >> >> Buy the org-mode book: >> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. yes, >> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >> anywhere anytime. >> >> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >> do one thing a day. Every day. >> >> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >> >> Best wishes, >> >> Holger Wenzel writes: >> >>> Hi Xebar, >>> >>> >>> >>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Dear Martin >>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google >>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on >>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a >>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to >>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>> >>> >>> >>> I'd start with: >>> >>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>> mode-for/ >>> >>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in >>> this list. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> Holger >>>> z >>>> >>>> >>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>> viewpoint)? >>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>> >> Hi all >>>> > >>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>> coding >>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >>>> > >>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me >>> greatly >>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>> bibliography >>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >>>> > success. >>>> > >>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>> lack of >>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>> potential >>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia >>> from >>>> > all aspects. >>>> > >>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>> detailed >>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>> > >>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless >>> email i >>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>> people >>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>> > >>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>> > >>>> > best >>>> > >>>> > Z >>>> >>>> Dear Xebar, >>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>> Kind regards >>>> Martin >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 14:14 ` Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-10 20:58 ` Titus von der Malsburg 2015-06-11 5:30 ` Rasmus 2015-06-11 14:56 ` Phillip Lord 0 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Titus von der Malsburg @ 2015-06-10 20:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ken Mankoff; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, windy [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 6686 bytes --] On 2015-06-10 Wed 07:14, Ken Mankoff wrote: > I found a happy medium working in Org, exporting to LaTeX, and then > using Pandoc to convert to Word. With ox-pandoc you can export to .docx directly. No need to go through LaTeX. Ox-pandoc is pretty amazing. Titus > I would send the Word and always the canonical PDF version in case some equations got messed up. This requires manually incorporating the tracked changes from Word, but I've never been a fan of just clicking "accept" on changes anyway, and don't mind the manual re-integration of comments. > > -k. > > > On 2015-06-10 at 09:49, John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> wrote: >> Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want >> them to help you. >> >> You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand >> writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the >> LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work >> with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, >> and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. >> >> windy writes: >> >>> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment or revise your article once again and again. >>> >>> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal with the problem ? >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >>> >>> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >>> >>> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >>> >>> and >>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >>> >>> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >>> org-mode. >>> >>> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >>> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >>> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >>> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >>> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >>> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >>> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >>> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >>> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >>> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >>> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >>> >>> Buy the org-mode book: >>> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. yes, >>> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >>> anywhere anytime. >>> >>> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >>> do one thing a day. Every day. >>> >>> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >>> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >>> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >>> >>> Best wishes, >>> >>> Holger Wenzel writes: >>> >>>> Hi Xebar, >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Dear Martin >>>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google >>>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on >>>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a >>>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to >>>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> I'd start with: >>>> >>>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>>> mode-for/ >>>> >>>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in >>>> this list. >>>> >>>> Cheers, >>>> >>>> Holger >>>>> z >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>>> viewpoint)? >>>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>>> >> Hi all >>>>> > >>>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>>> coding >>>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >>>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >>>>> > >>>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me >>>> greatly >>>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>>> bibliography >>>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >>>>> > success. >>>>> > >>>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>>> lack of >>>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>>> potential >>>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia >>>> from >>>>> > all aspects. >>>>> > >>>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>>> detailed >>>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>>> > >>>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >>>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless >>>> email i >>>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>>> people >>>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>>> > >>>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>>> > >>>>> > best >>>>> > >>>>> > Z >>>>> >>>>> Dear Xebar, >>>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >>>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>>> Kind regards >>>>> Martin >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 472 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 20:58 ` Titus von der Malsburg @ 2015-06-11 5:30 ` Rasmus 2015-06-11 14:56 ` Phillip Lord 1 sibling, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Rasmus @ 2015-06-11 5:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode Titus von der Malsburg <malsburg@posteo.de> writes: > On 2015-06-10 Wed 07:14, Ken Mankoff wrote: >> I found a happy medium working in Org, exporting to LaTeX, and then >> using Pandoc to convert to Word. > > With ox-pandoc you can export to .docx directly. No need to go through > LaTeX. Ox-pandoc is pretty amazing. Out of curiosity, why is it preferable to go via pandoc instead of ox-odt? Rasmus -- Bang bang ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 20:58 ` Titus von der Malsburg 2015-06-11 5:30 ` Rasmus @ 2015-06-11 14:56 ` Phillip Lord 2015-06-11 17:02 ` John Kitchin 1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Phillip Lord @ 2015-06-11 14:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Titus von der Malsburg; +Cc: emacs-orgmode I didn't know about this -- this could be a killer feature for me. I work a lot with biologists and medics and they are completely word-centric. Phil Titus von der Malsburg <malsburg@posteo.de> writes: > On 2015-06-10 Wed 07:14, Ken Mankoff wrote: >> I found a happy medium working in Org, exporting to LaTeX, and then >> using Pandoc to convert to Word. > > With ox-pandoc you can export to .docx directly. No need to go through > LaTeX. Ox-pandoc is pretty amazing. > > Titus > >> I would send the Word and always the canonical