[texhax] MiKTeX
Mike Marchywka
marchywka at hotmail.com
Tue Aug 29 20:48:58 CEST 2017
Do you have any scripts for generating latex to visualize riboswitches from a base sequence lol?
Obviously that may be a bit much but I was curious if there are decent script libraries for
making chem and bioinformatics things in latex that may not be well known. Even clever things with clustalw output
or alignment results.
Personally I have found that those simple scripts or vim macros can be a big help for
even many things.
________________________________________
From: texhax <texhax-bounces at tug.org> on behalf of Schneider, Thomas (NIH/NCI) [E] <schneidt at mail.nih.gov>
Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2017 1:11 PM
To: Philip TAYLOR; William Adams; galperin3 at gmail.com
Cc: TeXhax mailing list
Subject: Re: [texhax] MiKTeX
On 29/08/2017 17:38, William Adams wrote:
> usually, the best way to work through such problems is to start w/ a
> new, minimal document, then add bits to it, starting w/ the
> pre-amble until one arrives at a minimal document which re-creates
> the error --- often just going through the document thusly will
> reveal where there problem is.
For long files this can be very difficult and if one adds the wrong
bits or if there are two problems (!) it may never reveal the issue.
So I usually make a copy of the problem file and start chopping away
obvious things and then less obvious things while testing at each
change. If one can cut the file size in half each test cycle, then it
can go quite quickly.
Also, using my atchange tool to automate the latex/dvi compiling when
one writes the file out (so that one need not take one's hands off the
keyboard while testing) makes it go a lot faster:
https://alum.mit.edu/www/toms/atchange.html
Tom
Thomas D. Schneider, Ph.D.
Senior Investigator
National Institutes of Health
National Cancer Institute
Center for Cancer Research
RNA Biology Laboratory
Molecular Information Theory Group
Frederick, Maryland 21702-1201
schneidt at mail.nih.gov
https://schneider.ncifcrf.gov (current link)
https://alum.mit.edu/www/toms (permanent link)
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