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Quick code references and guidelines for your master or PhD dissertations in LaTex.
See also here
It is a good practice to split your work into separate .tex
files
for each component (abstract, chapters etc.) and use the \input{}
statement
to include different sources in a main .tex
file (e.g. thesis.tex
),
\begin{document} \input{frontpages.tex} \input{abstract.tex} \tableofcontents \input{chapter1.tex} \input{chapter2.tex} ... ... \input{conclusions.tex} \input{appendixA.tex} \input{appendixB.tex} ... \input{references.tex} \listoftables \listoffigures \input{glossary.tex} \input{acknowledgements.tex} \end{document}
\documentclass[a4paper,10pt,openright]{book}
Cover and first page for PhD thesis phd_thesis_cover.tex.gz
LaTex article
and report
classes provide a built-in abstract
environment,
\begin{abstract} ... \end{abstract}
When using the book
class you can use an unordered \chapter*{}
statement indeed,
\chapter*{Abstract} ...
A table of contents is automatically generated by LaTex with a \tableofcontents
statement.
\tableofcontents
Appendices, glossary and references close the thesis.
Appendices are created with the \appendix
command and work as any LaTex chapters,
with the possibility of using sections, subsections etc.
\appendix % Appendix A \chapter{Appendix A title} \section{...} ... ... \section{...} ... ... % Appendix B \chapter{Appendix B title} ... ...
Any new \chapter{}
statement will result in a new appendix with a default
ordering A, B, C etc.
Useful to collect the list of acronyms…
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX/Bibliography_Management
Built-in environment: thebibliography
External tool: BibTeX (now BibLaTex) http://www.bibtex.org/