PDF version in case some >> equations got messed up. This requires manually incorporating the tracked >> changes from Word, but I've never been a fan of just clicking "accept" on >> changes anyway, and don't mind the manual re-integration of comments. >> >> -k. >> >> >> On 2015-06-10 at 09:49, John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> wrote: >>> Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want >>> them to help you. >>> >>> You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand >>> writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the >>> LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work >>> with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, >>> and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. >>> >>> windy writes: >>> >>>> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to >>>> exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment >>>> or revise your article once again and again. >>>> >>>> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the >>>> pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal >>>> with the problem ? >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >>>> >>>> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >>>> >>>> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >>>> >>>> and >>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >>>> >>>> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >>>> org-mode. >>>> >>>> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >>>> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >>>> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >>>> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >>>> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >>>> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >>>> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >>>> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >>>> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >>>> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >>>> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >>>> >>>> Buy the org-mode book: >>>> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. >>>> yes, >>>> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >>>> anywhere anytime. >>>> >>>> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >>>> do one thing a day. Every day. >>>> >>>> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >>>> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >>>> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >>>> >>>> Best wishes, >>>> >>>> Holger Wenzel writes: >>>> >>>>> Hi Xebar, >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Dear Martin >>>>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google >>>>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on >>>>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a >>>>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to >>>>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I'd start with: >>>>> >>>>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>>>> mode-for/ >>>>> >>>>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in >>>>> this list. >>>>> >>>>> Cheers, >>>>> >>>>> Holger >>>>>> z >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>>>> viewpoint)? >>>>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>>>> >> Hi all >>>>>> > >>>>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>>>> coding >>>>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >>>>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >>>>>> > >>>>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me >>>>> greatly >>>>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>>>> bibliography >>>>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >>>>>> > success. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>>>> lack of >>>>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>>>> potential >>>>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia >>>>> from >>>>>> > all aspects. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>>>> detailed >>>>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>>>> > >>>>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >>>>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless >>>>> email i >>>>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>>>> people >>>>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>>>> > >>>>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>>>> > >>>>>> > best >>>>>> > >>>>>> > Z >>>>>> >>>>>> Dear Xebar, >>>>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >>>>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>>>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>>>> Kind regards >>>>>> Martin >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> > -- Phillip Lord, Phone: +44 (0) 191 208 7827 Lecturer in Bioinformatics, Email: phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk School of Computing Science, http://homepages.cs.ncl.ac.uk/phillip.lord Room 914 Claremont Tower, skype: russet_apples Newcastle University, twitter: phillord NE1 7RU ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-11 14:56 ` Phillip Lord @ 2015-06-11 17:02 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-12 13:24 ` Phillip Lord 0 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: John Kitchin @ 2015-06-11 17:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Phillip Lord; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Titus von der Malsburg I also wasn't familiar with it. I just played around with it a bit to see if you could integrate org-ref with this. You mostly can do it, but the document probably would need some final manual polishing for some things. http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/06/11/ox-pandoc-org-mode-+-org-ref-to-docx-with-bibliographies/ Phillip Lord writes: > I didn't know about this -- this could be a killer feature for me. I > work a lot with biologists and medics and they are completely > word-centric. > > Phil > > Titus von der Malsburg <malsburg@posteo.de> writes: > >> On 2015-06-10 Wed 07:14, Ken Mankoff wrote: >>> I found a happy medium working in Org, exporting to LaTeX, and then >>> using Pandoc to convert to Word. >> >> With ox-pandoc you can export to .docx directly. No need to go through >> LaTeX. Ox-pandoc is pretty amazing. >> >> Titus >> >>> I would send the Word and always the canonical PDF version in case some >>> equations got messed up. This requires manually incorporating the tracked >>> changes from Word, but I've never been a fan of just clicking "accept" on >>> changes anyway, and don't mind the manual re-integration of comments. >>> >>> -k. >>> >>> >>> On 2015-06-10 at 09:49, John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> wrote: >>>> Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want >>>> them to help you. >>>> >>>> You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand >>>> writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the >>>> LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work >>>> with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, >>>> and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. >>>> >>>> windy writes: >>>> >>>>> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to >>>>> exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment >>>>> or revise your article once again and again. >>>>> >>>>> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the >>>>> pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal >>>>> with the problem ? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >>>>> >>>>> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >>>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >>>>> >>>>> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >>>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >>>>> >>>>> and >>>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >>>>> >>>>> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >>>>> org-mode. >>>>> >>>>> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >>>>> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >>>>> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >>>>> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >>>>> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >>>>> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >>>>> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >>>>> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >>>>> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >>>>> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >>>>> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >>>>> >>>>> Buy the org-mode book: >>>>> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. >>>>> yes, >>>>> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >>>>> anywhere anytime. >>>>> >>>>> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >>>>> do one thing a day. Every day. >>>>> >>>>> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >>>>> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >>>>> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >>>>> >>>>> Best