A boilerplate to ease the pain of building and maintaining a CV or résumé using LaTeX. The perfect companion to [letter-boilerplate](https://github.com/mrzool/letter-boilerplate).
Thanks to [pandoc](http://pandoc.org/), we can then access our data from `template.tex` using a special notation. Iterating on repetitive data structures becomes trivial:
LaTeX takes then care of the typesetting with its usual elegance. Below a preview of the final result. Check out the [output](output.pdf) to see the compiled PDF.
With this method you can keep your entire CV encoded in a single yaml file, put it under version control (in a gist, for instance), and generate a PDF on the fly when needed. You can also easily convert it to other formats, like HTML for web publishing. Convenient, portable and time-proof.
To install LaTeX on Mac OS X, I recommend getting the smaller version BasicTeX from [here](https://tug.org/mactex/morepackages.html) and installing the additional packages with `tlmgr` afterwards. Same goes for Linux: install `texlive-base` with your package manager and add the needed additional packages later.
- **`geometry`**: A string that sets the margins through `geometry`. Read [this](https://www.sharelatex.com/learn/Page_size_and_margins) to learn how this package works.
- [Why I do my résumé in LaTeX](http://www.toofishes.net/blog/why-i-do-my-resume-latex/) by Dan McGee
- [What are the benefits of writing resumes in TeX/LaTeX?](http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/11955/what-are-the-benefits-of-writing-resumes-in-tex-latex) on TeX Stack Exchange
- [Typesetting your academic CV in LaTeX](http://nitens.org/taraborelli/cvtex) by Dario Taraborelli
- [letter-boilerplate](https://github.com/mrzool/letter-boilerplate) — Quickly and painlessly generate high-quality letters from markdown through LaTeX