I do mine in LaTeX and haven't had a reason to change that. I keep a "Master" CV/resumé with all the gratuitous information in all categories, then make subdirs for each submission and the trimmed-down versions of my resume that I sent out. At this stage in my career–where I am still tailoring resumés to employers and not really keeping a no-holds-barred CV— this is the best workflow I've found. I'm not sure how I'd go about versioning, trimming, and tracking things as neatly in an all-org environment.
I'm presuming you just want a full-disclosure CV, though? Org makes more sense there. Rainer M Krug <rai...@krugs.de> writes: > Hi > > I am looking for examples / templates for CVs written using org, as I > decided to ose org for my CV. > > I fund this oldish conversation > > http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgmode/2012-04/msg00096.html > > and these two templates for using org to write a CV: > > https://github.com/punchagan/resume > https://github.com/fasheng/fsh-orgmode-latex-cv > > as well this CV without .org file > > http://adamsonj.ninth.su/cv.html > > Also, there does not seem to be anything on worg. > > - Can somebody give any further info on org and CVs? > - How do you do it (I don't assume you write your CVs in Word?), or are > you using LaTeX directly? > - Any other examples and templates online? > > If I get enough, I will compile a summary for worg, but I need examples > and information. > > Thanks, > > Rainer