I haven't had much leisure to play with Typst, but the web is filled with mentions of it lately...
Looks like Typst main goal is to replace LaTex (e.g., check viewtopic.php?t=22937) with a simplified Markdown-type workflow, a goal that seems to have been already achieved (see below), so here's a little link dump:
![Image]()
![Image]()
Typst is currently v0.12.0, released 2024-10-08 and only available as 64-bit binary (changes and downloads at https://github.com/typst/typst/releases/; you need to get the package with "x86_64-pc-windows" in file name).
Looks like Typst main goal is to replace LaTex (e.g., check viewtopic.php?t=22937) with a simplified Markdown-type workflow, a goal that seems to have been already achieved (see below), so here's a little link dump:
- Official Typst tutorial (https://typst.app/docs/tutorial/)
- "Exploring Typst..." blog (https://blog.jreyesr.com/posts/typst/)
- "Using Pandoc and Typst to Produce PDFs"
(https://imaginarytext.ca/posts/2024/pandoc-typst-tutorial/)
Typst is a new markup-based typesetting system that is designed to be as powerful as LaTeX while being much easier to learn and use.
![Image](http://i.postimg.cc/4yPFCwcd/typst-win-cli.png)
![Image](http://i.postimg.cc/MGpbcxg9/typst-composing.png)
Typst is currently v0.12.0, released 2024-10-08 and only available as 64-bit binary (changes and downloads at https://github.com/typst/typst/releases/; you need to get the package with "x86_64-pc-windows" in file name).
Statistics: Posted by Midas — Thu Dec 12, 2024 7:09 am