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79 lines
4.0 KiB
TeX
79 lines
4.0 KiB
TeX
\hypertarget{introduction}{%
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\section{Introduction}\label{introduction}}
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The preparation of documents always takes our minds to relate the usage
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of specialized software like Microsoft-Word, Word-Pad, Pages,
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Open-office, and so on. However, many years ago, the preparation of
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documents, used to be more relaxed and faster; the plain-text fashion.
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Plain-text documents are files with no format nor specialized
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information. Instead, plain documents are only text. But, why plain-text
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documents are so crucial for the academic area? Why these files remain
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useful? And how can we use them to create high-quality documents? Well,
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let's start by explaining some special kinds of documents based in
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plain-text files; the \emph{Markdown files}.
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\hypertarget{formats-for-academic-documents}{%
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\section{Formats for academic
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documents}\label{formats-for-academic-documents}}
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The Markdown format was initially developed by John Gruber in
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collaboration with Aaron Swartz, to simplify the writing of HTML.
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Instead of coding a file in HTML syntax, the content of a document is
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written in \textbf{plain text} and denote with \emph{simple tags the
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final formatting}. Subsequently, the MD (Markdown) files are parsed to
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generate the final HTML document. With this concept, the source file
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remains easily readable, and the \textbf{author can focus on the
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contents rather than formatting}.
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\hypertarget{why-md-files-are-important-in-academia}{%
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\subsection{Why MD files are important in
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academia?}\label{why-md-files-are-important-in-academia}}
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Despite its original focus on the web, the MD format has been proven to
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be great for academic writing. In particular,
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\href{http://pandoc.org/}{pandoc-flavored MD} adds several extensions
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that facilitate the authoring of academic documents and their conversion
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into multiple output formats. The only requirement is to learn the
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basics of MD-syntax and install the \emph{pandoc} application to convert
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the files. Then, the output file can be defined by using some parameters
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in the input file to create a new different output document. Therefore,
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it is possible to create tables, bibliography citations, include
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figures, code sections, special symbols and characters, and the most
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important only using a plain-text file.
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\hypertarget{why-these-files-remain-useful-now}{%
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\subsection{Why these files remain useful
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now?}\label{why-these-files-remain-useful-now}}
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A single word can answer this question: Reproducibility. An MD file can
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be compiled\ldots, yes compiled; we are talking about programming,
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\ldots{} compiled in a different computer, if the pandoc engine is
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installed on it. And guess what? We can add one more word: traceability.
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Yes, we can follow how a file is changing its content and support old
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and new versions. -Hey, check my paper please, this is only a simple
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plain text, and you will not have problems of compatibility-, right? In
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most of the cases, there should no be a problem
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\hypertarget{how-can-we-use-them-to-create-high-quality-documents}{%
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\subsection{How can we use them to create high-quality
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documents?}\label{how-can-we-use-them-to-create-high-quality-documents}}
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By using pandoc there is possible to produce `.tex' files and then
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produce a PDF-formated document. When the TeX file is generated, the
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document's quality can be improved. Even more, the TeX file can be
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basically modified to create an entirely different document by selecting
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a new `document class'. Nevertheless, from my point of view, the MD
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files can be used for basic and short documents (proposal, drafts,
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guides, unformatted articles). In contrast, for more complex documents
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(thesis, books, formated-articles), it is better to use LaTeX.
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\hypertarget{whats-next}{%
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\section{Whats next?}\label{whats-next}}
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Pandoc is useful for creating basic and short documents; also is a first
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approach to use more powerful engines like pdflatex and xelatex. Also,
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the MD files are just plain text files and can be used for controlling
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versions. Actually, the MD file's process is commonly used by other IDE
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systems like r-studio to create complete environments for data science
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reproducibility.
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