You can use overleaf for sharing only, and write your document locally. I am currently writing my thesis using the git integration, using neovim/vimtex/jabref, and then doing git add/commit/push to sync to Overleaf.
You can use overleaf for sharing only, and write your document locally. I am currently writing my thesis using the git integration, using neovim/vimtex/jabref, and then doing git add/commit/push to sync to Overleaf.
If you have
fzf
installed, it is easy to integrate it with your bash history. In my.bashrc
, I have:# Introduce fzf-driven functionality as described here: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/fzf. source /usr/share/fzf/key-bindings.bash source /usr/share/fzf/completion.bash
Also, you may be interested in
zoxide
, which keeps track of paths you have navigated to. Also from my.bashrc
:# Enable an autojump-like 'j' command. Use 'ji M' to select paths starting with M using fzf. # This needs to always come last. eval "$(zoxide init --cmd j bash)"