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Latex document definition

This repo contains the most common structures used in professional document writing with latex It follows stypitic rules for bib references and the document itselfs as follows

Structure

  • preamble: contains all package and command definitions. Everything should be set by now, but if something needs defining this is the place to do it (look inside to see the structure)
  • bibfiles
    • local.bib: contains all local bib references i.e., references used for this paper specifically. Most references should be added here
    • bib folder: this folder contains many references used for multiple purposes, in particular the compsci.bib file contains many references on software engineering, programming languages, and adaptive systems. Check here if the reference exists before adding it to the local.bib file
  • acronym.tex: contains all Acronyms used in the paper (look into the file for example of the definition). Acronyms are used with the \ac{ACRONYM} command

Useful commands

  • \comment[TYPE]{AUTHOR}{COMMENT} is used to leave annotation inlined with the text. Comments only appear in draft mode (the option in the documentclass in the main.tex file) and are invisible otherwise. Type can be comment, missing, idea, author.
  • Figures, theorems, tables, etc are to be referenced using the command \fref{}, which automatically generates the appropriate reference as Figure 1., Theorem 1., ..... according to the delimiter used (fig:, sec:, tab:, thm:, ln:, enum:, ....)
  • \ie \eg \cf are used respectively for the abbreviations i.e., e.g., cf.
  • listings are defined according to each specific language in the preamble file and generate their own environment (e.g., \java[....]{....} generates a java listing).

Style guidelines

  • Citations should be prepended by a ~ and no space (e.g., word~\cite{ref1, ref2}). This ensures that the references are nicely separated and arranged when the bibtex engine is placing them in the document.
  • Inlined lists (created using the \begin{enumerate*}[label=(\arabic*)] command) should be indexed with arabic numbers between parenthesis (1). This is easier to read and is a nice style [Dubpre 98. Bugs in writing].
  • The paper should be written in American English.

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