A curated list of awesome LaTeX resources, including editors, packages, tools, templates, and tutorials.
Awesome LaTeX is a curated, open-source directory of resources for the LaTeX typesetting system. It aggregates the best tools, editors, packages, templates, and learning materials to help users efficiently create high-quality documents. The project solves the problem of scattered information by providing a single, organized reference point for the LaTeX ecosystem.
Students, researchers, academics, and technical writers who use LaTeX for documents, theses, papers, or presentations and seek reliable tools and learning resources. It is also valuable for developers integrating LaTeX into workflows or building related software.
Developers choose Awesome LaTeX because it saves time by filtering the vast LaTeX landscape into a trusted, community-vetted list. Its open-source, collaborative nature ensures it stays current with the latest tools and best practices, unlike fragmented web searches or outdated guides.
Curated list of LaTeX awesomeness
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Organizes a wide range of LaTeX tools into clear sections like Editors, Packages, and Tutorials, serving as a centralized hub for everything from distributions to templates.
Ucons for macOS, Linux, and Windows on many entries, helping users quickly identify tools that work on their operating system without digging through documentation.
Includes linters like ChkTeX and grammar checkers like TeXtidote, promoting best practices and improving document quality directly from the workflow.
Open-source with contribution guidelines, ensuring the list is continuously updated by the community to reflect new tools and resources.
The extensive list of links can overwhelm beginners or casual users without guidance on prioritization or essential starting points.
Acts as an aggregator without direct support or troubleshooting; users must rely on external sites and forums for help, which can be inconsistent.
Relies on community updates, so some links or tools might become outdated or broken over time if not regularly maintained.