A short primer of how reference with an approximation of UWE Harvard style.
Note that it doesn't quite match the quirks of when UWE Harvard uses et.al. after the first time a reference is cited within your text (i.e. this template works according to the rules of the first time a piece is cited within text, rather than the subsequent modifications).
This example shows how to write in Thai in LaTeX using the thailatex package. It uses UTF-8 encoding so you can type Thai characters directly in the LaTeX source code.
It also shows how to mix Thai with English using the babel package.
This is the training exercise for AguaClara team members to learn how to use LaTeX and Overleaf. Use this as an opportunity to get to know Overleaf, LaTeX, your teammates, and even yourself better!
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.
This is an example document to show the use of headers and footers. "Special features" are a fancy header, initially made for a CV template, and a "final footer" which will only appear on the very last page.
The tutorial to go with it is here.