![]() However, for one reason or another, CVs are one of the last documents in my life which people insist must conform to a standard printable paper size. Making it available online as rich, indexable HTML also makes it much easier to find by people searching for me or my skillset! ![]() Updating the CV is now just as easy as editing or publishing a new blog post, and any improvements I make to my site also carry over to the CV. The design is responsive, so it's readable on any device. The content is all written and stored in prismic, and is then structured and styled for my site by next.js and tailwind CSS respectively. You can see the result here, which I was very happy with! It's clean, concise, fast, and accessible. HTML, CSS, and typescript might have their own problems, but at least I had some use for them in other areas of my life. ![]() I decided to scrap the LaTeX version, and moved the content into a framework which matched the rest of this website. But in the years since, I'd grown frustrated with the ugly language, the fiddly and never-ending typesetting tweaks, and the archaic versioning, compiling, and publishing patterns. Coming from a background in physics, I used to write my CV in LaTeX, the typesetting tool of choice for dorks everywhere.
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