What do you do when you have spent considerable effort finessing your resume in TeX and a recruiter asks you for your resume in MS-Word?
Do you:
- Spend the time to produce something that looks half as good as the TeXed result,
- Ignore the openings advertised by that recruiter, or
- Somehow convert the resume to a draft in Word that you then edit?
If you take the third approach, please share what you do.
I've used Word over the years when someone had been passing a form that needed filling, but I have yet to learn the actual basics, hence my question.
Let me comment here on the answers to benefit from the ability to format
Solution: Use TeX4ht's htlatex
A resume is likely to use either tabbing or tabular environments extensively. If you run htlatex on the file:
\documentclass{article}
\begin{document}
\begin{tabbing} Job A {\centering Years A} \` Company A \\ Job B {\centering Years B} \` Company B \\ \end{tabbing}
\begin{tabular}{lcr} Job 1 & Years 1 & Company 1 \\ Job 2 & Years 2 & Company 2 \\ \end{tabular}
\end{document}
You will find that tabular
is handled correctly, but tabbing
is not.
Solution: Use online conversion tools
One did indeed produce a decent output, but it would be nice to know that the web site is not run by a marketer, a spammer, or worse. Sites that provide a program to download to one's own computer reduce somewhat this worry.