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authorMohammad Akhlaghi <mohammad@akhlaghi.org>2018-02-27 20:00:07 +0100
committerMohammad Akhlaghi <mohammad@akhlaghi.org>2018-02-27 20:00:07 +0100
commit7a989feae06c46f57d31fc434f940561a4199669 (patch)
treee85582b283830527ef21d14a92ba02c4e060ba79 /paper.tex
parent95a01b1eff0488698150c098e75e2224fcdc42a6 (diff)
Abstract added to final PDF along with better explanation
An abstract is also something most research reports will need, so a simple macro was defined to make it easy (not too many code lines within the text of the main body) to implement an abstract. The title was also moved up a little to better use the extra white space at the top of the page. Finally, the `\highlightchanges' along with its explanation (both as comments and within the text with examples) was added in `paper.tex' to demonstrate how useful the `\new' and `\tonote' macros are.
Diffstat (limited to 'paper.tex')
-rw-r--r--paper.tex83
1 files changed, 59 insertions, 24 deletions
diff --git a/paper.tex b/paper.tex
index 049bc18..4dd644a 100644
--- a/paper.tex
+++ b/paper.tex
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-\documentclass[twocolumn]{article}
+\documentclass[10pt, twocolumn]{article}
%% This is a convenience variable if you are using PGFPlots to build plots
%% within LaTeX. If you want to import PDF files for plots directly (and
@@ -9,6 +9,13 @@
%% in.
\newcommand{\makepdf}{}
+%% When defined (value is irrelevant), `\highlightchanges' will cause text
+%% in `\tonote' and `\new' to become colored. This is useful in cases that
+%% you need to distribute drafts that is undergoing revision and you want
+%% to hightlight to your colleagues which parts are new and which parts are
+%% only for discussion.
+\newcommand{\highlightchanges}{}
+
%% Necessary LaTeX preambles to include for relevant functionality. We want
%% to start this file as fast as possible with the actual body of the
%% paper, while keeping modularity in the preambles.
@@ -31,7 +38,21 @@
\begin{document}
%% Write the title, authors and date.
-\maketitle
+\includeabstract{
+ %% -------- Delete this ---------
+
+ You have completed the reproduction pipeline and are ready to configure
+ and implement it for your own research. This template reproduction
+ pipeline and document contains almost all the elements that you will need
+ in a research project containing the downloading of raw data, processing
+ it, including them in plots and report, including this abstract, figures
+ and bibliography. If you use this pipeline in your work, don't forget to
+ add a notice to clearly let the readers know that your work is
+ reproducible. If this pipeline proves useful in your research, please
+ cite \citet{ai15}.
+
+ %% ------------------------------
+}
%% -------- Delete this ---------
\section{Congratulations!}
@@ -54,40 +75,54 @@ in this way, will let you focus clearly on your science and not have to
worry about fixing this or that number/name in the text.
Just as a demonstration of creating plots within \LaTeX{} (using the
-PGFPlots package), in Figure \ref{deleteme} we show a plot of
+{\small PGFP}lots package), in Figure \ref{deleteme} we show a plot of
\deletemenum{} random points that were generated by this pipeline using the
text manipulation program {\small AWK} (which is not the best random number
generator, but just used here to generate some values). The minimum value
in this distribution is $\deletememin$ and $\deletememax$ is the maximum.
The {\small PDF} file of Figure \ref{deleteme} is available in the
-directory \texttt{\bdir/tex/build/tikz} and can be used in other contexts
-(for example slides). If you want to directly use the PDF file in the
-figure without having to let TiKZ decide if it should be remade or not, you
-can also comment the \texttt{makepdf} macro at the top of this \LaTeX{}
-source file.
-
-PGFPlots is a great tool to build the plots within \LaTeX{} and removes the
-necessity to add further dependencies (to create the plots) to your
-reproduction pipeline. High-level language libraries like Matplotlib do
-exist to also generate plots. However, bare in mind that they require many
-dependencies (Python, Numpy and etc). Installing these dependencies from
-source (after several years when the binaries are no longer available in
-common repositories), is not easy and will harm the reproducibility of your
-paper.
-
-\begin{Figure}
+directory \texttt{\bdir/tex/build/tikz/} and can be used in other contexts
+(for example slides). If you want to directly use the {\small PDF} file in
+the figure without having to let {\small T}i{\small KZ} decide if it should
+be remade or not, you can also comment the \texttt{makepdf} macro at the
+top of this \LaTeX{} source file.
+
+{\small PGFP}lots is a great tool to build the plots within \LaTeX{} and
+removes the necessity to add further dependencies (to create the plots) to
+your reproduction pipeline. High-level language libraries like Matplotlib
+do exist to also generate plots. However, bare in mind that they require
+many dependencies (Python, Numpy and etc). Installing these dependencies
+from source (after several years when the binaries are no longer available
+in common repositories), is not easy and will harm the reproducibility of
+your paper.
+
+\begin{figure}[t]
\includetikz{delete-me}
\captionof{figure}{\label{deleteme} A random set of values plotted as a
demonstration of how to generate plots within LaTeX.}
-\end{Figure}
+\end{figure}
-Furthermore, since PGFPlots is built by \LaTeX{} it respects all the
-properties of your text (for example line width and fonts and etc), so the
-final plot blends in your paper much more nicely. It also has a wonderful
+Furthermore, since {\small PGFP}lots is built by \LaTeX{} it respects all
+the properties of your text (for example line width and fonts and etc), so
+the final plot blends in your paper much more nicely. It also has a
+wonderful
manual\footnote{\url{http://mirrors.ctan.org/graphics/pgf/contrib/pgfplots/doc/pgfplots.pdf}}.
+This pipeline also defines two \LaTeX{} macros that allow you to mark text
+within your document as \emph{new} and \emph{notes}. For example, \new{this
+ text has been marked as \texttt{new}.} \tonote{While this one is marked
+ as \texttt{tonote}.} If you comment the line (by adding a `\texttt{\%}'
+at the start of the line or simply deleting the line) that defines
+\texttt{highlightchanges}, then the one that was marked \texttt{new} will
+become black (totally blend in with the rest of the text) and the one
+marked \texttt{tonote} will not be in the final PDF. You can thus use
+\texttt{highlightchanges} to easily make copies of your research for
+existing coauthors (who are just interested in the new parts or notes) and
+new co-authors (who don't want to be distracted by these issues in their
+first time reading).
+
\section{Notice and citations}
To encourage other scientists to publish similarly reproducible papers,
@@ -101,7 +136,7 @@ cite the first paper that used the first version of this pipeline:
After publication, don't forget to upload all the necessary data, software
source code and the reproduction pipeline to a long-lasting host like
-Zenodo (\url{https://zenodo.org/}).
+Zenodo (\url{https://zenodo.org}).
%% ------------------------------