Sort of version control for word document:https://www.simuldocs.com
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Looks promising, have you tried this?
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Replying to @dsquintana @o_guest
Just a little bit and only on my own. I think it integrates OK with microsoft word and its apple counterpart. Not a well with the libre or openoffice version so you have to upload manually when you want to push but it can definitely help with some things.
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The pricing system isn’t very well suited to academia, in which you randomly work with different people on manuscripts. A cost per user system only works well for labs that don’t really collaborate and tend to have the same author lists. Still want to give it a shot
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Replying to @dsquintana @RemiGau
I can't tell you how to deal with your coauthors, but a realistic solution both for git and for keeping backups easily regardless of version control is for all authors to convert to using plain text. But I am lucky all my coauthors use .tex — I have lost track of what I might do
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if they didn't because I haven't had to face that... My guess is I would offer to teach them LaTeX or at least how to edit on
@overleaf (wherein I would use it only as a git repo and they would use it on the website).3 replies 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @o_guest @dsquintana and
This being said, I am working ATM on a manuscript with more authors that is on
@overleaf and where all of us are using the GUI because we don't do turn-based edits as I am used to, so I use the GUI (it's still versioned on git ofc).1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @o_guest @dsquintana and
I prefer more clear turn-based edits to avoid conflict (which is typically what most ppl do regardless, I think?) — but on git with LaTeX it's easy to do concurrent edits if you have separate files for different part of the manuscript (the power LaTeX's input command)!
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Replying to @o_guest @dsquintana and
Also to be clear I mean both "conflict" (the interpersonal kind, because I feel concurrent edits are more likely to bring about confusion if not discussed first at least) and "conflicts" when you merge on git.
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I dislike either of those.
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Yeah, I have deep issues with concurrent edits in real time, but I can tolerate them if I know nobody is working on the same section or even the same table (yes, I put a table in a diff .tex file so I can edit it in peace).
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Also ofc LaTeX tables make me cry (who's immune?), but at least you can save the contents as a .csv and compile to table.
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