There should also be a Latex library (?) that makes your documents look like they were photocopied, so you can use the coffee stains and the photocopy to make it look like you spent long nights working on your assignments.
Haha that first one's great, addresses (what is sadly) a real need.
I've seen that cthulhu-worshipping madman one before, but the results are disappointing. I'm sure much better can be done in that direction. e.g. (is this the most famous SE answer of all-time?) https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/regex-match-open...
There should also be a Latex library (?) that makes your documents look like they were photocopied, so you can use the coffee stains and the photocopy to make it look like you spent long nights working on your assignments.
There almost is! https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/94523/simulate-a-sca... or https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/29402/how-do-i-make-...
Haha that first one's great, addresses (what is sadly) a real need.
I've seen that cthulhu-worshipping madman one before, but the results are disappointing. I'm sure much better can be done in that direction. e.g. (is this the most famous SE answer of all-time?) https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/regex-match-open...
On the TV show White Collar, there's an episode where a fake (paper) case file is put together and adding coffee mug stains is part of the process.
I've managed to sneak this in (I renamed it to basepackage.sty so no one would notice) into the base template at my company.
Let the chaos ensue!