%%% -*-LaTeX-*- %%% ==================================================================== %%% This is a sample top-level LaTeX-2e file for typesetting a thesis %%% or dissertation at the University of Utah. Most students find it %%% convenient to start with a COPY of this file as a template, and %%% then alter that copy to match their needs. %%% %%% This version differs from sample-thesis-1, in that it incorporates %%% a published paper as the contents of a chapter, and for that reason, %%% the Thesis Office rules require a separate bibliography in each %%% chapter that has literature citations. %%% %%% There is an associated Unix Makefile that can be similarly %%% customized, and then the only command ever needed to typeset the %%% complete thesis is the single word "make". Of course, during %%% writing and typesetting, not all of the steps are needed, so %%% often, one can just name a convenience target such as "make %%% dvi-pass" or "make pdf-pass" to do just a single pass of LaTeX and %%% BibTeX. %%% %%% There should be no, or very few, macro definitions in this file; %%% any needed belong in a private style file, called mythesis.sty, %%% and input below after all other packages. The bulk of this file %%% should just be command invocations, and any arguments that they %%% need. %%% %%% We exploit the fact that TeX ignores spaces after command names to %%% line up arguments for better readability. %%% %%% Each chapter should be a separate complete file, so that you can %%% insert a command like \includeonly{chap_intro} before the first %%% \include{chap_xxx} command to avoid typesetting all but the %%% chapter that you are currently working on, to save time. %%% %%% Remember that occupants of job positions change jobs from time to %%% time: YOU are responsible for ensuring correct names of all humans %%% mentioned in this file! %%% %%% [16-Mar-2016] %%% ==================================================================== \documentclass[11pt,Chicago]{uuthesis2e} %%% Undefine two macros from uuthesis2e.cls that conflict with %%% definitions in amsthm.sty that fail to check for prior definitions! %%% NB: The amsthm package refines the LaTeX theorem environment, %%% and the uuthesis-color-headings wraps that definition, so the %%% amsthm package must be read first! \let \proof = \relax \let \endproof = \relax \usepackage {amsthm} %%% ==================================================================== %%% Choose an alternate font family for the document if the TeX default %%% of Computer Modern is not wanted: \usepackage{mathpazo} %%% ==================================================================== %%% Some miscellaneous Utah- and student-specific settings: %%% %%% Chapter is one level, section and subsection are the next two levels. \fourlevels %%% ==================================================================== %%% The remaining packages are required by this particular thesis, %%% but other theses will almost certainly need different packages: %%% %%% WARNING: MANY \LaTeX{} packages change dimensions, glue, and/or %%% formatting styles, and such changes are likely to conflict with %%% University of Utah Thesis Office requirements. Therefore, minimize %%% the number of packages that you include! \usepackage {amsmath} \usepackage {amssymb} \usepackage {bm} \usepackage {bibnames} \usepackage {citesort} \usepackage {graphicx} \usepackage {graphpap} \usepackage {longtable} \usepackage {multirow} \usepackage {pdfpages} \usepackage {tikz} \usetikzlibrary {decorations.markings} \usepackage {varioref} %%% ==================================================================== %%% The various uuthesis-*.sty packages must come AFTER all other %%% system-provided packages, so that they can correctly override %%% settings from those packages. %%% Include latest updates for 2016 (WARNING: the name is subject to %%% change: see http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/uuthesis/ for the most %%% current version.) \usepackage {uuthesis-2016-h} % MANDATORY package %%% Use one or the other of these: % \usepackage {color} \usepackage {uuthesis-color-headings} \definecolor{utahheadingcolor} {rgb} {0.7, 0.0, 0.0} \definecolor{utahtheoremcolor} {rgb} {0.490,0.149,0.804} % purple4 \definecolor{utahtheoremcolor} {rgb} {0.545,0.137,0.137} % brown4 %%% Here is another, and more convenient, way to define colors, via %%% aliases of named colors in the X11-derived rgb.sty file \usepackage{coloralias} \definecoloralias{utahheadingcolor}{steelblue4} \definecoloralias{utahtheoremcolor}{hotpink3} %%% The default heading color is utahred (defined by University Printing %%% Services as 0.8 red, 0.0 green, 0.0 blue), but you could redefine %%% that to, for example, a dark blue color, like this AFTER including %%% the package: %%% %%% \definecolor{utahheading}{rgb}{0,0,0.8} %%% %%% NB: Be careful with use of colors in typesetting, and in figures, %%% because about 6 percent of the human male population is red/green %%% color blind: they see those colors as shades of brown. Red and %%% blue, or blue and green, are better choices for choosing %%% distinguishable colors. Also, avoid light colors, especially %%% yellow, because they are hard to see against white paper and %%% screen backgrounds, and when printed on black-and-white printers, %%% where they are rendered in gray, they may be too faint to read. %%% ==================================================================== %%% Support for a subject index: \usepackage {uuthesis-index} %%% ==================================================================== %%% Support for running page headers %%: \usepackage{uuthesis-pageheaders} %%% ==================================================================== %%% Support for chapter bibliographies (must come AFTER %%% uuthesis-pageheaders, if that package is loaded) \usepackage {uuthesis-chapterbib} %%% ==================================================================== %%% This single user-specific file is where all personal customizations %%% and macro definitions should be placed, and it should come LAST, %%% after ALL OTHER packages, in case it needs to override some of their %%% definitions. \usepackage {mythesis} %%% ==================================================================== %%% The student-specific front matter fields are defined here: \author {Jane Doe} \title {INTEGRAL ESTIMATION IN QUANTUM PHYSICS} \thesistype {dissertation} \dedication {For my parents, Alice and Bob.} %%% Most students need just a short degree name, like this: \degree {Doctor of Philosophy} %%% However, multiline degrees are possible, and are done like this: \degree {Doctor of Philosophy \\ in \\ Mathematical Physics} %%% College- and Department-level definitions: \approvaldepartment {Mathematics} \department {Department of Mathematics} \graduatedean {Alice B. Toklas} \departmentchair {Petrus Marcus Aurelius Featherstone-Hough} %%% The graduate student's committee members: \committeechair {Cornelius L{\'a}nczos} \firstreader {Hans Bethe} \secondreader {Niels Bohr} \thirdreader {Max Born} \fourthreader {Paul A. M. Dirac} \chairtitle {Professor} %%% NB: It is rare, but possible, for there to be two chairs, For %%% example, one student had %%% %%% \committeechair{\mbox{\small Andrej Cherkaev and Andrejs Treibergs}} %%% %%% The \mbox{} ensures that line breaks cannot happen, and the \small %%% is necessary to make the names fit on the Dissertation Approval form %%% Dates that must be adjusted for each academic term, and be permitted %%% according to the University of Utah Thesis Office: \submitdate {May 2016} \copyrightyear {2016} %%% Dates on which committee members approved the thesis \chairdateapproved {17 Feb 2016} \firstdateapproved {17 Feb 2016} \seconddateapproved {17 Feb 2016} \thirddateapproved {17 Feb 2016} \fourthdateapproved {17 Feb 2016} %%% ==================================================================== %%% Typesetting begins here: \begin{document} %% Comment out items by inserting a percent % character \frontmatterformat \titlepage \copyrightpage \dissertationapproval \setcounter {page} {2} % UofU Thesis Office demands abstract on p. iii: start one lower \preface {abstract} {Abstract} \dedicationpage \tableofcontents \listoffigures \listoftables % %%% Optional front matter page(s), made from source "notation.tex". If %%% you don't need it, then comment out the \optionalfront command %%% line! The first argument is the (unnumbered) section header for %%% the text supplied by the file input by the second argument; that %%% file must NOT contain \chapter, \section, \subsection, \ldots{} %%% sectioning commands. \optionalfront {Notation and Symbols} {\input{notation}} %%% Uncomment this is you want the contents of acknowledge.tex typeset here. %%% Note that both "Acknowledgement" and "Acknowledgment" are accepted %%% spellings of that word. % \preface{acknowledge}{Acknowledgements} %%% Demonstrations of