![]() ![]() But there are so many more tricks that vim has to offer. This alone was a huge timesaver and significantly impacted the time I needed to spend in order to write documents. Most editors make it possible to set up macros but usually you can only hardcode the environment name, which mens you have to do this for every environment you intend to use. In the vim config you can set up a command which inserts the begin and end statements and copies the name of the environment the you put in the begin statement to the end statement. This is the "basic stuff" that you type in the steps above: \documentclass, you will have to type the name of the environment twice, as will as the begin and end statements. Here's a simple document that should compile. If that works, then you're "done." You can go to Tools>View PDF to see the document that you made.(Overleaf does this part automatically so you probably haven't dong it before.) On my installation of Texmaker, you can go to Tools>pdflatex. I'll give an example of a simple document at the end. tex (but if you don't type an extension it will probably put in the right extension for you) and it doesn't really matter where you put it it's a file like any other. ![]()
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