resume.md 2.8 KB

Johnny Coder


In this style, the resume starts with a blockquote, where you can briefly list your specialties, or include a salient quote. Ending a line with a backslash forces a line break.


Education

2010-2014 (expected) : PhD, Computer Science; Awesome University (MyTown)

*Thesis title: Deep Learning Approaches to the Self-Awesomeness
 Estimation Problem*

2007-2010 : BSc, Computer Science and Electrical Engineering; University of

HomeTown (HomeTown)

*Minor: Awesomeology*

Experience

Your Most Recent Work Experience:

Short text containing the type of work done, results obtained, lessons learned and other remarks. Can also include lists and links:

  • First item

  • Item with link. Links will work both in the html and pdf versions.

That Other Job You Had

Also with a short description.

Technical Experience

My Cool Side Project : For items which don't have a clear time ordering, a definition

list can be used to have named items.

* These items can also contain lists, but you need to mind the
  indentation levels in the markdown source.
* Second item.

Open Source : List open source contributions here, perhaps placing emphasis on

the project names, for example the **Linux Kernel**, where you
implemented multithreading over a long weekend, or **node.js**
(with [link](http://nodejs.org)) which was actually totally
your idea...

Programming Languages : first-lang: Here, we have an itemization, where we only want

to add descriptions to the first few items, but still want to
mention some others together at the end. A format that works well
here is a description list where the first few items have their
first word emphasized, and the last item contains the final few
emphasized terms. Notice the reasonably nice page break in the pdf
version, which wouldn't happen if we generated the pdf via html.

: second-lang: Description of your experience with second-lang,

perhaps again including a [link] [ref], this time placing the url
reference elsewhere in the document to reduce clutter (see source
file). 

: obscure-but-impressive-lang: We both know this one's pushing

it.

: Basic knowledge of C, x86 assembly, forth, Common Lisp

Extra Section, Call it Whatever You Want

  • Human Languages:

    • English (native speaker)
    • ???
    • This is what a nested list looks like.
  • Random tidbit

  • Other sort of impressive-sounding thing you did


email@example.com • +00 (0)00 000 0000 • XX years old\ address - Mytown, Mycountry