Physics LaTeX Workshop


Welcome!

This is the hub of the Carleton Physics LaTeX workshop. This wiki page contains lots of information to help you get acquainted with LaTeX and resources to help you once you get the basics down. Rather than finding a compiler and downloading packages that will work on your computer, this tutorial has you work with Overleaf, a free online compiler. You can create projects, store them in the cloud, and get immediate feedback on your work with the online compiler. After you create an Overleaf account, you should begin by looking at and working through the Getting Started with LaTeX guide in this wiki. Once you work through the exercises in the Getting Started guide, you should be able to use any of the bare-bones templates for the task you need to accomplish. These templates have many of the initial document codes, but are otherwise blank so that you can begin adding text.

Carleton LaTeX guides

Getting started with LaTeX

PDF / View on Overleaf

Math typesetting guide

PDF / View on Overleaf

Text typesetting guide

PDF / View on Overleaf

Citation guide

PDF / View on Overleaf

Font guide

PDF

Some Carleton templates

PHYS 228 Lab Writeup

Essay

Physics Comps Paper


Additional resources

There are many excellent LaTeX resources available at Carleton and on the Internet.

LaTeX Wikibook

The LaTeX Wikibook is an excellent (and very thorough!) guide to many features of LaTeX, ranging from the most basic commands to extremely advanced techniques. Highly recommended.

DeTeXify

This site can find the LaTeX command for hand-drawn math symbols. Great when you just can't remember how to make a φ!

TeX Stack Exchange

Stack Exchange is a network of sites where users can ask and answer questions. The TeX-LaTeX Stack Exchange is a great resource for finding answers to both common and esoteric questions—but be careful! Not every answer is good!

Google

A search engine is an invaluable resource for learning any new technology. Not sure how to typeset an integral? Baffled by a cryptic error message? Just Google it!

Your peers

You're not the only one using LaTeX at Carleton! Ask around. Someone has probably already had the same problem you do!

Questions? Problems with the site? Contact Marty Baylor or Bruce Duffy.