Changes for page Technical Stuff
Last modified by Alexander Schulz-Rosengarten on 2025/10/21 14:40
From version 8.1
edited by cds
on 2013/09/13 12:23
on 2013/09/13 12:23
Change comment:
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To version 6.1
edited by Reinhard von Hanxleden
on 2013/09/12 17:13
on 2013/09/12 17:13
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
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... ... @@ -10,15 +10,15 @@ 10 10 11 11 = Use Git = 12 12 13 - Our shared repositories are managed with Git.The files associated with the thesis should be kept in the group'sGitinstallation,asaseparaterepositorythatyouradvisor will create foryou. The main purpose is to prevent loss of data,butitalso facilitates access for fellow group members if needed, and to allow on-line publication.See also [[doc:KIELER.Using Git]].13 +The files associated with the thesis should be kept in the group's [[Git>>url:http://trac.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/trac/rtsys/wiki/Git||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="wiki"]] repository. The main purpose is to prevent loss of data. It also facilitates access for fellow group members if needed, and to allow on-line publication. 14 14 15 -The main tex file for a thesis should be {{code language="none"}}<name of repository>.tex{{/code}}(see also [[Git/Structure>>url:http://trac.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/trac/rtsys/wiki/Git/Structure||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="wiki"]] for the canonical naming scheme). E.g., the bachelor thesis of user xyz can be found in a repository named{{code language="none"}}xyz-bt{{/code}}[[in the Theses project of ourStashsystem>>url:https://git.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/projects/THESES||shape="rect"]], in a file named{{code language="none"}}xyz-bt.tex{{/code}}. If there is a talk to "defend" the thesis (Bachelor-Kolloquium, Disputation), the talk should also be included in this repository, and should be named{{code language="none"}}<name of repository>-talk.tex{{/code}}(e.g.{{code language="none"}}xyz-bt-talk.tex{{/code}}). In case your thesis should be made available on-line, the same names should be used, e.g.,{{codelanguage="none"}}xyz.pdf{{/code}}.15 +The main tex file for a thesis should be <name of directory>.tex. See also [[Git/Structure>>url:http://trac.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/trac/rtsys/wiki/Git/Structure||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="wiki"]] for the canonical naming scheme. Eg, the bachelor thesis of user xyz can be found in a repository named xyz-bt in the Thesss project of our[[(% class="icon" %) (%%)Gitorious>>url:https://git.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/projects||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="ext-link"]] system, in a file named xyz-bt.tex. If there is a talk to "defend" the thesis (Bachelor-Kolloquium, Disputation), the talk should also be included in this repository, and should be named <name of directory>-talk.tex; eg xyz-bt-talk.tex. In case your thesis should be made available on-line, the same names should be used, eg, xyz.pdf. 16 16 17 -See also the notes on [[preparing a paper>> doc:WritingPapers]], e.g.regarding which files should be kept in Git and which shouldn't.17 +See also the notes on [[preparing a paper>>url:http://trac.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/trac/rtsys/wiki/Preparing_a_Paper||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="wiki"]], eg regarding which files should be kept in revision management (ie, should be checked into Git) and which shouldn't. 18 18 19 19 = Editor/IDE = 20 20 21 -Prof. von Hanxleden would recommend Emacs as a very flexible and powerful editor for LaTeX (and everything else). But probably you belong to a post-Emacs generation, so here are some alternatives: Hauke (haf) recommends [[Texlipse>>url:http://trac.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/trac/rtsys/wiki/Texlipse||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="wiki"]] as an easy-to use and also powerful Eclipse plug-in. Christoph Daniel (cds) recommends using Kile, a KDE LaTeX editor that is fast, powerful, and reasonably easy to understand and to use. On Mac, TeXShop is a fine editor that looks a bitt dated on first glance, but works very well.21 +Prof. von Hanxleden would recommend Emacs as a very flexible and powerful editor for LaTeX (and everything else). But probably you belong to a post-Emacs generation, so here are some alternatives: Hauke (haf) recommends [[Texlipse>>url:http://trac.rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/trac/rtsys/wiki/Texlipse||style="text-decoration: none;" shape="rect" class="wiki"]] as an easy-to use and also powerful Eclipse plug-in. Christoph Daniel (cds) recommends using Kile, a KDE LaTeX editor that is fast, powerful, and reasonably easy to understand and to use. 22 22 23 23 = The ToDo Package = 24 24
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ 1 -https://rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/confluence//wiki/spaces/RTSYS/pages/770100 6/Technical Stuff1 +https://rtsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/confluence//wiki/spaces/RTSYS/pages/7701002/Technical Stuff