This website collects miscellaneous material I created which some may find useful.
Latex introduction: This zip-folder contains a minimum working example of a paper written in Latex. This is useful to write, e.g., your Honours thesis or a paper for your PhD thesis.
examplepaperlatex.zip
examplepaperlatex.zip
Numbering equations in Word: This documents explains how to add equation numbers in a Word document which are right-aligned and enumerate automatically when rearranging equations. It also explains how to reference the equation numbers in the text. For Latex users, it explains how to replicate the functionality offered by \label{eqlabelname} and \eqref{eqlabelname} within Word.
how_to_add_equation_numbers_and_refering_to_them_in_word.pdf
how_to_add_equation_numbers_and_refering_to_them_in_word.pdf
Introduction to Julia: Julia (julialang.org/) is an open-source multi-purpose programming language which was developed to allow programming fast scientific computation tasks. It is an excellent and free alternative to Matlab. It can be used for quantitative economics. Coming from Matlab, I found it difficult to use Julia for the first time for my own research, as most introductions are already too advanced or geared towards programmers, not economists. I have therefore written a simple introduction for Julia, from the perspective of an applied economist who knows Matlab and Stata. You can find this introduction here, and the accompanying Julia code example here.