Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
2
The Name of the Title is Hope 59
60
3 61
4 Ben Trovato∗ Lars Thørväld Valerie Béranger 62
5 G.K.M. Tobin∗ The Thørväld Group Inria Paris-Rocquencourt 63
6 trovato@corporation.com Hekla, Iceland Rocquencourt, France 64
7 webmaster@marysville-ohio.com larst@affiliation.org 65
8 66
Institute for Clarity in Documentation
9 67
Dublin, Ohio
10 68
11 69
Aparna Patel Huifen Chan Charles Palmer
12 70
Rajiv Gandhi University Tsinghua University Palmer Research Laboratories
13 71
Doimukh, Arunachal Pradesh, India Haidian Qu, Beijing Shi, China San Antonio, Texas
14 72
15
cpalmer@prl.com 73
.
n. ft
16 74
John Smith Julius P. Kumquat
io ra
17 75
18 The Thørväld Group The Kumquat Consortium 76
jsmith@affiliation.org jpkumquat@consortium.net
ut d
19 77
20 78
ib ing
21 79
22 80
23 81
24
str rk 82
25 83
di o
26 84
or d w
27 85
28 86
29 87
30 88
t f he
31 89
32 90
No lis
33 91
34 Figure 1: Seattle Mariners at Spring Training, 2010. 92
b
35
ABSTRACT KEYWORDS 93
36 94
pu
37
A clear and well-documented LATEX document is presented as an datasets, neural networks, gaze detection, text tagging 95
38
article formatted for publication by ACM in a conference proceed- 96
ACM Reference Format:
Un
39
ings or journal publication. Based on the “acmart” document class, 97
this article presents and explains many of the common variations, Ben Trovato, G.K.M. Tobin, Lars Thørväld, Valerie Béranger, Aparna Patel,
40 Huifen Chan, Charles Palmer, John Smith, and Julius P. Kumquat. 2018. The 98
as well as many of the formatting elements an author may use in
41 Name of the Title is Hope. In Woodstock ’18: ACM Symposium on Neural 99
the preparation of the documentation of their work.
42 Gaze Detection, June 03–05, 2018, Woodstock, NY . ACM, New York, NY, USA, 100
43 6 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/1122445.1122456 101
44
CCS CONCEPTS 102
45 • Computer systems organization → Embedded systems; Re- 103
46 dundancy; Robotics; • Networks → Network reliability. 1 INTRODUCTION 104
47 ACM’s consolidated article template, introduced in 2017, provides 105
∗ Both authors contributed equally to this research.
48 a consistent LATEX style for use across ACM publications, and in- 106
49 corporates accessibility and metadata-extraction functionality nec- 107
Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or
50
Unpublished working
classroom use is granted without feedraft.
providedNot for distribution.
that copies are not made or distributed essary for future Digital Library endeavors. Numerous ACM and 108
51 for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation SIG-specific LATEX templates have been examined, and their unique 109
52 on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM features incorporated into this single new template. 110
must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish,
53 If you are new to publishing with ACM, this document is a 111
to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a
54 fee. Request permissions from permissions@acm.org. valuable guide to the process of preparing your work for publication. 112
55 Woodstock ’18, June 03–05, 2018, Woodstock, NY If you have published with ACM before, this document provides 113
56
© 2018 Association for Computing Machinery. 114
ACM ISBN 978-1-4503-XXXX-X/18/06. . . $15.00 insight and instruction into more recent changes to the article
57 https://doi.org/10.1145/1122445.1122456 template. 115
58 2020-02-11 08:22. Page 1 of 1–6. 116
Woodstock ’18, June 03–05, 2018, Woodstock, NY Trovato and Tobin, et al.
117 The “acmart” document class can be used to prepare articles for 3 MODIFICATIONS 175
118 any ACM publication — conference or journal, and for any stage Modifying the template — including but not limited to: adjusting 176
119 of publication, from review to final “camera-ready” copy, to the margins, typeface sizes, line spacing, paragraph and list definitions, 177
120 author’s own version, with very few changes to the source. and the use of the \vspace command to manually adjust the vertical 178
121 179
spacing between elements of your work — is not allowed.
