I'm currently writing a report in using Overleaf. As I'm getting the premium version for free through my Uni, I've had no problems so far. Now I'm working in a place with unstable internet and using Overleaf has become very annoying.
Are there some good FOSS alternatives out there, preferably where I can just upload my Project.zip and continue working offline? I have no need to collaborate with anyone or anything like that.
Currently I'm looking at LyX, but I'd be happy to hear about your experiences with that or other programs.
Out of curiosity, what program are you using to write? I think I saw they have a web editor, but I there’s a neovim plugin (and maybe an LSP) as well I think.
I use VScodium with some plugins. But writing in any editor and running the typst executable with the "watch" argument is also an option. That way as soon as you overwrite the source file a new PDF is generated.
In that case I use Okular which auto refreshes when the open document changes.
Jabref is so great, but do read the documentation when you start. Its easy to use without reading any of it, but there's so much functionality beyond the basics that I just found out recently, and makes it so much easier to use!
Just FYI, I've done this, and if you're not super familiar with Docker network permissions it can be more than a bit funky, especially if you're on Windows. I'm sure it's trivial for folks who're used to docker, but getting the right ports configured is a bit of a pain.
Idk when you did it, but with the overleaf toolkit, at least the docker networking seems to be no problem. I had quite some problems with updating though. I run an outdated version at the moment because texlive gets updated faster than overleaf, which produces errors when installing the texlive full package.
Overall, also can’t recommend.
I've tried, but it was not easy at all and I sadly finally gave up because it uses Redis and that Redis needs some specific instructions that are not available for old/low end CPUs like the one I have in my homelab. The best self-hosted alternative I found at the time was FidusWriter. Probably not the best solution for OP, but still an OK self-hosted alternative to Overleaf.
Before overleaf, most people installed Latex locally (see e.g. texlive on Linux, miktex on Windows, etc), and then used their editor of choice (dozen of options here, ranging from dedicated Latex IDE like textudio, texmaker, etc. to more general editors like emacs, etc). LyX is nice too, essentially it's just a particular IDE (i.e. a nice way to edit a latex file without looking directly at the source file). To collaborate (or just backup), they used a cloud provider (e.g. Dropbox is pretty popular in academia); these days, some ppl use private github repo to work collectively on a paper (but you can do that even
if you are the only one editing the file, of course).
Would one of these options that work for you? or do you specifically need something that does not rely on a local installation?
If you're on Linux, I found Gummy to be the closest to Overleaf's constant recompilation. My default has always been TexStudio, it has a good UI, but you can also use a VSCode extension.
These are all just editors, though. You'd also need to download LaTeX locally. On Windows, that's MikTeX, on Mac it's MacTeX, and on Linux texlive is usually already installed, but you may need to install packages. On Debian-based distros, they're grouped into collections like texlive-science.
I will say that I've helped friends who were very used to overleaf to a local editor, and they were quite frustrated that TeXStudio wasn't exactly 1:1 with the overleaf UI. Please know beforehand that if you're expecting to be able to do things like open images in the TeX editor to check on them before inserting them, that's not gonna happen.
Also LyX will not seamlessly interconvert with a TeX file, even though it seems like it ought to. Pandoc conversion between TeX and markdown seems to be less fixing each time, but is also not 1:1. For writing where I care about being able to draft quickly, I've settled on writing markdown with embedded LaTeX with something like Zettlr, then converting to a LaTeX with Pandoc for final formatting. You can also convert to Word better from md than from TeX, for those collaborators who refuse to comment on a PDF.
You can use overleaf for sharing only, and write your document locally.
I am currently writing my thesis using the git integration, using neovim/vimtex/jabref, and then doing git add/commit/push to sync to Overleaf.
Something to consider but not for anyone: if youre thinking of using latex, why don't just learn how to use raw latex packages. Download the packages and use your own editor and PDF viewer. It you're using Linux, maybe something like [(neo)vim+vimtex]+zathura. Anyway you can still use LyX to easily create math formula by copy pasting. And for backup, you can use github (plus Dropbox) etc.