Comment by sondr3
1 day ago
I used Org Mode for all mandatory assignments [0] when I was a student, it worked super well and I could create well formatted LaTeX documents/PDFs from it as well. The supervisors were very impressed that I did my assignment in LaTeX, and I could never be bothered to correct them :-)
[0]: https://gist.github.com/sondr3/ae4eda2816cfeda7b8597ce1c48d0..., best viewed as the raw file for all the details
Very much this. In fact, I had made a note about earning "professor points", in my (giant) blog post [0] describing my org-mode use...
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[0] Discussed here recently:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43157672
YMMV, my probability professor forbade typeset homework submissions, regardless of how well presented they were.
I don't recommend SP's section for MA421, regardless of the excellent teaching quality.
^derived^deprived
ah ... hahaahhh ... quite possibly, I was sleep, ah, derived at the time of finishing it up ... i shall let the typo remain, to vex yet another eagle-eyed reader
Kudos to you, my biggest regret nowadays was not learning how to use orgmode (and org-roam) in college. As long as you set up a proper environment and have an org-publish config you barely need to bother with verbose LaTeX documents.
https://www.orgroam.com/
I had an amusing incident that was related, quite some years back as a CS undergrad. One prof had quite poor eyesight, so had a no-pencil rule for assignments. Typed was OK, neat pen was fine also. (My writing has always been atrocious, typed it is.) As it happened, I used LaTeX (and I knew she did also.)
She also had a rule about promptness of assignment delivery, meaning the start of class when she arrived. Fair enough!
On this one assignment, I had done all but the last question at home, and printed it off, with the hope that I could finish it at the lab and send it to a laser printer in another building. At the time, labs used shared, dot-matrix printers that were usually jammed. I got the last question done, sent it to the printer, then checked the queue. Apparently someone was printing a book, not going to get done before class.
I emailed her my .tex file, with the explanation that I'd hand in my incomplete printout in class, but would appreciate if she could mark the last section so I knew how I did. This was sent well before class, as the timestamp would show. The prof ended up printing, marking, and returning this version, and I received full marks!