122
2 TEMPLATE OVERVIEW Your document will be returned to you for revision if mod- 180
123
As noted in the introduction, the “acmart” document class can ifications are discovered. 181
124 182
125
be used to prepare many different kinds of documentation — a 183
126
double-blind initial submission of a full-length technical paper, a 4 TYPEFACES 184
two-page SIGGRAPH Emerging Technologies abstract, a “camera-
127 The “acmart” document class requires the use of the “Libertine” 185
ready” journal article, a SIGCHI Extended Abstract, and more — all
128 typeface family. Your TEX installation should include this set of 186
by selecting the appropriate template style and template parameters.
129 packages. Please do not substitute other typefaces. The “lmodern” 187
This document will explain the major features of the document
130 and “ltimes” packages should not be used, as they will override 188
class. For further information, the LATEX User’s Guide is available
the built-in typeface families.
.
131 189
n. ft
132
from https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template. 190
io ra
133 191
134 2.1 Template Styles 5 TITLE INFORMATION 192
The title of your work should use capital letters appropriately -
ut d
135 The primary parameter given to the “acmart” document class is the 193
136 template style which corresponds to the kind of publication or SIG https://capitalizemytitle.com/ has useful rules for capitalization. 194
Use the title command to define the title of your work. If your
ib ing
137 publishing the work. This parameter is enclosed in square brackets 195
138 and is a part of the documentclass command: work has a subtitle, define it with the subtitle command. Do not 196
139 insert line breaks in your title. 197
\documentclass[STYLE]{acmart}
140
str rk If your title is lengthy, you must define a short version to be 198
141 used in the page headers, to prevent overlapping text. The title 199
Journals use one of three template styles. All but three ACM
command has a “short title” parameter:
di o
142 journals use the acmsmall template style: 200
or d w
143 201
• acmsmall: The default journal template style. \title[short title]{full title}
144 202
145 • acmlarge: Used by JOCCH and TAP. 203
146 • acmtog: Used by TOG. 6 AUTHORS AND AFFILIATIONS 204
t f he
147 Each author must be defined separately for accurate metadata identi- 205
The majority of conference proceedings documentation will use
148 206
the acmconf template style. fication. Multiple authors may share one affiliation. Authors’ names
No lis
149 should not be abbreviated; use full first names wherever possible. 207
150 • acmconf: The default proceedings template style. Include authors’ e-mail addresses whenever possible. 208
• sigchi: Used for SIGCHI conference articles.
b
.
247 is included in the input file; compare the placement of the table 305
n. ft
248 here with the table in the printed output of this document. 306
Rights information is unique to the work; if you are preparing
io ra
249 To set a wider table, which takes up the whole width of the page’s 307
several works for an event, make sure to use the correct set of
250 live area, use the environment table* to enclose the table’s contents 308
commands with each of the works.
ut d
251 and the table caption. As with a single-column table, this wide 309
252
The ACM Reference Format text is required for all articles over 310
table will “float” to a location deemed more desirable. Immediately
ib ing
253
one page in length, and is optional for one-page articles (abstracts). 311
following this sentence is the point at which Table 2 is included in
254 the input file; again, it is instructive to compare the placement of 312
255 8 CCS CONCEPTS AND USER-DEFINED the table here with the table in the printed output of this document. 313
str rk
256
KEYWORDS 314
257
Two elements of the “acmart” document class provide powerful 11 MATH EQUATIONS 315
di o
258 316
taxonomic tools for you to help readers find your work in an online You may want to display math equations in three distinct styles:
or d w
259 317
search. inline, numbered or non-numbered display. Each of the three are
260 318
The ACM Computing Classification System — https://www.acm. discussed in the next sections.
