Hello. This tutorial has helped me a lot with getting job interviews. I love the fact that I can make my own CV with Latex and have some control rather than relaying on some chunky premade template. It would be excellent if you could maybe create another video or two sharing some latex tricks to make our CV even better. Either way I am grateful.
Thank You very much !❤ , great video and I'm curious to see the other interesting videos of yours of which I find the topics very beautiful, useful and increasing the culture in general❤! Great Job.
Hi! I'll be totally honest, this tutorial was awesome! I was looking forward to having a professional looking cv and you made it possible! Many thanks for your commitment and ease with which you explain certain topics! Today sir, you gained a new subscriber! Keep it up! (Sorry for bad English)
hello, I am facing an issue with arranging the contents parallel on the left and right sides. the right side contents are automatically being shifted to the next page
Hello! I have literally reproduced your work but the two boxes, the one starting with the profile and the other starting with education are not stacking side by side as it is the case for you, they are instead starting on a second page and one above another, the second can not even display the whole content. I need your help, please!
Hello! Try checking the widths of the minipage blocks. For me, I used \begin{minipage}[t]{8cm} for the 'Profile' section and \begin{minipage}[t]{11cm} for the second section. If I increase the width of the first minipage too much beyond 8cm, then it pushes both onto the second page and one above the other, as you describe. Be aware that any different page size you may have used, or different margins, might change the available space, so you may have to experiment a bit to get it right. Latex often does take quick a bit of experimenting to get right! :-)
@@QuantitativeBytes I have used exactly the same size and even tried to shrink them to smaller sizes, but it is not changing at all. May it be caused by my editor (TeXmaker)? I tried different editors, including the online Overleaf, the result is still the same...
I have come to realize that this page split came from the space between this line \begin{tcolorbox}[grow to right by=0.75cm, colframe=white, colback=white] of this minipage \begin{minipage}[t]{11cm} and the \section*{Education}. So, remove the space between them....
Your videos are always informative but i was wondering how you're runningC++? I don't know why but i am having issues with DOSBox trying to run c++ on windows 10 I don't know what I'm doing wrong.
Thank you very much for the comment! I actually use Linux, so it is easy to run gcc or g++ from the command line in a terminal window in the way that I do in the videos. In Windows, I would recommend using an IDE really, but I believe (I haven't used it myself) that minGW provides the same kind of command line interface for compiling as I use in the videos.
Thank you for the comment and the honest answer is that I don't know. One point to note is that making a CV this way will result in a PDF file, which may not be compatible with all ATS software systems.
As a follow up to my previous reply, I think that if you know that your CV is likely to be processed by an ATS first, then you're probably best to stick to a very simple format and a standard word processor file format. That will increase the chances of the automated system being able to pick out the information that it needs. However, for occasions when you know that your CV is going to go straight to a human, then I think it is worth making the effort to create a nice looking layout, such as the one I create in this video.
@@QuantitativeBytes Thanks for this awesome tutorial! I wasnt thinking about ATS compatibility but from what I googled, LaTeX output isn't that good for ATS, such a bummer. There are apparently options you can put to make the output more friendly though. I'm probably going to have to write my resume in a word doc since that's the best for ATS AFAIK. Thanks again!
Hello. This tutorial has helped me a lot with getting job interviews. I love the fact that I can make my own CV with Latex and have some control rather than relaying on some chunky premade template. It would be excellent if you could maybe create another video or two sharing some latex tricks to make our CV even better. Either way I am grateful.
Very instructive. Your video gave me the push to write my very first LaTeX document! So my updated Résumé as well.
Thank You very much !❤ , great video and I'm curious to see the other interesting videos of yours of which I find the topics very beautiful, useful and increasing the culture in general❤! Great Job.
Hi, your video helped me a lot.
Thank you for providing useful tutorials to everyone, sir.
Have a nice day and keep it up!!
Thank you very much for such a positive comment and I'm really glad it was useful to you. Have a nice day!
Exactly what i was looking for. Very clear and simple. Now I know how to create my own CV template. Thanks QB :-)
You're welcome!
"Other ways of achieving the same result"
understatement lol
Great tutorial for tcolorbox and minipage as well
Very creative curriculum layout! Congrats and thanks for the video
Thanks so much! Glad you liked it.
Hi! I'll be totally honest, this tutorial was awesome!
I was looking forward to having a professional looking cv and you made it possible! Many thanks for your commitment and ease with which you explain certain topics!
Today sir, you gained a new subscriber!
Keep it up!
(Sorry for bad English)
Thank you very much! It is comments like this that make it all worthwhile and motivate me to try to make more great content.
Thank you so much this really helped.
Thanks for the video. Is the code availabe anywhere?
I love your videos.
Can I get the code shown here?
hello,
I am facing an issue with arranging the contents parallel on the left and right sides. the right side contents are automatically being shifted to the next page
You the best
Is it true that LaTex Codio will replace Word?
where can i download a template for this cv? thank you
Can u please send the file
Hello!
I have literally reproduced your work but the two boxes, the one starting with the profile and the other starting with education are not stacking side by side as it is the case for you, they are instead starting on a second page and one above another, the second can not even display the whole content. I need your help, please!
Hello! Try checking the widths of the minipage blocks. For me, I used \begin{minipage}[t]{8cm} for the 'Profile' section and \begin{minipage}[t]{11cm} for the second section. If I increase the width of the first minipage too much beyond 8cm, then it pushes both onto the second page and one above the other, as you describe. Be aware that any different page size you may have used, or different margins, might change the available space, so you may have to experiment a bit to get it right. Latex often does take quick a bit of experimenting to get right! :-)
@@QuantitativeBytes I have used exactly the same size and even tried to shrink them to smaller sizes, but it is not changing at all. May it be caused by my editor (TeXmaker)? I tried different editors, including the online Overleaf, the result is still the same...
@@jeanpauliradukunda2195 same problem!
I have also same problem. Is there anyone who find the way?
I have come to realize that this page split came from the space between this line \begin{tcolorbox}[grow to right by=0.75cm, colframe=white, colback=white] of this minipage \begin{minipage}[t]{11cm} and the \section*{Education}. So, remove the space between them....
Your videos are always informative but i was wondering how you're runningC++? I don't know why but i am having issues with DOSBox trying to run c++ on windows 10 I don't know what I'm doing wrong.
Thank you very much for the comment! I actually use Linux, so it is easy to run gcc or g++ from the command line in a terminal window in the way that I do in the videos. In Windows, I would recommend using an IDE really, but I believe (I haven't used it myself) that minGW provides the same kind of command line interface for compiling as I use in the videos.
can i make this in overleaf
I don't know, I have never used overleaf myself.
Is it ats compatible though?
Thank you for the comment and the honest answer is that I don't know. One point to note is that making a CV this way will result in a PDF file, which may not be compatible with all ATS software systems.
As a follow up to my previous reply, I think that if you know that your CV is likely to be processed by an ATS first, then you're probably best to stick to a very simple format and a standard word processor file format. That will increase the chances of the automated system being able to pick out the information that it needs. However, for occasions when you know that your CV is going to go straight to a human, then I think it is worth making the effort to create a nice looking layout, such as the one I create in this video.
@@QuantitativeBytes Thanks for this awesome tutorial! I wasnt thinking about ATS compatibility but from what I googled, LaTeX output isn't that good for ATS, such a bummer. There are apparently options you can put to make the output more friendly though. I'm probably going to have to write my resume in a word doc since that's the best for ATS AFAIK. Thanks again!
Nice work, i like it! Thanks you for that interesting tutorial. Did you check out moderncv? I like that as well.
You're very welcome, thank you for the comment. I haven't used moderncv before, I will check it out sometime, thanks for the suggestion!