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author | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2022-12-01 08:40:07 -0500 |
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committer | Sacha Chua <sacha@sachachua.com> | 2022-12-01 08:40:07 -0500 |
commit | 3ed157c016165d77adccdcbd8f7da3f51b397e4e (patch) | |
tree | 817fe3b5a417afab93da1e9d6ce0a0155519c9c8 /2022/talks | |
parent | 4bd09c6fa19379334b2412f272ac8cc4d357fcb4 (diff) | |
download | emacsconf-wiki-3ed157c016165d77adccdcbd8f7da3f51b397e4e.tar.xz emacsconf-wiki-3ed157c016165d77adccdcbd8f7da3f51b397e4e.zip |
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diff --git a/2022/talks/science.md b/2022/talks/science.md index 122b99c2..5a4b10db 100644 --- a/2022/talks/science.md +++ b/2022/talks/science.md @@ -16,6 +16,35 @@ Literature notes are a cornerstone of one's zettelkasten. Especially for scienti This talk will focus on how Emacs has aided me in scientific writing and will cover how I use various packages for this. Featured will be: Org-noter, one of my favourite emacs packages which I use to annotate articles using org-mode while reading them. I will focus primarily on its integration with my org-roam-capture-templates and how it, org-roam-bibtex and ivy-bibtex work together to very easily create and flesh out literature notes for the articles I find, but I will also briefly mention how I annotate articles. Then, how I use org-roam to then take what I learned from this literature and create permanent notes on it which I can then add easily to my Zettelkasten. And finally, how I organize both literature and permanent notes on a subject using my own project, the zetteldesk package, and how I can very easily create a first draft of my work using this. With the draft created organically through my notes, it is then almost effortless to write the final work, as it consists simply of reading the draft, making small changes and fixes and perfecting it so it is a ready product. +## Links + +- [Zotero](https://www.zotero.org/), the app I use for capturing + literature I find, which is unfortunately not in Emacs as I haven't + figured out a good way to do this from Emacs. (P.S. if you have a + good workflow for doing this from inside Emacs, I would love to have + a discussion with you because leaving Emacs annoys me). + +- [Org-Roam](https://www.orgroam.com/), the bread and butter of almost + everything in my workflow. Org-roam creates my zettelkasten and is + the basis of the other packages here. + +- [Ivy-bibtex](https://github.com/tmalsburg/helm-bibtex), the package + that allows Emacs to read .bib files and do things with them, + allowing for bibliography management in Emacs. + +- [Org-roam-bibtex](https://github.com/org-roam/org-roam-bibtex). + Integration between the 2 packages listed above so I can easily add + literature notes to my Zettelkasten. + +- [Org-noter](https://github.com/weirdNox/org-noter), the package that + does all the annotating. I can't take notes on an article without + org-noter, its just the best way to do it. + +- [Zetteldesk](https://github.com/Vidianos-Giannitsis/zetteldesk.el) + my personal project which was inspired by making this workflow work + in Emacs. This package facilitates everything discussed in the last + part of the talk about organizing your literature. + ## Bio I am Vidianos Giannitsis, a 4th year chemical engineering student who loves to use Emacs. I have been using Emacs for about 2 and a half years and at this point it has become the most important part of my workflow. After seeing how awesome Emacs is, I was very inclined to learn elisp to truly customize Emacs to its limits. So I did, and at the start of 2022 I started working on a package of mine "zetteldesk.el". This package was inspired from "How to take smart notes" the well known zettelkasten book. I read something there and I was like, surely I can implement this in Emacs, can't I. And so I did. |