261 319
262
org/publications/class-2012 — is a set of classifiers and concepts 320
11.1 Inline (In-text) Equations
t f he
263
that describe the computing discipline. Authors can select entries 321
264
from this classification system, via https://dl.acm.org/ccs/ccs.cfm, A formula that appears in the running text is called an inline or 322
and generate the commands to be included in the LATEX source. in-text formula. It is produced by the math environment, which
No lis
265 323
266
User-defined keywords are a comma-separated list of words and can be invoked with the usual \begin . . . \end construction or 324
phrases of the authors’ choosing, providing a more flexible way of with the short form $ . . . $. You can use any of the symbols and
b
267 325
describing the research being presented. structures, from 𝛼 to 𝜔, available in LATEX [21]; this section will
pu
268 326
269
CCS concepts and user-defined keywords are required for for simply show a few examples of in-text equations in context. Notice 327
270
all articles over two pages in length, and are optional for one- and how this equation: lim𝑛→∞ 𝑥 = 0, set here in in-line math style, 328
Un
271
two-page articles (or abstracts). looks slightly different when set in display style. (See next section). 329
272 330
273 9 SECTIONING COMMANDS 11.2 Display Equations 331
274 332
Your work should use standard LATEX sectioning commands: section, A numbered display equation—one set off by vertical space from
275
subsection, subsubsection, and paragraph. They should be num- the text and centered horizontally—is produced by the equation 333
276 334
bered; do not remove the numbering from the commands. environment. An unnumbered display equation is produced by the
277
Simulating a sectioning command by setting the first word or displaymath environment. 335
278 336
words of a paragraph in boldface or italicized text is not allowed. Again, in either environment, you can use any of the symbols
279 337
and structures available in LATEX; this section will just give a couple
280 338
of examples of display equations in context. First, consider the
281 10 TABLES equation, shown as an inline equation above: 339
282 The “acmart” document class includes the “booktabs” package — 340
283 https://ctan.org/pkg/booktabs — for preparing high-quality tables. lim 𝑥 = 0 (1) 341
𝑛→∞
284 Table captions are placed above the table. 342
285 Because tables cannot be split across pages, the best placement Notice how it is formatted somewhat differently in the display- 343
286 for them is typically the top of the page nearest their initial cite. math environment. Now, we’ll enter an unnumbered equation: 344
287 To ensure this proper “floating” placement of tables, use the envi- ∞
345
ronment table to enclose the table’s contents and the table caption.
Õ
288 346
𝑥 +1
289 The contents of the table itself must go in the tabular environment, 𝑖=0
347
290 2020-02-11 08:22. Page 3 of 1–6. 348
Woodstock ’18, June 03–05, 2018, Woodstock, NY Trovato and Tobin, et al.
.
363 421
n. ft
364 12 FIGURES 13 CITATIONS AND BIBLIOGRAPHIES 422
io ra
365 The use ofTBibEX for the preparation and formatting of one’s references 423
The “figure” environment should be used for figures. One or more
366 is strongly recommended. Authors’ names should be complete — 424
images can be placed within a figure. If your figure contains third-
ut d
367 use full first names (“Donald E. Knuth”) not initials (“D. E. Knuth”) — 425
party material, you must clearly identify it as such, as shown in the
368 and the salient identifying features of a reference should be included: 426
example below.
ib ing
369 title, year, volume, number, pages, article DOI, etc. 427
370 The bibliography is included in your source document with these 428
371 two commands, placed just before the \end{document} command: 429
372
str rk 430
373 \bibliographystyle{ACM-Reference-Format} 431
\bibliography{bibfile}
di o
374 432
or d w
375 433
376
where “bibfile” is the name, without the “.bib” suffix, of the TB ibEX 434
377
file. 435
378
Citations and references are numbered by default. A small num- 436
t f he
379
ber of ACM publications have citations and references formatted 437
380
in the “author year” style; for these exceptions, please include this 438
command in the preamble (before “\begin{document}”) of your
No lis
381 439
382
LATEX source: 440
b
383 441
\citestyle{acmauthoryear}
pu
384 442
385 Some examples. A paginated journal article [2], an enumerated 443
386 journal article [8], a reference to an entire issue [7], a monograph 444
Un
465 14 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS [9] Bruce P. Douglass, David Harel, and Mark B. Trakhtenbrot. 1998. Statecarts in 523
466 use: structured analysis and object-orientation. In Lectures on Embedded Systems, 524
Identification of funding sources and other support, and thanks Grzegorz Rozenberg and Frits W. Vaandrager (Eds.). Lecture Notes in Computer
467 525
to individuals and groups that assisted in the research and the Science, Vol. 1494. Springer-Verlag, London, 368–394. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-
468 540-65193-4_29 526
preparation of the work should be included in an acknowledgment [10] Ian Editor (Ed.). 2007. The title of book one (1st. ed.). The name of the series
469 527
section, which is placed just before the reference section in your one, Vol. 9. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-
470 09237-4 528
document.
471 [11] Ian Editor (Ed.). 2008. The title of book two (2nd. ed.). University of Chicago Press, 529
This section has a special environment: Chicago, Chapter 100. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-09237-4
472 530
\begin{acks} [12] Matthew Van Gundy, Davide Balzarotti, and Giovanni Vigna. 2007. Catch me, if
473 you can: Evading network signatures with web-based polymorphic worms. In 531
... Proceedings of the first USENIX workshop on Offensive Technologies (WOOT ’07).