wishes, >>>>> >>>>> Holger Wenzel writes: >>>>> >>>>>> Hi Xebar, >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Dear Martin >>>>>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google >>>>>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on >>>>>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a >>>>>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to >>>>>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> I'd start with: >>>>>> >>>>>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>>>>> mode-for/ >>>>>> >>>>>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in >>>>>> this list. >>>>>> >>>>>> Cheers, >>>>>> >>>>>> Holger >>>>>>> z >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>>>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>>>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>>>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>>>>> viewpoint)? >>>>>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>>>>> >> Hi all >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>>>>> coding >>>>>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >>>>>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me >>>>>> greatly >>>>>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>>>>> bibliography >>>>>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>>>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >>>>>>> > success. >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>>>>> lack of >>>>>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>>>>> potential >>>>>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia >>>>>> from >>>>>>> > all aspects. >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>>>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>>>>> detailed >>>>>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >>>>>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless >>>>>> email i >>>>>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>>>>> people >>>>>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > best >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> > Z >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Dear Xebar, >>>>>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >>>>>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>>>>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>>>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>>>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>>>>> Kind regards >>>>>>> Martin >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >> -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-11 17:02 ` John Kitchin @ 2015-06-12 13:24 ` Phillip Lord 0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Phillip Lord @ 2015-06-12 13:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Kitchin; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Titus von der Malsburg For me, I was interested in integrating it with my literate work (lentic). The idea would be a document with some formal representation (using OWL, but it could be anything at all) and some English (or bad English as this is science) representation in the org-mode view. I could hide the formal view, and use this to generate a word doc for the biologists to say "is this what you said, and what you mean?". Then use their comments and feedback to update both the English AND the formal representation. I've already had a paper bounced on the (daft) grounds that "biologists are never going to use Emacs and Clojure" (which I never said they would). A word based representation would be fantastic. I shall investigate further. Phil John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> writes: > I also wasn't familiar with it. > > I just played around with it a bit to see if you could integrate org-ref > with this. You mostly can do it, but the document probably would need > some final manual polishing for some things. > > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/06/11/ox-pandoc-org-mode-+-org-ref-to-docx-with-bibliographies/ > > > > Phillip Lord writes: > >> I didn't know about this -- this could be a killer feature for me. I >> work a lot with biologists and medics and they are completely >> word-centric. >> >> Phil >> >> Titus von der Malsburg <malsburg@posteo.de> writes: >> >>> On 2015-06-10 Wed 07:14, Ken Mankoff wrote: >>>> I found a happy medium working in Org, exporting to LaTeX, and then >>>> using Pandoc to convert to Word. >>> >>> With ox-pandoc you can export to .docx directly. No need to go through >>> LaTeX. Ox-pandoc is pretty amazing. >>> >>> Titus >>> >>>> I would send the Word and always the canonical PDF version in case some >>>> equations got messed up. This requires manually incorporating the tracked >>>> changes from Word, but I've never been a fan of just clicking "accept" on >>>> changes anyway, and don't mind the manual re-integration of comments. >>>> >>>> -k. >>>> >>>> >>>> On 2015-06-10 at 09:49, John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> wrote: >>>>> Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want >>>>> them to help you. >>>>> >>>>> You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand >>>>> writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the >>>>> LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work >>>>> with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, >>>>> and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. >>>>> >>>>> windy writes: >>>>> >>>>>> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how to >>>>>> exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will comment >>>>>> or revise your article once again and again. >>>>>> >>>>>> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the >>>>>> pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal >>>>>> with the problem ? >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >>>>>> >>>>>> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >>>>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >>>>>> >>>>>> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >>>>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >>>>>> >>>>>> and >>>>>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >>>>>> >>>>>> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >>>>>> org-mode. >>>>>> >>>>>> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >>>>>> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >>>>>> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >>>>>> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >>>>>> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >>>>>> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >>>>>> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >>>>>> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >>>>>> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >>>>>> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >>>>>> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >>>>>> >>>>>> Buy the org-mode book: >>>>>> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. >>>>>> yes, >>>>>> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >>>>>> anywhere anytime. >>>>>> >>>>>> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >>>>>> do one thing a day. Every day. >>>>>> >>>>>> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >>>>>> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >>>>>> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >>>>>> >>>>>> Best wishes, >>>>>> >>>>>> Holger Wenzel writes: >>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi Xebar, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Dear Martin >>>>>>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive google >>>>>>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus on >>>>>>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for is a >>>>>>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and to >>>>>>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I'd start with: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>>>>>> mode-for/ >>>>>>> >>>>>>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts in >>>>>>> this list. