![typora ios typora ios](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Neph3779/Blog-Image/master/img/20210502223128.png)
I don’t typically make full-blown literate documents (like, I have yet to write a full article or book in R Markdown)-instead, I generate figures and tables with R and reference them in my writing. In the interest of full reproducibility and transparency, I make R Markdown websites for each of my projects. I use R and RStudio for most of my statistical computing, and I’m a dedicated devotee of the tidyverse.
![typora ios typora ios](https://www.typora.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/9a740-dffb4b41-cd17-ea11-8da1-20040ff9d71d.png)
I post almost everything I write or develop on GitHub.I abandoned Evernote in September 2018 after 9 years of heavy use, given their ongoing privacy controversies and mass layoffs. I store all my notes in Bear, which has fantastic support for Markdown and syncs across all my devices through iCloud.I read and annotate all my PDFs with Skim (and iAnnotate on iOS), since both export annotations as clean plain text.I store all my bibliographic references, books, and articles in a BibTeX file that I edit with BibDesk.
Typora ios pdf#
I use my own variation of Kieran Healy’s Plain Text Social Science workflow to convert Markdown to HTML, PDF (through LaTeX), and Word (through LibreOffice).
![typora ios typora ios](https://cache.img.appgao.com:1443/usr/uploads/2017/04/3503801615.png)
I permanently ditched Word as a writing environment in 2008 after starting grad school.I try to keep this updated fairly regularly. In truth, my workflow tends to look like this or this, but here’s a more detailed list of all the interconnected programs I use. People often ask me what programs I use for my writing and design.