474 532
\end{acks} USENIX Association, Berkley, CA, Article 7, 9 pages.
475 [13] David Harel. 1978. LOGICS of Programs: AXIOMATICS and DESCRIPTIVE POWER. 533
476
so that the information contained therein can be more easily col- MIT Research Lab Technical Report TR-200. Massachusetts Institute of Technol- 534
477
lected during the article metadata extraction phase, and to ensure ogy, Cambridge, MA. 535
consistency in the spelling of the section heading. [14] David Harel. 1979. First-Order Dynamic Logic. Lecture Notes in Computer Science,
478 Vol. 68. Springer-Verlag, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-09237-4 536
Authors should not prepare this section as a numbered or un- [15] Lars Hörmander. 1985. The analysis of linear partial differential operators. III.
.
479 537
numbered \section; please use the “acks” environment.
n. ft
Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of
480 538
Mathematical Sciences], Vol. 275. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Germany. viii+525
io ra
481 pages. Pseudodifferential operators. 539
482
15 APPENDICES [16] Lars Hörmander. 1985. The analysis of linear partial differential operators. IV. 540
Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of
If your work needs an appendix, add it before the “\end{document}”
ut d
483 Mathematical Sciences], Vol. 275. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Germany. vii+352 541
484 command at the conclusion of your source document. pages. Fourier integral operators. 542
[17] IEEE 2004. IEEE TCSC Executive Committee. In Proceedings of the IEEE Interna-
ib ing
485 Start the appendix with the “appendix” command: 543
tional Conference on Web Services (ICWS ’04). IEEE Computer Society, Washington,
486 \appendix DC, USA, 21–22. https://doi.org/10.1109/ICWS.2004.64 544
487 [18] Markus Kirschmer and John Voight. 2010. Algorithmic Enumeration of Ideal 545
and note that in the appendix, sections are lettered, not numbered. Classes for Quaternion Orders. SIAM J. Comput. 39, 5 (Jan. 2010), 1714–1747.
488
str rk 546
This document has two appendices, demonstrating the section and https://doi.org/10.1137/080734467
489
subsection identification method. [19] Donald E. Knuth. 1997. The Art of Computer Programming, Vol. 1: Fundamental 547
Algorithms (3rd. ed.). Addison Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc.
di o
490 548
[20] David Kosiur. 2001. Understanding Policy-Based Networking (2nd. ed.). Wiley,
16 SIGCHI EXTENDED ABSTRACTS
or d w
wide left margin. Three environments are available for use with 1057278
495 553
the “sigchi-a” template style, and produce formatted output in [23] Dave Novak. 2003. Solder man. Video. In ACM SIGGRAPH 2003 Video Review on
496 554
the margin: Animation theater Program: Part I - Vol. 145 (July 27–27, 2003). ACM Press, New
No lis
499 [25] Poker-Edge.Com. 2006. Stats and Analysis. Retrieved June 7, 2006 from http: 557
• margintable: Place a table in the margin.
pu
503 To Robert, for the bagels and explaining CMYK and color spaces. [27] Bernard Rous. 2008. The Enabling of Digital Libraries. Digital Libraries 12, 3, 561
Article 5 (July 2008). To appear.
504 562
[28] Mehdi Saeedi, Morteza Saheb Zamani, and Mehdi Sedighi. 2010. A library-based
505 REFERENCES synthesis methodology for reversible logic. Microelectron. J. 41, 4 (April 2010), 563
506 [1] Rafal Ablamowicz and Bertfried Fauser. 2007. CLIFFORD: a Maple 11 Package 185–194. 564
for Clifford Algebra Computations, version 11. Retrieved February 28, 2008 from [29] Mehdi Saeedi, Morteza Saheb Zamani, Mehdi Sedighi, and Zahra Sasanian. 2010.
507 http://math.tntech.edu/rafal/cliff11/index.html Synthesis of Reversible Circuit Using Cycle-Based Approach. J. Emerg. Technol. 565
508 [2] Patricia S. Abril and Robert Plant. 2007. The patent holder’s dilemma: Buy, sell, Comput. Syst. 6, 4 (Dec. 2010). 566
509
or troll? Commun. ACM 50, 1 (Jan. 2007), 36–44. https://doi.org/10.1145/1188913. [30] Joseph Scientist. 2009. The fountain of youth. Patent No. 12345, Filed July 1st., 567
1188915 2008, Issued Aug. 9th., 2009.