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Cheers, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Holger >>>>>>>> z >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>>>>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>>>>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>>>>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>>>>>> viewpoint)? >>>>>>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>>>>>> >> Hi all >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>>>>>> coding >>>>>>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two >>>>>>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me >>>>>>> greatly >>>>>>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>>>>>> bibliography >>>>>>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>>>>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild >>>>>>>> > success. >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>>>>>> lack of >>>>>>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>>>>>> potential >>>>>>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia >>>>>>> from >>>>>>>> > all aspects. >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>>>>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>>>>>> detailed >>>>>>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper >>>>>>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless >>>>>>> email i >>>>>>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>>>>>> people >>>>>>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > best >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > Z >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Dear Xebar, >>>>>>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search already >>>>>>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>>>>>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>>>>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>>>>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>>>>>> Kind regards >>>>>>>> Martin >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>> > > -- > Professor John Kitchin > Doherty Hall A207F > Department of Chemical Engineering > Carnegie Mellon University > Pittsburgh, PA 15213 > 412-268-7803 > @johnkitchin > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu > > -- Phillip Lord, Phone: +44 (0) 191 208 7827 Lecturer in Bioinformatics, Email: phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk School of Computing Science, http://homepages.cs.ncl.ac.uk/phillip.lord Room 914 Claremont Tower, skype: russet_apples Newcastle University, twitter: phillord NE1 7RU ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 13:49 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-10 14:14 ` Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy ` (2 more replies) 1 sibling, 3 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Julian Burgos @ 2015-06-10 14:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Kitchin; +Cc: Holger Wenzel, emacs-orgmode, windy Windy, I am a researcher (not in academia, but in a government lab). I use emacs and org-mode a lot, for project management, programming (using R and GRASS), writing papers, keeping notes, etc.etc. I find that collaborative writing is problematic because most people use Word, and in most cases will not become enlightened and use emacs. I have used two strategies. a) I first write in org-mode. Export to Word, either exporting first to ODT and then to Word, or to LaTex and then use pandoc to convert LaTex to Word. My coauthor can edit the document as he wishes, using the "Track changes" option. Then, I transcribe their edits back into the org-mode document. Advantage of this approach: your coauthor receives a clean word file, that could include figures, references, etc., and he/she uses the tools she likes to edit the file. Disadvantage: you have to manually incorporate the changes to the org-mode file each time there are edits. b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file to my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my coauthor can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track changes" and to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, when I receive it I use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and incorporate the edits I want. Advantage of this approach: the merging of the documents is easy using ediff. Disadvantage: your coauthor has to edit a weird-looking document, with markup, code blocks, etc. All the best, Julian > Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want > them to help you. > > You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand > writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the > LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work > with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, > and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. > > windy writes: > >> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how >> to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will >> comment or revise your article once again and again. >> >> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the >> pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal >> with the problem ? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >> >> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >> >> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >> >> and >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >> >> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >> org-mode. >> >> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >> >> Buy the org-mode book: >> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. >> yes, >> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >> anywhere anytime. >> >> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >> do one thing a day. Every day. >> >> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >> >> Best wishes, >> >> Holger Wenzel writes: >> >>> Hi Xebar, >>> >>> >>> >>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Dear Martin >>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive >>>> google >>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus >>> on >>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for >>> is a >>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and >>> to >>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>> >>> >>> >>> I'd start with: >>> >>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>> mode-for/ >>> >>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts >>> in >>> this list. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> Holger >>>> z >>>> >>>> >>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>> viewpoint)? >>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>> >> Hi all >>>> > >>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>> coding >>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or >>>> two >>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists >>>> etc >>>> > >>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit >>>> me >>> greatly >>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>> bibliography >>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with >>>> mild >>>> > success. >>>> > >>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>> lack of >>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>> potential >>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in >>>> academia >>> from >>>> > all aspects. >>>> > >>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>> detailed >>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>> > >>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, >>>> paper >>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, >>>> endless >>> email i >>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>> people >>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>> > >>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>> > >>>> > best >>>> > >>>> > Z >>>> >>>> Dear Xebar, >>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search >>>> already >>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>> Kind regards >>>> Martin >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> > > -- > Professor John Kitchin > Doherty Hall A207F > Department of Chemical Engineering > Carnegie Mellon University > Pittsburgh, PA 15213 > 412-268-7803 > @johnkitchin > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos @ 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy 2015-06-11 5:38 ` Rasmus 2015-06-11 12:18 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-12 14:02 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-16 1:49 ` Bob Newell 2 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: windy @ 2015-06-11 2:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 7977 bytes --] Thanks for all you reply, My teacher let me give a DOC version for that only me use the emacs in our lab (So lonely, DOC dominate the most people). I finnally export as ODT and change into DOC version, it seems works well for that only no reference generate. Wish a more wisdom ODT exporter in org-mode. Bibtex is a big problem when export into different format files. 