Lab report writing software? (Mac)

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the best software options for writing lab reports at the university level, focusing on tools suitable for Mac users. Participants explore various software solutions, including LaTeX, Microsoft Word, and LibreOffice, while considering their efficiency and integration capabilities for handling mathematical equations, diagrams, and data analysis.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant describes their current workflow using iWork Pages or MS Word for reports, and importing PDFs from LaTeX, Mathematica, OmniGraffle, and Excel, expressing concerns about inefficiency.
  • Another participant strongly recommends learning LaTeX, suggesting it will be beneficial for further studies.
  • A different user shares their experience using Word and Excel, mentioning the utility of the Equation Editor add-in for mathematical expressions.
  • One participant advocates for LaTeX, asserting its long-standing relevance and modern capabilities.
  • A user mentions using LibreOffice for technical writing, highlighting its integrated formula editor but noting limitations with its spreadsheet functionality and data import from Excel.
  • Another participant suggests moving away from Excel to learn data analysis tools like R or MATLAB for better graphing capabilities, sharing a negative experience with using Maple for report writing.
  • A later reply promotes LibreOffice, emphasizing its open-source nature and compatibility with various systems, while also mentioning its connection to OpenOffice.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of opinions on the best software, with some advocating for LaTeX as a superior option, while others prefer Microsoft Word or LibreOffice. There is no consensus on a single best solution, as different users have varying experiences and needs.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note limitations in data handling and integration between different software, particularly regarding the import of data from Excel into LaTeX and the performance of spreadsheet functions in LibreOffice.

quozzy
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Hi all,

so... now that I have to write lab reports at uni level, I'm starting to wonder what software would be best suited for the task. Currently, my workflow goes like this:

  • iWork Pages (or MS Word) for the actual report.
  • imported LaTeX (or Mathematica) PDFs for mathematical equations
  • imported OmniGraffle PDFs for diagrams of apparatus/circuits/whatever
  • imported Excel PDFs for data-based tables/regression graphs/etc.
  • occasionally, imported Mathematica (or Grapher.app) PDFs for purely mathematical graphs

Obviously, this is ridiculously inefficient. The way I see it, I've got the option to either learn proper Mathematica layout (which I suck at. I don't even know how to hide the input boxes I don't want...) and consolidate all my work to that (except maybe diagrams, I don't think it can do those too well), or find some other solution. Which is why I'm asking you folks.

Thoughts? Ideas? Suggestions?

Thanks in advance,
-q
 
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You should use latex-- it'll be well worth taking the couple of days to learn how to use it now, especially if you're planning to go on to further study.
 
I used to use Word for the actual report, do the analysis on the data in Excel (and copy and paste the resulting graph into Word--yay for Office COM). Plus there's an add-in for Word (which I don't believe is installed by default) Equation Editor (the cut-down version of MathType which used to be the defacto high school math teacher test-writing program)

The integrated nature of Office does come in handy sometimes.

EDIT: Installing Equation Editor for Word:
http://www.technipages.com/word-2007-enable-equation-editor.html
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Go for LaTeX. It has been around for as long as computers, and is completely up-to-date.

Cheers
 
I use LibreOffice (seems faster over OpenOffice or NeoOffice) to write up technical stuff on my Mac. It has an integrated TeX-like formula editor and is free. The drawbacks are that its spreadsheet program isn't great, and copy/paste from other spreadsheets (like Excel) don't work that well. The reason I've stuck with this so far is because of the requirement to show tables of data in the typical undergrad report. There's likely a way to import Excel into LaTeX but I couldn't figure it out.

That said, I think all roads lead to LaTeX eventually.
 
Sorry, one more thing. If possible, get away from Excel and learn a data analysis language/package that can make some sexy graphs. R, MATLAB, Gnuplot, Root, etc. are all excellent and are very useful to know in general anyway. Finally, I once tried to do everything in Maple (it has a worksheet mode like Mathematica) and it was an incredibly frustrating experience--programs like these aren't designed to write reports.
 
Hello,

samson smith said:
Hello sir_manning, you are right but Openoffice is also the best software for word processing, spreadsheets, databases, presentations, graphics, and many more. This software is come in many languages and mostly works at all the computers. The most important it stores all the data in international open standard format. You can free download this software from the internet by entering the keyword on the Google search engine.

So is LibreOffice. As a matter of fact, LibreOffice developers are mainly coming from the OpenOffice project, after Oracle mingle in the license.

I would suggest LibreOffice, if you are looking for an office suite. It is licensed under GPL, which can only mean that it is the best in the west.

Cheers
 

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