This is revision . of this document.This abstract should be some brief description of your work and how it advances our science. For journal submissions, this is the same text that you fill in the oline form.
\cite
commands here. If you feel that a
reference is important for the overall estimation of your work,
spell that reference out by using something like
``This result has been conjectured by Erdos et al. (1931)''.
The real text of your paper should already start here, on the frontpage.
Before you read on to know how to use our style file please ensure that the manuscript fits well into DMTCS.
There is no excuse for plagiarism, not even self-plagiarism. We have a good record in tracking such things down, be warned.
Your writing must be grammatically correct. Be ensured, that especially authors that are non-native speakers of English will receive all possible help to correct flaws. But also have in mind, that incorrect grammar might be the cause of severe misunderstandings and finally result in a rejection of the paper.
First of all, for a correct submission we need some basic information. Consider this file here itself as an example how this should be done. We need the following type of information:
\author
command.
This is about the same as for standard LATEX2e. Please refer to your LATEX book to see how this is usually done, or look at the examples given here in this file.
They will disturbe the extraction of the meta-data. Please write out
everything you may, in particular encode accented characters with
LATEX-commands, e.g {\'e}
for an `é'.
There is some speciality, though, for sets of authors with different
affiliations. In that case, put an appropriate
\addressmark{i}
directly after the last name of an
author, where
\title
command.
The title command may be given in two different forms. The first is
\title{Your title goes here}If done like that, the title that you give is used as running head for the odd numbered pages as well. If your title is too long such that it doesn't fit into the running head you should use the alternative form
\title[Formatting a submission for DMTCS]{How to format a submission for DMTCS with the journal's own \LaTeX2e-style}Here the string that inside the
[ ]
is used in the
running head.
The same rule as for the author command applies here, don't use avoidable specialities in here.
\address
command.
If different authors have different affiliatiions, put each
such address on a line of its own, separate the lines by a \\
command, and start line number
\addressmark{i}
. For an example, look at the LATEX-source of
this file here.
\keywords
command. This is mandatory. Be careful on the
choice of these keywords, you are the author, you should know best
what is adequate such that your article can be easily and correctly
identified by search engines and alike. Give it in the form
\keywords{first item, second, third}So each ``key word'' might consist of several words in the usual sense. To separate several key words use commas.
These keywords must be the same as the ones that are given when you fill out the http-form for submission.
The same rule as for the author command applies here, don't use avoidable specialities in here.
abstract
environment. This should be no longer than a paragraph and concisely
reflect the main contributions of your work.
Many readers (such as editors) base their selection whether to look at a paper more closely on that abstract. In particular there are high chances that the decision which referees are assigned to your manuscript is mainly based on that abstract. You have been warned.
An abstract must be understandable by its own and should not contain formulas or reference citations. In particular for citations, write things out such as `In a faboulous paper from 2078, Samuel Bluetooth conjectured...''. Also, the same rule as for the author command applies here, don't use avoidable specialities in here.
This abstract must be the same as the one that is given when you fill out the http-form for submission.
Please use the standard conventions for all commands and environments
that provide a numbering such as theoremlike environments or sections.
In particular usual counting starts at
This is the age of computers, use them before they use you. We need
automatically produced numbers to put hyperlinks into your text, such
that reading a paper in DMTCS becomes a real `electronic' experience.
Don't use markup of text according to some layout or style, but to
stress semantical differences. The correct way to emphazise a
certain part of your text is
If ever you use commands that change the font use the modern form
Please also be careful in the writing of personal names. Customs in
different countries are different! Be sure to use a standard
transcription of names that use a different alphabet than English, and
also be sure to use the full capabilities of LATEX2e for accentuated
character sets that are based on the Latin alphabet. Be sure to catch
the correct concept of ``last name'' in that language.
It is considered as being very impolite to leave obvious spelling
errors in the manuscript before sending it out. Computers are made for
these, use them.
You might either use the North American variant for spelling or the
British one, but please don't mix them in one paper. The same holds
for different possible spellings for the same word as for example
``acknowledg(e)ment'' or ``formulae'' versus
``formulas''. Be coherent.
All complicated mathematical formulae should be given on separate
lines and should not be spread out into the running text. Never use
the
You should use LATEX2e environments that provide a numbering for all
formulae that are rendered on line of the their own. Use environmenst
such as equation or eqnarray. Such numbers ease the
referee process very much, and after eventual publication easily allow
readers to refer to in their own work.
The quantifiers ``
The equal sign ``
The same holds for citations. Never ever number citations by
hand. This only can go wrong and it will. Use LATEX'
Use bibtex to produce your bibliography. With a little bit of
initial overhead it lets you easily maintain your references. This
pays off when you will write more than one article in your life...
Have a look into Oetiker et al. (1999) and to
the
.bib-file
of DMTCS to see how this works.
I personally prefer the so-called natural citation style as it
is used herein (via natbib). It has the advatage that the
author names of the work that is cited appear properly. Papers are to
the merits of people. In addition, such a citation by
name has the advantage of being easily recognizable without looking in
the bibliography.
The switching beteen pdf or the traditional dvi format should be done
automatically on whether you process your file with pdflatex
or latex. If this doesn't work for you you could try to add
the option pdflatex to the
If your installation doesn't support the package hyperref,
you should switch of these features by giving the option
nohyperref in the
Please use the (standard) packages graphics or
graphicx to include graphical data and not
epsf or similar. Something like the PostScript picture in the
title of this document can be produced as simple as this
For a realistic graphic of your paper you should chose a
figure environment as is done with the following for
Figure 1
If you have several (small) figures that are related to each other you may
place them inside one figure environment. As you may see in
Figure 2 how this may look like and consider the source
of this description here on how to refer to each part (that is
Figure 2(a) and 2(b)) individually.
This document was generated using the
LaTeX2HTML translator Version 2002-2-1 (1.71)
Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
Nikos Drakos,
Computer Based Learning Unit, University of Leeds.
The command line arguments were:
The translation was initiated by Jens Gustedt on 2008-01-20
Markup commands
\emph{emphazise}
. Don't use the
\text..
family for that purpose, in particular don't use
\textit
or \it
. They have different
meanings and rendering. E.g., observe the word
different in the previous phrase: this is rendered in an
upright font since this is an \emph
inside another
\emph
. On the other hand \texit
for the abreviations
``e.g.'' and ``i.e.'' is appropriate. This is
because they are Latin (for exempli gratia and id
est), and all foreign text inside English text has to be put in
italics (sic!).
\text..
for them, such as \textbf{text}
,
\textit{text}
or \textsc{text}
. These commands know
better what has to be done when they switch back to normal than the
ancient commands {\bf text}
, {\it text\/}
or
{\sc text}
.
Use the standard heading and structuring commands
Headings
\section
,
\subsection
etc. to structure your document. For
theorems use the corresponding environments that you may define by
means of the \newtheorem
command.
Names of theorems and alike are considered as proper names. In
English (sic!) proper names are capitalized. So please write something
like ``In Section 2 we have seen...'' and
``By the Main Theorem we know...''. But distinguish properly
from the use of the word ``theorem'' as ordinary noun as it is for
example in ``In the following theorem we prove ...''.
Proper Names
Use a Spell Checker
Running text must always constitute correct English phrases. An
English phrase needs a verb and an `
Mathematics
$
form of the math enviroment for these. Human or automatic
taggers have a hard time to recognize which is an opening or a closing
$
. Use
\begin{math}...\end{math}
for all formulas that spread over several words and
\begin{displaymath}...\end{displaymath}
(or equation etc.) that should be rendered on a line
of their own. Using the old fashioned double-dollar environment
$$ some complicated formula $$
is frowned upon.
For the later use of ``
Use cross-references throughout your whole paper. Use
Cross-references and citations
\label
and
\ref
for that and don't do the work of the computer by
yourself. Not only that it is easier (believe me!) but also
it helps to insert hyperlinks across the final document in the pdf
version, see Section 4.
\cite
command. Again, in the pdf version this will have the
advantage of a hyperlink that lets you jump directly to the
bibliography item.
The style supports PDF output if used with pdflatex
as the formatting command. If you are viewing this document in its pdf
form you may see some of the advantages this has: in particular pdf
documents produced in that way have included hyperlinks. If you
want to know more about these features please refer to
http://xxx.lanl.gov/hypertex/.
PDF Files
\documentclass
right at the
start of the document.
\documentclass
declaration at the
beginning of your manuscript. To give you the possibility to include
hyperlinks even if your local installation doesn't support this, we
provide the command \href{URL}{text}
in any case.
Graphics
\includegraphics[width=0.13\textwidth]{dmtcs}
. Note that in
this command the width is given in relation to the width of the text
and not in an absolut measure and that the file name is given without
extension. Don't include the extension of the graphic file in
the command! If accepted, we will have to process your file for
PostScript and PDF. Please, leave the choice of the desired format to
the graphicx package.
\begin{figure}[htbp]
\begin{center}
%% Don't use epsfile!
\includegraphics{dmtcs}
\caption{The logo of DMTCS.}
\label{fig:logo}
\end{center}
\end{figure}
Summary of Options
option
description
submission
whether or not this is considered as a submission or
final
being the final document for jounal papers
proceedings
or proceedings volumes
pdftex
force production of pdf, if pdflatex doesn't work
nohyperref
switch reference to hyperref off
notimes
switch selection of the times package off
Summary of Relevant Commands
command
description
\address
the affiliation and address of the authors
\addressmark
to number different affiliations for different authors
\revision
the revision number, defaults to
\keywords
a comma separated list of keywords
\qed
produces
. See proof-environment below.□ \acknowledgements
Use the following commands only for the indicated
purpose. If, e.g, you wand to use a
\mathbb{P}
\naturals
the positive integers or `naturals',
\integers
the ring of the integers,
\rationals
the field of the rational numbers,
\reals
the field of the real numbers,
\complexes
the field of the complex numbers,
\primes
the set of prime numbers,
Summary of Relevant Environments
abstract
The abstract of your paper, see Section 2.
proof
Acknowledgements
At the end of the manuscript, right before the bibliography you might
want to place an acknowledgement. This can be easily done by using the
command \acknowledgements
as you can see here.
Bibliography
available at
http://www.loria.fr/services/tex/general/lshort2e.pdf.
About this document ...
How to format a submission
for DMTCS
with the journal's own LATEX2e-style
Copyright © 1997, 1998, 1999,
Ross Moore,
Mathematics Department, Macquarie University, Sydney.
latex2html -split 0 -tex_defs -html_version 4.0,math,latin9 -math -strict sample-dmtcs.tex
Footnotes
Jens Gustedt
2008-01-20