Skip to content
  • Posted by Tim on February 16, 2015

    On 4 September 2018 a new version of Overleaf was launched (Overleaf v2) and a decision was taken to (temporarily) remove the integration of Plotly within Overleaf v2. As part of Overleaf’s development roadmap we will be working toward an improved integration of Plotly which leverages the Plotly API—which was not available when the original Plotly integration work was conducted. Consequently, this blog post is, at present, of historic interest only and describes features/functionality which were available in Overleaf v1 but are not (currently) present in Overleaf v2. If you have any questions or concerns about this do please feel free to contact us.

    Overleaf Plotly import menu

    You can now import your Plotly graphs directly into your Overleaf projects!

  • Posted by John on July 14, 2014
    Mozilla Science - FireFox in a Crowd

    The writeLaTeX team will be helping out at Mozilla Science Lab's first Global Sprint, Jul 22–23 — two days of intense work on open source projects in open science and teaching. There are both technical and non-technical projects, and there are 18 (and counting!) sprint sites around the world, so there's one near you! Join us!

  • Posted on November 7, 2013

    A guest blog post by Julia Schölermann

    Join us at the SpotOn conference in London on Friday Nov 9th 3-4 pm to discuss the possibilities and implications of rethinking the scientific record. Join the conversation live on twitter using #solo13digital or read our session notes - prepared collaboratively and on the fly using writeLaTeX.com and pushed to figshare at the conclusion of the session.

  • Posted on September 5, 2013

    We're proud (and excited!) to be officially featured as part of the F1000Research submission process, for example as seen in this extract from their author guidelines page:

    F1000Research author guidelines screenshot

    F1000Research are also offering authors of software papers the chance to submit for free during 2013, to help encourage the documentation of the software used in life sciences research.

  • Posted by John on May 23, 2013

    This is an excellent collection of talks from the Future of Science event held in Oxford last month: rigourandopenness.com

    Rigour and Openness conference banner

    Entitled "Rigour and Openness in 21st Century Science", the event brought together representatives from the many areas of science and publication...

Sign up for a free account and receive regular updates

Регистрация

Popular Tags


Start writing now!

Create A New Paper

Overleaf is Бесплатно

New to LaTeX?
Start with a template

Company