thesis typesetting features for the sample thesis. %%% Once you have seen the examples, you can comment out this line. \optionalfront {Typesetting Experiments} {\input{samples.tex}} \maintext % Start normal page numbering: parts and chapters follow. \pagestyle{plain} % TEMPORARY EXPERIMENT: override default page headers \pagestyle{headings} % TEMPORARY EXPERIMENT: override default page headers \include {chap1} \include {chap2} \include {chap3} \include {chap4} \include {chap5} % NEW for sample-thesis-2 % \numberofappendices = 1 % Set 0 for none, else number of appendices. \numberofappendices = 3 \appendix % Chapters, sections are now appendix style A, A.1, A.2, B, C, D, ... \include {appa} \include {appb} \include {appc} %%% The choice of bibliography style is a major decision, jointly made %%% by you, your thesis advisor and the thesis editor. Common choices are %%% one of the four standard BibTeX styles (abbrv, alpha, plain, and unsrt), %%% or enhanced styles like acm, amsplain, siam, and hundreds of others %%% available in TeX Live, and other Unix and Windows TeX distributions. %%% %%% Do NOT handcode your reference list, because you are unlikely to %%% achieve consistency or conformance to the University of Utah Thesis Office %%% requirements: let BibTeX do that tedious job for you! %%% %%% Remember that reference-list metadata in BibTeX files remains %%% constant across journals and publishers, and is are often reused %%% in other documents and shared with others, whereas formatted %%% reference-list styles change: with BibTeX, you only need to record %%% the metadata once. %%% %%% If you prefer named, rather than numeric or tagged citations, you %%% may use styles such as authordate{1,2,3,4}, chicago, harvard, or %%% natbib. Be aware, however, that most of those require an %%% additional \usepackage{} command to supply \LaTeX{} with %%% definitions of commands that the style needs, and that there are %%% usually several flavors of LaTeX citation commands beyond the %%% standard \cite{} command that you need to understand before you %%% can use them properly in your prose. %%% This tells BibTeX to read siam.bst from the first directory where %%% it is found in the BSTINPUTS search path. However, for chapterbib %%% use, the style is defined in each chapter/appendix file that needs %%% a bibliography. Thus, we suppress it here: %%% \bibliographystyle{siam} %%% This can also specify a comma-separated list (without embedded %%% spaces) of *.bib files found by BibTeX in its BIBINPUTS search %%% path. The argument \jobname means the base name of the top-level %%% LaTeX file, avoiding an unnecessary filename dependence here. %%% %%% BibTeX writes only one .bbl file, no matter how many *.bib files %%% are listed here, using the name \jobname.bbl. %%% %%% LaTeX reads BibTeX's formatted reference list from the file %%% \jobname.bbl. For chapterbib use, there is no end-of-volume %%% bibliography, so we suppress it here: %%% \bibliography{\jobname} %%% The last part of this sample thesis is two specialized indexes, %%% and a general topic index. If the companion Makefile is used to %%% create the DVI or PDF file for this work, the topic index excludes %%% the lengthy list of free software packages. However, the biology %%% names of the first index are included in the topic index. %%% Switch from thesis double spacing to single spacing for the three %%% indexes, as a matter of style (to match the reference list), and %%% for compactness. \singlespace %%% Define several index cross references (there are many more such %%% in chap1.tex, but the examples here give a useful summary of how %%% they are made): \index{DCT|see{discrete cosine transform}} \index{DWT|see{discrete wavelet transform}} \index{Borel measure ($\mu$)} \index{mu@$\mu$ (mu)|see{Borel measure}} \index{Escherichia coli@\bioname{Escherichia coli}|see{E. coli}} \index{transform|seealso{Discrete DCT Transform}} \index{transform|seealso{Fast Fourier Transform}} \renewcommand {\bioname} [1] {\emph{#1}} % redefine to suppress color and indexing in index \renewcommand {\fsfname} [1] {\texttt{#1}} % redefine to suppress color and indexing in index \renewcommand {\indexname} {Binomial Nomenclature Index} \input{\jobname-bioname.ind} \renewcommand {\indexname} {Free Software Index} \input{\jobname-fsfname.ind} \renewcommand {\indexname} {Topic Index} \overfullrule = 0pt % suppress visible warnings about overfull hboxes \printindex \end {document}