在2015年06月10 22时16分, "Julian Burgos"<julian@hafro.is>写道: Windy, I am a researcher (not in academia, but in a government lab). I use emacs and org-mode a lot, for project management, programming (using R and GRASS), writing papers, keeping notes, etc.etc. I find that collaborative writing is problematic because most people use Word, and in most cases will not become enlightened and use emacs. I have used two strategies. a) I first write in org-mode. Export to Word, either exporting first to ODT and then to Word, or to LaTex and then use pandoc to convert LaTex to Word. My coauthor can edit the document as he wishes, using the "Track changes" option. Then, I transcribe their edits back into the org-mode document. Advantage of this approach: your coauthor receives a clean word file, that could include figures, references, etc., and he/she uses the tools she likes to edit the file. Disadvantage: you have to manually incorporate the changes to the org-mode file each time there are edits. b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file to my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my coauthor can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track changes" and to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, when I receive it I use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and incorporate the edits I want. Advantage of this approach: the merging of the documents is easy using ediff. Disadvantage: your coauthor has to edit a weird-looking document, with markup, code blocks, etc. All the best, Julian > Speaking as an advisor/teacher, you should do what they want if you want > them to help you. > > You could ask if they are willing to comment on the pdf, either by hand > writing on a printed version, or by pdf commenting, or maybe in the > LaTeX source. But, if that is not what they want, and they cannot work > with what you give them, you will not get as much feedback as you want, > and you will end up creating frustration on your end and theirs. > > windy writes: > >> Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that how >> to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher will >> comment or revise your article once again and again. >> >> However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also the >> pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will you deal >> with the problem ? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> 在2015年06月09 21时21分, "John Kitchin"<jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu>写道: >> >> you might also enjoy our youtube video: >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgizHHd7nOo >> >> And this one on using org-mode in teaching: >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsSMs-4GlT8&list=FLQp2VLAOlvq142YN3JO3y8w >> >> and >> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRUCiF2MwP4 >> >> See http://github.com/jkitchin/jmax for my Emacs setup for >> org-mode. >> >> My only other advice is start learning to program in emacs-lisp. It took >> me about four years to get proficient enough to write org-ref. I learned >> by solving lots of little problems, and building up to bigger >> problems. A lot of those are documented in my blog. Read the emacs and >> emacs-lisp manuals (read them in Emacs or in a browser). They take some >> time, so skip the stuff that doesn't make sense and come back to it >> later if you need to. Consider getting the book at >> https://www.masteringemacs.org. It isn't about org-mode, but it will >> make you better at using Emacs. Consider reading Land of Lisp. It isn't >> about Emacs or Emacs-lisp, but it might interest you in programming in a >> lispy language, and it is a fun read. >> >> Buy the org-mode book: >> http://www.amazon.com/Org-Mode-Reference-Manual-Organize/dp/9881327709/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1433855847&sr=8-1&keywords=org-mode. >> yes, >> it is the same stuff as in the manual, but it is a book you can read >> anywhere anytime. >> >> Start by learning how to get org-mode to do some things you want. Just >> do one thing a day. Every day. >> >> You hopefully have 30+ years of career ahead of you, so even if it takes >> a few years or more to learn how to program in emacs-lisp to customize >> your workflows, you still have plenty of time to benefit from it! >> >> Best wishes, >> >> Holger Wenzel writes: >> >>> Hi Xebar, >>> >>> >>> >>> Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Dear Martin >>>> Thanks so much for your prompt response. I did ofc do an extensive >>>> google >>> research yet found that as can be seen in your link most entries focus >>> on >>> either writing papers or general bits an pieces .What i am looking for >>> is a >>> holistic approach regarding organizing all aspects of academic life and >>> to >>> hear workflows of other colleagues using org for that >>>> >>> >>> >>> I'd start with: >>> >>> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2014/08/08/What-we-are-using-org- >>> mode-for/ >>> >>> follow John Kitchin's blog there closely and read everything he posts >>> in >>> this list. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> Holger >>>> z >>>> >>>> >>>> On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 12:16 AM, M <Elwood151 <at> web.de> wrote: >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > Von: Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> >>>> > Datum: Mon, 8 Jun 2015 19:39:14 +0300 >>>> > An: org mode <emacs-orgmode <at> gnu.org> >>>> > Betreff: [O] Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty >>> viewpoint)? >>>> > Tips or a good guides sought after :) >>>> >> Hi all >>>> > >>>> > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific >>> coding >>>> > skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or >>>> two >>>> > now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists >>>> etc >>>> > >>>> > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit >>>> me >>> greatly >>>> > such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my >>> bibliography >>>> > (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda >>>> > capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with >>>> mild >>>> > success. >>>> > >>>> > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and >>> lack of >>>> > coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its >>> potential >>>> > and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in >>>> academia >>> from >>>> > all aspects. >>>> > >>>> > i am looking for 2 things really: >>>> > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or >>> detailed >>>> > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) >>>> > >>>> > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, >>>> paper >>>> > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, >>>> endless >>> email i >>>> > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other >>> people >>>> > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) >>>> > >>>> > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail >>>> > >>>> > best >>>> > >>>> > Z >>>> >>>> Dear Xebar, >>>> I think the first 10 results of the correspondindg google search >>>> already >>>> show some very interesting examples:http://www.google.com/search? >>> client=safari&rls=en&q=emacs+org-mode+in+resear >>>> ch&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 >>>> Did you have a look at those? >>>> Kind regards >>>> Martin >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> > > -- > Professor John Kitchin > Doherty Hall A207F > Department of Chemical Engineering > Carnegie Mellon University > Pittsburgh, PA 15213 > 412-268-7803 > @johnkitchin > http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 10894 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy @ 2015-06-11 5:38 ` Rasmus 2015-06-11 12:19 ` windy 2015-06-11 12:18 ` Ken Mankoff 1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Rasmus @ 2015-06-11 5:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode windy <chxp_moon@163.com> writes: > My teacher let me give a DOC version for that only me use the > emacs in our lab (So lonely, DOC dominate the most people). You should see if you can at least "upgrade" to docx. In my experience, LO writes much better docx than doc (e.g. when using doc math is downsampled to images losing a lot of quality). > I finnally export as ODT and change into DOC version, it seems > works well for that only no reference generate. Wish a more wisdom ODT > exporter in org-mode. Bibtex is a big problem when export into > different format files. ATM I think the a lot of people use John's org-ref. For this problem I've used a home-grown "org-cite.el" that uses reftex.el to format citations in author-year style. I generate the final bibliography via tex4ht and merge the two documents in an odm. This is easy with a Makefile. Later, probably after 8.3, we'll try to include citation support in Org. Rasmus -- The second rule of Fight Club is: You do not talk about Fight Club ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-11 5:38 ` Rasmus @ 2015-06-11 12:19 ` windy 0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: windy @ 2015-06-11 12:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rasmus; +Cc: emacs-orgmode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1548 bytes --] Thanks for your advices. I will try to export as DOCX instead of DOC. The org-ref is a very convenient way to control the bibtex after I watch the video, through it doesn't resovle the bibtex expoort in ODT. I think in a long time, the DOC format stil a dominate format that communicate with teachers...(Sad news...) Very glad to hear the news that citation will supported by org-mode and Thanks for you and your partners' hard work! Many Thanks. 