![]() ![]() :) And I’d like to learn to use GitHub Pages and Jekyll. Or rather let’s just say it’s my version of it. I found a good guide about how to number your equations correctly and automatically ( this one), which explains it really well, but since it was a real nightmare until I succeeded, I try to give a longer, but more understandable version of it. The common solution for the equation numbering is to use brackets and a number in between, like the following (I use MathJax here). ![]() And this but is about the equation referencing. So things changed for the better over the years.īut there is always a “but”. And using BibTex I can export my reference databases to Office 2007 format, which I can import in Office 2013/16. In Office 2013 I can choose the IEEE form (which was not present in the earlier versions like Office 2010), which is the common referencing format in my field. I cannot even say very bad things about the referencing system. ![]() The figure and section references work quite well. The main reason I chose Office is that I know it better, than the whole TeX system and I find much faster to type and format the material, even if it’s not that pretty at the end. Some might say, that LaTeX is much better, which is true in some sense. However, I’m writing my PhD thesis these days and for some reasons I chose Microsoft Office to do that. I haven’t written anything for a long time. ![]()
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