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DBeaver is my go-to as well, came here to ask the same question.


I'm not American, and the culture here wasn't to tip everyone for doing their job, but I don't mind it if I feel the food and service were good. But presented with a screen suggesting I tip, with/out a suggested amount, is pretty much a guarantee I'm not tipping. If I tip I want to make sure it's going to the people I want to tip.


It's free?


Hahaha


Quarto appears a popular alternative, out of interest is anyone using Zettlr?

https://www.zettlr.com/


I saw this come up today in a different thread.

I'm a mature undergrad, I've never used LaTeX, actively avoided it in fact and am forced to produce word documents. My current workflow is pandoc style markdown and obviously pandoc for conversion, with zotero for citations. I make use of pandoc-crossref for figures, tables, sections, etc.

I'm hopefully moving to a different uni for a masters this year. Can anyone who uses typst comment on whether I should consider moving from my fairly complicated workflow to typst?


You may be limited for your thesis. My grad program required us to conform to either a Word or LaTeX template, of which I found the latter actually much easier to deal with. I just kept my chapters in separate files that are inputted into the template.

If you're asking for other assignments, I'd actually recommend Quarto [1]. It's basically a streamlined version of your current workflow. The other benefit is that it can convert your markdown to Typst if you decide to switch over in the future.

1: https://quarto.org


Not the OP but I use pandoc-crossref for this: https://lierdakil.github.io/pandoc-crossref/


CSV is easier.


i'll make that over this weekend


Thank you, you're a star. I would never have got this with what I was searching! Even tried gpt, no joy. Again thanks.


Mupdf.


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