在2015年06月11 13时38分, "Rasmus"<rasmus@gmx.us>写道: windy <chxp_moon@163.com> writes: > My teacher let me give a DOC version for that only me use the > emacs in our lab (So lonely, DOC dominate the most people). You should see if you can at least "upgrade" to docx. In my experience, LO writes much better docx than doc (e.g. when using doc math is downsampled to images losing a lot of quality). > I finnally export as ODT and change into DOC version, it seems > works well for that only no reference generate. Wish a more wisdom ODT > exporter in org-mode. Bibtex is a big problem when export into > different format files. ATM I think the a lot of people use John's org-ref. For this problem I've used a home-grown "org-cite.el" that uses reftex.el to format citations in author-year style. I generate the final bibliography via tex4ht and mlentic erge the two documents in an odm. This is easy with a Makefile. Later, probably after 8.3, we'll try to include citation support in Org. Rasmus -- The second rule of Fight Club is: You do not talk about Fight Club [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2061 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy 2015-06-11 5:38 ` Rasmus @ 2015-06-11 12:18 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-11 12:54 ` windy 1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-11 12:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: windy; +Cc: emacs-orgmode On 2015-06-10 at 22:07, windy <chxp_moon@163.com> wrote: > I finnally export as ODT and change into DOC version, it seems works > well for that only no reference generate. Wish a more wisdom ODT > exporter in org-mode. Bibtex is a big problem when export into > different format files. Org -> LaTeX --Pandoc--> DOCX supports references. -k. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-11 12:18 ` Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-11 12:54 ` windy 0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: windy @ 2015-06-11 12:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ken Mankoff; +Cc: emacs-orgmode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 866 bytes --] Thanks. However, pandoc hardly to deal right about the figure caption number, the table (table caption) and the superscript. The export in org-mode perform well in everything except for the bibtex. I prefer the inherent method in org-mode. The command I use: pandoc --bibliography=zotero.bib --filter pandoc-citeproc 12.tex -o 12.docx By the way, I like the output style in ODT of org-exporter and I am lazy to adjust the pandoc export style... 在2015年06月11 20时18分, "Ken Mankoff"<mankoff@gmail.com>写道: On 2015-06-10 at 22:07, windy <chxp_moon@163.com> wrote: > I finnally export as ODT and change into DOC version, it seems works > well for that only no reference generate. Wish a more wisdom ODT > exporter in org-mode. Bibtex is a big problem when export into > different format files. Org -> LaTeX --Pandoc--> DOCX supports references. -k. [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1340 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy @ 2015-06-12 14:02 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-13 19:06 ` Xebar Saram 2015-06-15 17:33 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-16 1:49 ` Bob Newell 2 siblings, 2 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-12 14:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Julian Burgos; +Cc: Holger Wenzel, emacs-orgmode, windy, John Kitchin Hi Julian, On 2015-06-10 at 10:16, Julian Burgos <julian@hafro.is> wrote: > a) I first write in org-mode. Export to Word, either exporting first > to ODT and then to Word, or to LaTex and then use pandoc to convert > LaTex to Word. My coauthor can edit the document as he wishes, using > the "Track changes" option. Then, I transcribe their edits back into > the org-mode document. Advantage of this approach: your coauthor > receives a clean word file, that could include figures, references, > etc., and he/she uses the tools she likes to edit the file. > Disadvantage: you have to manually incorporate the changes to the > org-mode file each time there are edits. > > b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file > to my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my > coauthor can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track > changes" and to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, > when I receive it I use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and > incorporate the edits I want. Advantage of this approach: the merging > of the documents is easy using ediff. Disadvantage: your coauthor has > to edit a weird-looking document, with markup, code blocks, etc. It seems like with a bit of extra (scriptable?) work you could remove both disadvantages. Why can't you use method (a) above, and then DOCX -> Org via pandoc (with --accept-all option)? I know pandoc introduce some of its own changes to the Org syntax but not the document itself. You can get around this. You can remove the pandoc-generated changes automagically so that only co-author changes appear in Org format, which you can then use with your (b) above and emacs ediff. Original: Your Org source A: Org -> DOCX for co-authors (using pandoc) B: Org -> DOCX -> Org (using pandoc). C: A -> Org (using pandoc and --accept-all-changes) D: B-Original The difference between B and Original are pandoc-introduced changes that you do not want. Ignore/remove these changes from C, call it D and then the difference between D and the Original are your co-author comments. Now your authors can edit DOCX with Track Changes and you can work on those edits with Emacs ediff. -k. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-12 14:02 ` Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-13 19:06 ` Xebar Saram 2015-06-13 19:52 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-15 17:33 ` Julian Burgos 1 sibling, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-13 19:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ken Mankoff Cc: Julian Burgos, windy, emacs-orgmode, John Kitchin, Holger Wenzel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2750 bytes --] Hi list and John Thank you all for all the great advice i will start incorporating them into my daily workflow John: org-ref looks great but is it also used for "managing" you references? that is searching for entries, grouping by keys, exporting them to html, adding etc. does it have a "table" view or other? if not what do you use for managing your references? best Z On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 5:02 PM, Ken Mankoff <mankoff@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Julian, > > On 2015-06-10 at 10:16, Julian Burgos <julian@hafro.is> wrote: > > a) I first write in org-mode. Export to Word, either exporting first > > to ODT and then to Word, or to LaTex and then use pandoc to convert > > LaTex to Word. My coauthor can edit the document as he wishes, using > > the "Track changes" option. Then, I transcribe their edits back into > > the org-mode document. Advantage of this approach: your coauthor > > receives a clean word file, that could include figures, references, > > etc., and he/she uses the tools she likes to edit the file. > > Disadvantage: you have to manually incorporate the changes to the > > org-mode file each time there are edits. > > > > b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file > > to my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my > > coauthor can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track > > changes" and to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, > > when I receive it I use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and > > incorporate the edits I want. Advantage of this approach: the merging > > of the documents is easy using ediff. Disadvantage: your coauthor has > > to edit a weird-looking document, with markup, code blocks, etc. > > It seems like with a bit of extra (scriptable?) work you could remove both > disadvantages. > > Why can't you use method (a) above, and then DOCX -> Org via pandoc (with > --accept-all option)? > > I know pandoc introduce some of its own changes to the Org syntax but not > the document itself. You can get around this. You can remove the > pandoc-generated changes automagically so that only co-author changes > appear in Org format, which you can then use with your (b) above and emacs > ediff. > > Original: Your Org source > A: Org -> DOCX for co-authors (using pandoc) > B: Org -> DOCX -> Org (using pandoc). > C: A -> Org (using pandoc and --accept-all-changes) > D: B-Original > > The difference between B and Original are pandoc-introduced changes that > you do not want. Ignore/remove these changes from C, call it D and then the > difference between D and the Original are your co-author comments. Now your > authors can edit DOCX with Track Changes and you can work on those edits > with Emacs ediff. > > -k. > > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3474 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-13 19:06 ` Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-13 19:52 ` John Kitchin 0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: John Kitchin @ 2015-06-13 19:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Xebar Saram Cc: Julian Burgos, emacs-orgmode, windy, Ken