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resume.md's Introduction

resume.md

Resume

Write your resume in Markdown, style it with CSS, output to HTML and PDF.

Instructions

  1. Clone this repository

  2. Install the dependencies:

    pip install markdown weasyprint
    
  3. Edit resume.md (the placeholder text is taken with thanks from the JSON Resume Project)

  4. Run make resume to build resume.html and resume.pdf.

Customization

Edit resume.css to change the appearance of your resume. The default style is extremely generic, which is perhaps what you want in a resume, but CSS gives you a lot of flexibility. See, e.g. The Tech Resume Inside-Out for good advice about what a resume should look like (and what it should say).

Because the source is plain markdown and python-markdown is a very bare bones markdown compiler, elements cannot be tagged with ids or classes in the markdown source. If you need more control over the HTML, take a look at kramdown. I chose not to use it for this project to avoid a non-python dependency.

Change the appearance of the PDF version (without affecting the HTML version) by adding rules under the @media print CSS selector.

Change the margins and paper size of the PDF version by editing the @page CSS rule.

If you make a resume.css that you like, please submit a pull request. I'd be happy to collect these.

Tips

Run make watch while you are working on your resume to rebuild it whenever resume.md or resume.css change (requires entr).

The simplest way to maintain multiple versions of your resume is to comment bits of text in or out based on the audience. This can be done with standard HTML comment syntax (e.g. <!-- Skills: Microsoft Word -->) but beware that commented out text will be included in the HTML source that you are presumably going to put online or share.

An alternative is to keep snippets of Markdown (or CSS) in separate files, and collect them into a single file for each version of your resume using a templating tool, makefile or shell script.

Use, e.g. git tag to record which version of the resume you sent to which person.

Use git diff --word-diff to make git diff more legible (this applies any time you run git diff on natural language).

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