First of all, yes, I am aware of the question LaTeX Editors/IDEs.
The reason why I am asking this question is because I'm curious about people's experience with writing really large documents (100+ pages) and the link above doesn't really talk about it. I've tried Texmaker before and it was getting sluggish with 30-40 page documents (this was about 3 years ago though). Now I will soon have to start writing my PhD thesis and I'm curious as to what people would recommend.
At home I'm running Debian and just use vim. However, here at uni I have win7 and am hoping to avoid vim because I've read that vim on windows might cumbersome - command piping unavailable, backslash in paths, etc.
A cloud-based solution maybe? Something like ShareLaTeX or WriteLaTeX?
I'm sure other people have thought about this as well, but a quick google search didn't really reveal anything.
tl;dr: 100+ page documents in LaTeX on windows without the editor becoming very slow. How?
\includeonlyfor chapter-wise compiling. Especially, when you have compiled graphics (TikZ, etc.) compile times grow. – Dohn Joe Sep 24 '14 at 10:18:)– T. Verron Sep 24 '14 at 10:29Regarding compiled graphics like TikZ, I actually often compile the images separately which means they don't have to be recompiled every time. See this.
– kbau Sep 24 '14 at 10:30vimand define folds for your sectional units, paragraphs, and environments. See this for a start. – Sep 24 '14 at 10:51unixkeeps me much more sane than usingwindows. Furthermore, the fewer windows the better, which is why I only have one terminal and always runvimfrom the command line. – Sep 24 '14 at 11:33C:/Some/path. The only thing you can't do is to begin a path with/in the command line. Because that usage conflicts with option flags, but you can workaround that. (This is true since DOS 2.0, and in all Windows versions). – Bakuriu Sep 24 '14 at 15:13