A gallery of up-to-date and stylish LaTeX templates, examples to help you learn LaTeX, and papers and presentations published by our community. Search or browse below.
LaTeX template for Review of Finance—the official journal of the European Finance Association and published by Oxford University Press.
Note: An older LaTeX template package for Review of Finance was originally published on ShareLaTeX but that has been replaced with a newer version sourced from the journal’s Instructions for Authors.
This template, based on the nws.cls LaTeX class, is for authors who are preparing papers for Network Science—a Cambridge University Press journal.
See also: Network Science.
This template was originally published on ShareLaTeX and subsequently moved to Overleaf in November 2019.
This is an example illustating how to typeset code in LaTeX, especially in beamer presentations. It uses the metropolis theme.
It is a presentation with one slide per "technique" which include some explanatory comments.
Examples shown are minted, lstlisting, verbatim, tcolorbox and knitR. The main document has the ending ".Rtex" which is required if you want it to be able to run knitR. Otherwise, you can just use normal ".tex".
It is accompanied by a blog post with more information here.
In this blog post, some complications which can arise when using code listings in beamer are discussed (package clashes, etc.), so this might be informative if you want to learn more.
LaTeX template for the Cambridge University Press Journal of Functional Programming.
This template was originally published on ShareLaTeX and subsequently moved to Overleaf in November 2019.
Template for Arduino enthusiasts who want to keep a tidy and organized project log. The syntax highlighting style is similar to the one for the Arduino IDE.
Author: Luis José Salazar-Serrano.
This template was originally published on ShareLaTeX and subsequently moved to Overleaf in November 2019.
This template is designed for assignments/homework when code listings are needed.
This template was originally published on ShareLaTeX and subsequently moved to Overleaf in October 2019.
Uploaded from ShareLaTeX
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