Masters of Bioinformatics Thesis Template KUL
Auteur
Hakim Elakhrass
Last Updated
il y a 9 ans
License
Creative Commons CC BY 4.0
Résumé
Template for Masters of Bioinformatics thesis at the KUL.
Template for Masters of Bioinformatics thesis at the KUL.
\documentclass[master=ebin]{kulemt}
\setup{title={The Effect of Space Travel on Immune System Gene Expression},
author={John Smith},
promotor={Prof.\,dr.\,ir.\ Cool\\Prof.\,dr.\ Awesome\\Prof.\,dr.\ Smart},
assessor={Ir.\,Kn. Owsmuch\and K. Nowsrest},
assistant={Dr.\ Cool}}
% The following \setup may be removed entirely if no filing card is wanted
\setup{filingcard,
translatedtitle=,
udc=621.3,
shortabstract={Here comes a very short abstract, containing no more than 500
words. \LaTeX\ commands can be used here. Blank lines (or the command
\texttt{\string\pa r}) are not allowed!
\endgraf \lipsum[2]}}
% Uncomment the next line for generating the cover page
%\setup{coverpageonly}
% Uncomment the next \setup to generate only the first pages (e.g., if you
% are a Word user.
%\setup{frontpagesonly}
% Choose the main text font (e.g., Latin Modern)
\setup{font=lm}
% If you want to include other LaTeX packages, do it here.
% Finally the hyperref package is used for pdf files.
% This can be commented out for printed versions.
\usepackage[pdfusetitle,colorlinks,plainpages=false]{hyperref}
%%%%%%%
% The lipsum package is used to generate random text.
% You never need this in a real master thesis text!
\IfFileExists{lipsum.sty}%
{\usepackage{lipsum}\setlipsumdefault{11-13}}%
{\newcommand{\lipsum}[1][11-13]{\par And some text: lipsum ##1.\par}}
%%%%%%%
%\includeonly{chap-n}
\begin{document}
\begin{preface}
I would like to thank everybody who kept me busy the last year,
especially my promotor and my assistants. I would also like to thank the
jury for reading the text. My sincere gratitude also goes to my wive and
the rest of my family.
\end{preface}
\tableofcontents
\begin{abstract}
The \texttt{abstract} environment contains a more extensive overview of
the work. But it should be limited to one page.
\lipsum[1]
\end{abstract}
% A list of figures and tables is optional
%\listoffigures
%\listoftables
% If you only have a few figures and tables you can use the following instead
\listoffiguresandtables
% The list of symbols is also optional.
% This list must be created manually, e.g., as follows:
\chapter{List of Abbreviations and Symbols}
\section*{Abbreviations}
\begin{flushleft}
\renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.1}
\begin{tabularx}{\textwidth}{@{}p{12mm}X@{}}
LoG & Laplacian-of-Gaussian \\
MSE & Mean Square error \\
PSNR & Peak Signal-to-Noise ratio \\
\end{tabularx}
\end{flushleft}
\section*{Symbols}
\begin{flushleft}
\renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.1}
\begin{tabularx}{\textwidth}{@{}p{12mm}X@{}}
42 & ``The Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe,
and Everything'' according to \cite{h2g2} \\
$c$ & Speed of light \\
$E$ & Energy \\
$m$ & Mass \\
$\pi$ & The number pi \\
\end{tabularx}
\end{flushleft}
% Now comes the main text
\mainmatter
\input{Chapters/Introduction/IntroductionRoot}
%\input{Chapters/chap-1}
%\input{Chapters/chap-2}
% ... and so on until
%\input{Chapters/chap-n}
%\input{Conclusion/conclusion}
% If you have appendices:
%\appendixpage* % if wanted
%\appendix
%\include{app-A}
% ... and so on until
%\include{app-n}
\backmatter
% The bibliography comes after the appendices.
% You can replace the standard "abbrv" bibliography style by another one.
\bibliographystyle{abbrv}
\bibliography{references}
\end{document}
%%% Local Variables:
%%% mode: latex
%%% TeX-master: t
%%% End: