This is my résumé, built using Rob Oakes' excellent
[xetexCV class](https://code.google.com/archive/p/latex-professional/)
for [LaTeX](https://www.latex-project.org/) using
[LyX](https://www.lyx.org/), along with a series of examples of
my work that are linked to from the résumé itself. I use
the [Snakemake](https://snakemake.readthedocs.io/en/stable/) build
tool to automate generating the PDF of my résumé, preparing all the
supporting files, and deploying them all to a web server for online
viewing. You can see the result here:
https://darwinawardwinner.github.io/resume/ryan_thompson_resume.pdf
There is also an HTML version generated from the same source here:
https://darwinawardwinner.github.io/resume/ryan_thompson_resume.html
Lastly, there is a manually-prepared plain text version here:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DarwinAwardWinner/resume/master/ryan_thompson_resume.txt
If you want to use this as a template for your own résumé, you'll need
to install a few fonts (or else switch the style to fonts that you
prefer):
1. Minion Pro: https://typekit.com/fonts/minion-pro
2. Fontin: https://www.exljbris.com/fontin.html
3. Fontin Sans: https://www.exljbris.com/fontinsans.html
Additionally, my résumé uses slightly modified versions of the xetexCV
document class ([`xetexCV.cls`](./xetexCV.cls)) and LyX layout
([`xetexCV.layout`](./xetexCV.layout)), which are included in this
repository. You may need to install these files to the appropriate
locations for LaTeX and LyX, respectively in order for the resume pdf
to build properly.
## License
All files in this repository are licensed under the [Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0
license](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/), with the
exception of `xetexCV.cls` and `xetexCV.layout`. These two files are
based on the originals created by Rob Oakes, which are licensed under
the [LGPL license](https://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-3.0.en.html).
Hence, my modified versions are also licensed under the same terms.
(Rob Oakes' [original 2009 mailing list
post](https://tug.org/pipermail/xetex/2009-December/015046.html)
doesn't specify a version of the LGPL, but the latest version at that
time was version 3, so I'm assuming that's what was meant.)