Mankoff, Holger Wenzel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 4014 bytes --] I guess you could say I use it to manage my references. E.g. I add references using the functions in doi-utils.el. I can search them using helm-bibtex (which is not part of org-ref, we just use it because it is awesome), and from that I can see groups of references with keywords, etc... helm-bibtex provides the "table"view I think you are referring to as a helm selection buffer. Alternatively in org-ref you could use the older reftex interface. When I click on a cite link, there actions available to do things like open the entry, find related articles, etc... (org-ref-build-full-bibliography) allows you to build a pdf version of a bibtex file pretty conveniently. the jmax-bibtex.el file in org-ref provides additional functionality to clean up bibtex entries, etc... so, it is fair to say emacs+org-ref+helm-bibtex is how I manage my references, and use them in writing. John ----------------------------------- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu On Sat, Jun 13, 2015 at 3:06 PM, Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi list and John > > Thank you all for all the great advice i will start incorporating them > into my daily workflow > > John: org-ref looks great but is it also used for "managing" you > references? that is searching for entries, grouping by keys, exporting them > to html, adding etc. does it have a "table" view or other? if not what do > you use for managing your references? > > best > > Z > > On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 5:02 PM, Ken Mankoff <mankoff@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi Julian, >> >> On 2015-06-10 at 10:16, Julian Burgos <julian@hafro.is> wrote: >> > a) I first write in org-mode. Export to Word, either exporting first >> > to ODT and then to Word, or to LaTex and then use pandoc to convert >> > LaTex to Word. My coauthor can edit the document as he wishes, using >> > the "Track changes" option. Then, I transcribe their edits back into >> > the org-mode document. Advantage of this approach: your coauthor >> > receives a clean word file, that could include figures, references, >> > etc., and he/she uses the tools she likes to edit the file. >> > Disadvantage: you have to manually incorporate the changes to the >> > org-mode file each time there are edits. >> > >> > b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file >> > to my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my >> > coauthor can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track >> > changes" and to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, >> > when I receive it I use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and >> > incorporate the edits I want. Advantage of this approach: the merging >> > of the documents is easy using ediff. Disadvantage: your coauthor has >> > to edit a weird-looking document, with markup, code blocks, etc. >> >> It seems like with a bit of extra (scriptable?) work you could remove >> both disadvantages. >> >> Why can't you use method (a) above, and then DOCX -> Org via pandoc (with >> --accept-all option)? >> >> I know pandoc introduce some of its own changes to the Org syntax but not >> the document itself. You can get around this. You can remove the >> pandoc-generated changes automagically so that only co-author changes >> appear in Org format, which you can then use with your (b) above and emacs >> ediff. >> >> Original: Your Org source >> A: Org -> DOCX for co-authors (using pandoc) >> B: Org -> DOCX -> Org (using pandoc). >> C: A -> Org (using pandoc and --accept-all-changes) >> D: B-Original >> >> The difference between B and Original are pandoc-introduced changes that >> you do not want. Ignore/remove these changes from C, call it D and then the >> difference between D and the Original are your co-author comments. Now your >> authors can edit DOCX with Track Changes and you can work on those edits >> with Emacs ediff. >> >> -k. >> >> > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 5336 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-12 14:02 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-13 19:06 ` Xebar Saram @ 2015-06-15 17:33 ` Julian Burgos 1 sibling, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Julian Burgos @ 2015-06-15 17:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ken Mankoff Cc: Julian Burgos, Holger Wenzel, emacs-orgmode, windy, John Kitchin Hi Ken, This is a good idea! I will give it a try. Thanks! Julian > Hi Julian, > > On 2015-06-10 at 10:16, Julian Burgos <julian@hafro.is> wrote: >> a) I first write in org-mode. Export to Word, either exporting first >> to ODT and then to Word, or to LaTex and then use pandoc to convert >> LaTex to Word. My coauthor can edit the document as he wishes, using >> the "Track changes" option. Then, I transcribe their edits back into >> the org-mode document. Advantage of this approach: your coauthor >> receives a clean word file, that could include figures, references, >> etc., and he/she uses the tools she likes to edit the file. >> Disadvantage: you have to manually incorporate the changes to the >> org-mode file each time there are edits. >> >> b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file >> to my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my >> coauthor can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track >> changes" and to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, >> when I receive it I use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and >> incorporate the edits I want. Advantage of this approach: the merging >> of the documents is easy using ediff. Disadvantage: your coauthor has >> to edit a weird-looking document, with markup, code blocks, etc. > > It seems like with a bit of extra (scriptable?) work you could remove both > disadvantages. > > Why can't you use method (a) above, and then DOCX -> Org via pandoc (with > --accept-all option)? > > I know pandoc introduce some of its own changes to the Org syntax but not > the document itself. You can get around this. You can remove the > pandoc-generated changes automagically so that only co-author changes > appear in Org format, which you can then use with your (b) above and emacs > ediff. > > Original: Your Org source > A: Org -> DOCX for co-authors (using pandoc) > B: Org -> DOCX -> Org (using pandoc). > C: A -> Org (using pandoc and --accept-all-changes) > D: B-Original > > The difference between B and Original are pandoc-introduced changes that > you do not want. Ignore/remove these changes from C, call it D and then > the difference between D and the Original are your co-author comments. Now > your authors can edit DOCX with Track Changes and you can work on those > edits with Emacs ediff. > > -k. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy 2015-06-12 14:02 ` Ken Mankoff @ 2015-06-16 1:49 ` Bob Newell 2015-06-16 23:15 ` Alan L Tyree 2 siblings, 1 reply; 28+ messages in thread From: Bob Newell @ 2015-06-16 1:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode "Julian Burgos" <julian@hafro.is> writes: > b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file to > my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my coauthor > can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track changes" and > to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, when I receive it I > use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and incorporate the edits I > want. Simple is best, and I wish I had thought of this simple idea before I took an 87,000 word novel that I wrote in org-mode, output as ODT, converted to DOCX, and then sent to an editor. I got back all the track changes stuff and even worse, margin notes, and punctuation (like quotes and ellipses) changed over to Word-ish characters. It wasn't utterly useless but it created a lot of extra work, which still isn't over. Next time I'll do as per above, tell her to just edit the thing directly, write her notes in-line, and keep it as pure ASCII. I really believe she thinks I was going to use Word to publish the novel. Failure to communicate on my part. I could say lack of judgment on her part but that's unfair; in her world, most everyone uses Word at some stage in the process. -- Bob Newell Honolulu, Hawai`i * Sent via Ma Gnus 0.12-Emacs 24.3-Linux Mint 17 * ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-16 1:49 ` Bob Newell @ 2015-06-16 23:15 ` Alan L Tyree 0 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Alan L Tyree @ 2015-06-16 23:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode On 16/06/15 11:49, Bob Newell wrote: > "Julian Burgos" <julian@hafro.is> writes: > >> b) I write the manuscript in org-mode. Then I send the org-mode file to >> my coauthor. Because the org-mode file is just a text file, my coauthor >> can use Word to edit it. I ask him/her *not* to use "track changes" and >> to save the edited version also as a text file. Then, when I receive it I >> use ediff in emacs to compare both documents and incorporate the edits I >> want. > Simple is best, and I wish I had thought of this simple idea before I > took an 87,000 word novel that I wrote in org-mode, output as ODT, > converted to DOCX, and then sent to an editor. I got back all the track > changes stuff and even worse, margin notes, and punctuation (like quotes > and ellipses) changed over to Word-ish characters. > > It wasn't utterly useless but it created a lot of extra work, which > still isn't over. Next time I'll do as per above, tell her to just edit > the thing directly, write her notes in-line, and keep it as pure ASCII. > > I really believe she thinks I was going to use Word to publish the > novel. Failure to communicate on my part. I could say lack of judgment > on her part but that's unfair; in her world, most everyone uses Word at > some stage in the process. > I used this method when working with an editor on the last edition of my book on banking law: almost 300,000 words. I had a few special constructs that I asked her not to meddle with, and she put editors notes in-line. It worked a treat although the publisher actually required Word files at the end. Cheers, Alan -- Alan L Tyree http://www2.austlii.edu.au/~alan Tel: 04 2748 6206 sip:typhoon@iptel.