Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

What is your preferred novice-friendly markdown editor for academic writing? #297

Open
joelostblom opened this issue Jun 22, 2019 · 5 comments

Comments

@joelostblom
Copy link
Member

joelostblom commented Jun 22, 2019

Poll for everyone who uses markdown for academic writing, which editor do you use and do you think it would be suitable for novices? The key features I think are needed for a novice friendly editor include the following:

  • Syntax highlighting support for as much as possible of the pandoc markup.
  • Automatic output generation without resorting to the command line pandoc tool.
  • The ability to search for and automatically insert citation keys (like the Zotero GoogleDocs plugin).
  • Comprehensive documentation for how to use pandoc markdown with the editor (preferably for writing reproducible documents).

The only editor I have found that meets these criteria so far is RStudio (I think, not sure about the citation insertion), which is a great choice, but I am curious if there are others since RStudio is a rather big install if one were to use it just for writing markdown.

@joelostblom
Copy link
Member Author

joelostblom commented Jun 22, 2019

I should add that these are the ones I have looked at so far (only briefly, please correct if something does not look right):

Name Syntax Auto output Citations Docs
Brackets Plugin N Plugin N
Sublime Plugin Plugin Plugin N
Atom Plugin Plugin Plugin N
Texts Y ? Y Y
RStudio Y Y ? Y

@QuLogic
Copy link
Member

QuLogic commented Jun 23, 2019

Not sure about citations, but have you tried Ghostwriter?

@joelostblom
Copy link
Member Author

Thanks @QuLogic! Yes, I actually used that myself for a while a few years back (together with abricotine). I remember it being quite nice but I don't think it has citation support or much in terms of documentation for writing academically (I clarified that in my initial comment, I guess one could always point to the Rstudio docs for that since much carries over). I saw that GhostWriter have built-in export support also, nice!

@hueyy
Copy link

hueyy commented Nov 15, 2019

Have you considered Zettlr?

@joelostblom
Copy link
Member Author

No I haven't seen that one, thanks for sharing! It seems to tick most (maybe all) the boxes, have you had a good experience using it yourself @hueyy ?

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants