diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'paper.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | paper.tex | 76 |
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 26 deletions
@@ -2,43 +2,67 @@ %% See the end of the file for license conditions. \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 figures directly, you -%% can use the standard `\includegraphics' command. See the definition of -%% `\includetikz' in `tex/preamble-pgfplots.tex' for where the files are -%% assumed to be if you use `\includetikz' when `\makepdf' is not defined. +%% (OPTIONAL) CONVENIENCE VARIABLE: Only relevant when you use Maneage's +%% '\includetikz' macro to build plots/figures within LaTeX using TikZ or +%% PGFPlots. If so, when the Figure files (PDFs) are already built, you can +%% avoid TikZ or PGFPlots completely by commenting/removing the definition +%% of '\makepdf' below. This is useful when you don't want to slow-down a +%% LaTeX-only build of the project (for example this happens when you run +%% './project make dist'). See the definition of '\includetikz' in +%% `tex/preamble-pgfplots.tex' for more. \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. +%% (OPTIONAL) CONVENIENCE VARIABLE: Only relevant when +%% 'tex/src/preamble-necessary.tex' is included (in particular the small +%% patch relating to '\highlightchanges'). In there, Maneage defines two +%% macros: `\tonote' and `\new'. When '\highlightchanges' is defined (value +%% is irrelevant), the text in those two macros becomes colored (in the +%% former, the text becomes dark red, in the latter it becomes dark +%% green). When not defined, text in the former isn't printed in the output +%% at all, and text in the latter becomes the same color as the rest of the +%% text. This is useful in cases that you need to distribute drafts and you +%% want to hightlight the new parts and add notes in the middle of the text +%% only for discussion, and build a clean PDF without any such highlights +%% without modifying the text. \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. +%% VALUES FROM ANALYSIS (NUMBERS AND STRINGS): these are automatically +%% generated by the analysis phase of the project. The files loaded by +%% 'project.tex' only contain macro definitions (with '\newcommand') and +%% nothing else. So they won't interfere with any LaTeX style and can be +%% safely used in any pre-defined style. +\input{tex/build/macros/project.tex} + +%% CUSTOM PREAMBLES FOR DEMO: You can remove them if you are using a +%% specific journal style, or don't need features like BibLaTeX (advanced +%% bibliography management) or PGFPlots (for drawing plots within LaTeX +%% directly from tables of data). If you don't need them, you can also +%% delete their files from your branch to keep the 'tex/src' directory on +%% your branch clean. \input{tex/src/preamble-style.tex} \input{tex/src/preamble-header.tex} \input{tex/src/preamble-biblatex.tex} \input{tex/src/preamble-pgfplots.tex} \input{tex/src/preamble-necessary.tex} -%% Title and author information. For a more fine-grained control of the -%% headers including author name, or paper info, see -%% `tex/src/preamble-header.tex'. Note that if you plan to use a journal's -%% LaTeX style file, you will probably not need to set them, and can also -%% replace this "Title and author information" section with the journal's -%% preferred format. -% -%% NOTE ON TITLE: The title of the project should also be printed as -%% metadata in all output files. So it is defined with other core project -%% metadata in 'reproduce/analysis/config/metadata.conf'. That value is -%% then written in the '\projectitle' LaTeX macro and directly used -%% here. So please set your project's title in that Makefile with other -%% basic information. +%% PROJECT TITLE: The project title should also be printed as metadata in +%% all output files. To avoid inconsistancy caused by manually typing it, +%% the title is defined with other core project metadata in +%% 'reproduce/analysis/config/metadata.conf'. That value is then written in +%% the '\projectitle' LaTeX macro by +%% 'reproduce/analysis/make/initialize.mk' and is directly used here. So +%% please set your project's title in 'metadata.conf' (ideally with other +%% basic project information) and re-run the project to have your new +%% title. If you later use a different LaTeX style, please use the same +%% '\projectitle' in it (after importing 'tex/build/macros/project.tex' +%% like above), don't type it by hand. \title{\large \uppercase{\projecttitle}} + +%% AUTHOR INFORMATION: For a more fine-grained control of the headers +%% including author name, or paper info, see +%% `tex/src/preamble-header.tex'. Note that if you plan to use a journal's +%% LaTeX style file, you will probably set the authors in a different way, +%% feel free to change them here, this part is not related to the analysis. \author[1]{Your name} \author[2]{Coauthor one} \author[1,3]{Coauthor two} |