\newpage \subsection{Extras} \subsubsection{BibTeX} \textit{Included in \texttt{recommended} and up} Use \verb|\setupBiber|\{\textit{/path/to/your/bib/sources.bib file}\} in the preamble to prepare, then use \verb|\printbib| to print your bibliography. To add more sources, simply use bibter's built-in macro \verb|\addbibresource|\textit{\{filepath\}}, which will load your \texttt{.bib} file. You need to use that inside the preamble as well. \subsubsection{Glossary} \textit{Included in \texttt{recommended} and up} Use \verb|\setupGlossary| in the preamble to prepare, then use the normal glossary commands to add entries to the glossary. When you want to print it, use \verb|\printGlossary|. \subsubsection{Minted} \textit{Included in \texttt{full}} Be sure to enable \texttt{shell-escape} for your compiler! When \texttt{minted} is available via these helpers, you will also have access to the \texttt{codesnippet} macro: \begin{minted}{latex} \begin{code}{language} //Code goes here \end{code} \end{minted} This is nothing different than a wrapper for a minted environment with a box drawn around it. Example (in python): \begin{code}{python} def hello_world(): print("hello world!") \end{code} If you want to print code inline, use \verb|\inlinecode|\textit{\{string\}}, which redners to \inlinecode{code}. \textit{Caveat: This is not using the \texttt{verbatim} environment due to various limitations of that environment and instead is simply using} \verb|\texttt{}|, so you cannot use this to print \LaTeX-commands