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-10 1:57 ` windy 2015-06-10 13:49 ` John Kitchin @ 2015-06-10 18:51 ` Eric S Fraga 1 sibling, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Eric S Fraga @ 2015-06-10 18:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: windy; +Cc: Holger Wenzel, emacs-orgmode, John Kitchin On Wednesday, 10 Jun 2015 at 09:57, windy wrote: > Another question, I am a student , I think it is a big problem that > how to exchange you article with your teacher, because the teacher > will comment or revise your article once again and again. > > However, Many teachers will not use emacs to write articles and also > the pdf file is not so convenient to do some modification, how will > you deal with the problem ? As John has already said, go with the flow and use whatever system your teacher prefers... The students in my group quickly learn that they get more useful feedback from me if they give me LaTeX or org files instead of Word! It's not because I wish to penalise them, of course. It's that I don't have Word so I get them to give me PDF to ensure the maths come through properly (libreoffice is not particularly good when it comes to mathematics). I only end up commenting indirectly on any document they give me. On the other hand, if they give me LaTeX or org, I comment directly within their documents and/or suggest changes when appropriate. -- : Eric S Fraga (0xFFFCF67D), Emacs 25.0.50.1, Org release_8.3beta-1147-g0e5069.dirty ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-08 16:39 Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) Xebar Saram 2015-06-08 21:16 ` M @ 2015-06-09 9:49 ` Alan Schmitt 2015-08-26 14:17 ` Anders Johansson 2 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Alan Schmitt @ 2015-06-09 9:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Xebar Saram; +Cc: org mode [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2059 bytes --] Hi, On 2015-06-08 18:39, Xebar Saram <zeltakc@gmail.com> writes: > i am looking for 2 things really: > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or detailed > examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) > > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper > writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless email i > would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other people > organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) I'm in academia and I use org (also not to its full potential). Some great tips were already given, let me add a couple. I try to keep notes for every paper that I read. I have found org-ref to be really useful to keep the links between the notes and the papers (https://github.com/jkitchin/org-ref). If you write many letters (for instance recommendation letters), you might be interested in koma export. (http://orgmode.org/worg/exporters/koma-letter-export.html) Finally, I have found that one of the biggest pitfalls (for me) in working in academia is to spend all my time dealing with urgent, but not necessarily important, things. Following the procrastination matrix (see http://waitbutwhy.com/2015/03/procrastination-matrix.html for an entertaining description), I use a "@Q2" tag for things that are important and not urgent, and I reserve some time to work on them. The ones I'm currently working on are scheduled, and they are shown in my custom agenda view using this: #+begin_src emacs-lisp ("q" "Q2 tasks" ((agenda "" ((org-agenda-overriding-header "Q2 Scheduled") (org-agenda-skip-function '(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'notregexp ":@Q2:")))) (tags-todo "@Q2/!-HOLD-WAITING" ((org-agenda-overriding-header "Q2") (org-agenda-todo-ignore-deadlines t) (org-agenda-todo-ignore-scheduled t))))) #+end_src Best, Alan -- OpenPGP Key ID : 040D0A3B4ED2E5C7 Weekly CO₂ average (2015-05-30, Mauna Loa Observatory): 403.41 ppm [-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 472 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
* Re: Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) 2015-06-08 16:39 Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) Xebar Saram 2015-06-08 21:16 ` M 2015-06-09 9:49 ` Alan Schmitt @ 2015-08-26 14:17 ` Anders Johansson 2 siblings, 0 replies; 28+ messages in thread From: Anders Johansson @ 2015-08-26 14:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode Xebar Saram <zeltakc <at> gmail.com> writes: > > Hi all > Im a young assistant professor (in humanities and thus my horrific coding skills..basically non ) and having been using orgmode for a year or two now. I love orgmode dearly and use it mainly for note taking, lists etc > > I am aware of the fantastic orgmode capabilities that could benefit me greatly such as exporting, email tie-ins, beamer support, organizing my bibliography (i have switched to a .bib file recently for my references), agenda capabilities and so much moreand have tried several of these with mild success. > > unfortunately (and this maybe due to me not being very technical and lack of coding skills) i still feel like im really not using orgmode to its potential and still feel miserably lost in terms of organizing my work in academia from all aspects. > > i am looking for 2 things really: > 1. as i said in the post topic a good guide if anyone is aware of or detailed examples of using org in Academia (mainly aimed at faculty :)) > > 2. related to that as a young researcher with multiple students, paper writing, grant applications, department duties, endless TODOS, endless email i would really be grateful for even non org specific tips on how other people organize all this to make life more..well..organized :) > > thanks alot in advance and sorry for the long mail > > best > > Z > > I have to collaborate in Word but can at least start out writing my papers in org-mode. I use Zotero for reference management and with the help of several tools I can insert citations that can be formatted by Zotero in the final version of the paper. Here is my configuration: https://gist.github.com/andersjohansson/324a01364eb5a5435c65 It uses Erik Hetzners org-zotxt and org-pdcite, ox-odt for converting to odt, and then the tool http://zotero-odf-scan.github.io/zotero-odf-scan/ to convert the generated citations like { | Smith, (2012) | | |zu:2433:WQVBH98K} to Zotero citation marks in the odt-file. Perhaps someone else will have use for this as well, Cheers, Anders Johansson ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 28+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2015-08-26 14:17 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 28+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2015-06-08 16:39 Organizing and taming hectic Academia work (faculty viewpoint)? Tips or a good guides sought after :) Xebar Saram 2015-06-08 21:16 ` M 2015-06-09 5:13 ` Xebar Saram 2015-06-09 7:00 ` Holger Wenzel 2015-06-09 13:21 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-10 1:57 ` windy 2015-06-10 13:49 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-10 14:14 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-10 20:58 ` Titus von der Malsburg 2015-06-11 5:30 ` Rasmus 2015-06-11 14:56 ` Phillip Lord 2015-06-11 17:02 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-12 13:24 ` Phillip Lord 2015-06-10 14:16 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-11 2:07 ` windy 2015-06-11 5:38 ` Rasmus 2015-06-11 12:19 ` windy 2015-06-11 12:18 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-11 12:54 ` windy 2015-06-12 14:02 ` Ken Mankoff 2015-06-13 19:06 ` Xebar Saram 2015-06-13 19:52 ` John Kitchin 2015-06-15 17:33 ` Julian Burgos 2015-06-16 1:49 ` Bob Newell 2015-06-16 23:15 ` Alan L Tyree 2015-06-10 18:51 ` Eric S Fraga 2015-06-09 9:49 ` Alan Schmitt 2015-08-26 14:17 ` Anders Johansson
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