Hi all,
Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> Vikas Rawal writes:
>>> > [1] Off the top of the head I recall a package called `scrlttr'.
>>>
>>> Yes, part of KOMA (?), but thats rather low level if you have to design
>>> your own letters - and who knows all that stuff about professional letter
>>> design?. I
Vikas Rawal writes:
>> >
>> > [1] Off the top of the head I recall a package called `scrlttr'.
>>
>> Yes, part of KOMA (?), but thats rather low level if you have to design
>> your own letters - and who knows all that stuff about professional letter
>> design?. I tried that once and the result w
Mehul Sanghvi writes:
> Just out of curiosity, what was the CV template you used ?
I attach 3 variations of the same template, I used the one from TRAVIS
as a basis for my CV, but the others are nice too.
%% start of file `template_en.tex'.
%% Copyright 2007 Xavier Danaux (xdan...@gmail.com).
%
On Fri, Jul 6, 2012 at 12:35 PM, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
> Yes, I'm German, and I've used komascript before, and that is definitely
> a way to achieve what I want.
>
> I'm just trying to repeat the nice experience I had with writing a
> modern CV in LaTeX - download a template, put in your data,
> >
> > [1] Off the top of the head I recall a package called `scrlttr'.
>
> Yes, part of KOMA (?), but thats rather low level if you have to design
> your own letters - and who knows all that stuff about professional letter
> design?. I tried that once and the result was ugly, there is a lot of
FWIW:
One format provided by Groff MM macros are business letters. It may not
fit all types of communications, but it was the way business letters
written in Ma Bell for many years.
Keep in mind that I'm still working on this code. It is far from
done.
Source:
http://ppl.ug/AcT6H0xSB1o/
Out
Hello,
Bastien writes:
> A letter is no more than a header with the author, the date, the object
> of the letter, perhaps the client's address and the content of the
> letter.
>
> If you find a nice LaTeX class, it is quite straightforward to create a
> derived LaTeX backend with ̀org-export-def
Hi Thorsten,
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> If I find (or make) a nice template, I will announce it ;)
A letter is no more than a header with the author, the date, the object
of the letter, perhaps the client's address and the content of the
letter.
If you find a nice LaTeX class, it is quite strai
suvayu ali writes:
> On Fri, Jul 6, 2012 at 6:35 PM, Thorsten Jolitz
> wrote:
>> I'm just trying to repeat the nice experience I had with writing a
>> modern CV in LaTeX - download a template, put in your data, and enjoy a
>> beautifill CV (or letter) - actually much more beautiful than I would
On Fri, Jul 6, 2012 at 6:35 PM, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> I'm just trying to repeat the nice experience I had with writing a
> modern CV in LaTeX - download a template, put in your data, and enjoy a
> beautifill CV (or letter) - actually much more beautiful than I would
> have ever managed to produ
Michael Strey writes:
Hi Michael,
> On Fri, Jul 06, 2012 at 12:47:59AM +0200, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>> suvayu ali writes:
> ...
>> > [1] Off the top of the head I recall a package called `scrlttr'.
>>
>> Yes, part of KOMA (?), but thats rather low level if you have to design
>> your own lette
Hi Thorsten,
On Fri, Jul 06, 2012 at 12:47:59AM +0200, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> suvayu ali writes:
...
> > [1] Off the top of the head I recall a package called `scrlttr'.
>
> Yes, part of KOMA (?), but thats rather low level if you have to design
> your own letters - and who knows all that stuf
suvayu ali writes:
> Well I assumed it would be since you already have a "quite nice"
> OpenOffice template.
It looks like a professional letter, while everything I found in the web
rathers proves that programmers are not designers, even with a tool like
LaTeX at hand.
> If you are after late
On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 9:00 PM, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> suvayu ali writes:
>
>> On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Thorsten Jolitz
>> wrote:
>>> although using Emacs/Org-mode for almost everything, I still write my
>>> "official" correspondence with a (quite nice) OpenOffice template. It
>>> would
suvayu ali writes:
> On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Thorsten Jolitz
> wrote:
>> although using Emacs/Org-mode for almost everything, I still write my
>> "official" correspondence with a (quite nice) OpenOffice template. It
>> would be so much easier and faster to just use Org mode for that too.
On Thu, Jul 5, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> although using Emacs/Org-mode for almost everything, I still write my
> "official" correspondence with a (quite nice) OpenOffice template. It
> would be so much easier and faster to just use Org mode for that too.
You can use opendocument e
Hi List,
although using Emacs/Org-mode for almost everything, I still write my
"official" correspondence with a (quite nice) OpenOffice template. It
would be so much easier and faster to just use Org mode for that too.
I tried some LaTeX templates from the web, but they were ugly. I know
one co
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