> On 06 Jan 2017, at 05:07 , John Muccigrosso wrote: > > pandockers, > > (Thought I might have coined a phrase, but I see it's been used a couple of times. @jgm, you should ™ that.) > > I just found out that I'm doing a workshop at the NYC DH week in a month (Feb 9, 1-3pm, to be precise). I've called it "Making the most of text: Using a text-only workflow with markdown and pandoc". > > Any suggestions/tips gratefully appreciated. Hi John What sort of suggestions were you after. I do quite a lot of DH in Classics on the programming side, but my thesis (which is not DH-based, but straight classics/ancient history) is fully written in pandoc style markdown. Classics has been using digital tools a lot longer than most other humanities disciplines (witness Perseus), because of its long relationship with philology, linguistics, and use of tools like concordances. Whenever I strike my fellow postgrads struggling with Word issues, I keep telling people to use markdown to write their thesis in markdown. They freak out. They think it’s difficult, when a thesis document nearly all text and simple to write in markdown. Our systems pretty much train them in undergraduate courses to use Word and never let up from that point. Scot. -- Scot Mcphee Computer Programmer, Classics PhD. p +61 412 957414 e scot.mcphee-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w@public.gmane.org w http://autonomous.org/ t @scotartt -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "pandoc-discuss" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to pandoc-discuss+unsubscribe-/JYPxA39Uh5TLH3MbocFF+G/Ez6ZCGd0@public.gmane.org To post to this group, send email to pandoc-discuss-/JYPxA39Uh5TLH3MbocFF+G/Ez6ZCGd0@public.gmane.org To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/pandoc-discuss/890F613E-F940-4468-A73C-326CA07C479E%40gmail.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.