Writing technical content in Academic
Academic is designed to give technical content creators a seamless experience. You can focus on the content and Academic handles the rest.
Highlight your code snippets, take notes on math classes, and draw diagrams from textual representation.
On this page, you’ll find some examples of the types of technical content that can be rendered with Academic.
Examples
Code
Academic supports a Markdown extension for highlighting code syntax. You can enable this feature by toggling the highlight
option in your config/_default/params.toml
file.
```python
import pandas as pd
data = pd.read_csv("data.csv")
data.head()
```
renders as
import pandas as pd
data = pd.read_csv("data.csv")
data.head()
Charts
Academic supports the popular Plotly chart format.
Save your Plotly JSON in your page folder, for example chart.json
, and then add the {{< chart data="chart" >}}
shortcode where you would like the chart to appear.
Demo:
You might also find the Plotly JSON Editor useful.
Math
Academic supports a Markdown extension for $\LaTeX$ math. You can enable this feature by toggling the math
option in your config/_default/params.toml
file.
To render inline or block math, wrap your LaTeX math with $...$
or $$...$$
, respectively.
Example math block:
$$\gamma_{n} = \frac{
\left | \left (\mathbf x_{n} - \mathbf x_{n-1} \right )^T
\left [\nabla F (\mathbf x_{n}) - \nabla F (\mathbf x_{n-1}) \right ] \right |}
{\left \|\nabla F(\mathbf{x}_{n}) - \nabla F(\mathbf{x}_{n-1}) \right \|^2}$$
renders as
$$\gamma_{n} = \frac{ \left | \left (\mathbf x_{n} - \mathbf x_{n-1} \right )^T \left [\nabla F (\mathbf x_{n}) - \nabla F (\mathbf x_{n-1}) \right ] \right |}{\left |\nabla F(\mathbf{x}{n}) - \nabla F(\mathbf{x}{n-1}) \right |^2}$$
Example inline math $\nabla F(\mathbf{x}_{n})$
renders as $\nabla F(\mathbf{x}_{n})$.
Example multi-line math using the \\\\
math linebreak:
$$f(k;p_{0}^{*}) = \begin{cases}p_{0}^{*} & \text{if }k=1, \\\\
1-p_{0}^{*} & \text{if }k=0.\end{cases}$$
renders as
$$f(k;p_{0}^{}) = \begin{cases}p_{0}^{} & \text{if }k=1, \\ 1-p_{0}^{*} & \text{if }k=0.\end{cases}$$
Diagrams
Academic supports a Markdown extension for diagrams. You can enable this feature by toggling the diagram
option in your config/_default/params.toml
file or by adding diagram: true
to your page front matter.
An example flowchart:
```mermaid
graph TD
A[Hard] -->|Text| B(Round)
B --> C{Decision}
C -->|One| D[Result 1]
C -->|Two| E[Result 2]
```
renders as
An example sequence diagram:
```mermaid
sequenceDiagram
Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
loop Healthcheck
John->>John: Fight against hypochondria
end
Note right of John: Rational thoughts!
John-->>Alice: Great!
John->>Bob: How about you?
Bob-->>John: Jolly good!
```
renders as
An example Gantt diagram:
```mermaid
gantt
section Section
Completed :done, des1, 2014-01-06,2014-01-08
Active :active, des2, 2014-01-07, 3d
Parallel 1 : des3, after des1, 1d
Parallel 2 : des4, after des1, 1d
Parallel 3 : des5, after des3, 1d
Parallel 4 : des6, after des4, 1d
```
renders as
An example class diagram:
```mermaid
classDiagram
Class01 <|-- AveryLongClass : Cool
<<interface>> Class01
Class09 --> C2 : Where am i?
Class09 --* C3
Class09 --|> Class07
Class07 : equals()
Class07 : Object[] elementData
Class01 : size()
Class01 : int chimp
Class01 : int gorilla
class Class10 {
<<service>>
int id
size()
}
```
renders as
An example state diagram:
```mermaid
stateDiagram
[*] --> Still
Still --> [*]
Still --> Moving
Moving --> Still
Moving --> Crash
Crash --> [*]
```
renders as
Todo lists
You can even write your todo lists in Academic too:
- [x] Write math example
- [x] Write diagram example
- [ ] Do something else
renders as
- Write math example
- Write diagram example
- Do something else
Tables
Represent your data in tables:
| First Header | Second Header |
| ------------- | ------------- |
| Content Cell | Content Cell |
| Content Cell | Content Cell |
renders as
First Header | Second Header |
---|---|
Content Cell | Content Cell |
Content Cell | Content Cell |
Callouts
Academic supports a shortcode for callouts, also referred to as asides, hints, or alerts. By wrapping a paragraph in {{% callout note %}} ... {{% /callout %}}
, it will render as an aside.
{{% callout note %}}
A Markdown aside is useful for displaying notices, hints, or definitions to your readers.
{{% /callout %}}
renders as
Spoilers
Add a spoiler to a page to reveal text, such as an answer to a question, after a button is clicked.
{{< spoiler text="Click to view the spoiler" >}}
You found me!
{{< /spoiler >}}
renders as
Click to view the spoiler
You found me!
Icons
Academic enables you to use a wide range of icons from Font Awesome and Academicons in addition to emojis.
Here are some examples using the icon
shortcode to render icons:
{{< icon name="terminal" pack="fas" >}} Terminal
{{< icon name="python" pack="fab" >}} Python
{{< icon name="r-project" pack="fab" >}} R
renders as
Terminal
Python
R