510 [3] Sten Andler. 1979. Predicate Path expressions. In Proceedings of the 6th. ACM [31] Stan W. Smith. 2010. An experiment in bibliographic mark-up: Parsing metadata 568
511 SIGACT-SIGPLAN symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL ’79). for XML export. In Proceedings of the 3rd. annual workshop on Librarians and 569
ACM Press, New York, NY, 226–236. https://doi.org/10.1145/567752.567774 Computers (LAC ’10), Reginald N. Smythe and Alexander Noble (Eds.), Vol. 3.
512 570
[4] David A. Anisi. 2003. Optimal Motion Control of a Ground Vehicle. Master’s thesis. Paparazzi Press, Milan Italy, 422–431. https://doi.org/99.9999/woot07-S422
513 Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden. [32] Asad Z. Spector. 1990. Achieving application requirements. In Distributed 571
514 [5] Sam Anzaroot and Andrew McCallum. 2013. UMass Citation Field Extraction Systems (2nd. ed.), Sape Mullender (Ed.). ACM Press, New York, NY, 19–33. 572
Dataset. Retrieved May 27, 2019 from http://www.iesl.cs.umass.edu/data/data- https://doi.org/10.1145/90417.90738
515 umasscitationfield [33] Harry Thornburg. 2001. Introduction to Bayesian Statistics. Retrieved March 2, 573
516 [6] Kenneth L. Clarkson. 1985. Algorithms for Closest-Point Problems (Computational 2005 from http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/bayes/bayes.html 574
517
Geometry). Ph.D. Dissertation. Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA. UMI Order [34] TUG 2017. Institutional members of the TEX Users Group. Retrieved May 27, 2017 575
Number: AAT 8506171. from http://wwtug.org/instmem.html
518 [7] Jacques Cohen (Ed.). 1996. Special issue: Digital Libraries. Commun. ACM 39, 11 [35] Boris Veytsman. [n.d.]. acmart—Class for typesetting publications of ACM. Re- 576
519 (Nov. 1996). trieved May 27, 2017 from http://www.ctan.org/pkg/acmart 577
[8] Sarah Cohen, Werner Nutt, and Yehoshua Sagic. 2007. Deciding equivalances
520 578
among conjunctive aggregate queries. J. ACM 54, 2, Article 5 (April 2007),
521 50 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/1219092.1219093 579
522 2020-02-11 08:22. Page 5 of 1–6. 580
Woodstock ’18, June 03–05, 2018, Woodstock, NY Trovato and Tobin, et al.
581 A RESEARCH METHODS at laoreet eros. Vivamus non purus placerat, scelerisque diam eu, 639
582 cursus ante. Etiam aliquam tortor auctor efficitur mattis. 640
A.1 Part One
583 641
584 Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Morbi B ONLINE RESOURCES 642
585 malesuada, quam in pulvinar varius, metus nunc fermentum urna, 643
Nam id fermentum dui. Suspendisse sagittis tortor a nulla mollis,
586 id sollicitudin purus odio sit amet enim. Aliquam ullamcorper eu 644
in pulvinar ex pretium. Sed interdum orci quis metus euismod, et
587 ipsum vel mollis. Curabitur quis dictum nisl. Phasellus vel semper 645
sagittis enim maximus. Vestibulum gravida massa ut felis suscipit
588 risus, et lacinia dolor. Integer ultricies commodo sem nec semper. 646
congue. Quisque mattis elit a risus ultrices commodo venenatis eget
589 dui. Etiam sagittis eleifend elementum. 647
590
A.2 Part Two 648
Nam interdum magna at lectus dignissim, ac dignissim lorem
591 Etiam commodo feugiat nisl pulvinar pellentesque. Etiam auctor rhoncus. Maecenas eu arcu ac neque placerat aliquam. Nunc pulv- 649
592 sodales ligula, non varius nibh pulvinar semper. Suspendisse nec inar massa et mattis lacinia. 650
593 lectus non ipsum convallis congue hendrerit vitae sapien. Donec 651
594 652
.
595 653
n. ft
596 654
io ra
597 655
598 656
ut d
599 657
600 658
ib ing
601 659
602 660
603 661
604
str rk 662
605 663
di o
606 664
or d w
607 665
608 666
609 667
610 668
t f he
611 669
612 670
No lis
613 671
614 672
b
615 673
pu
616 674
617 675
618 676
Un
619 677
620 678
621 679
622 680
623 681
624 682
625 683
626 684
627 685
628 686
629 687
630 688
631 689
632 690
633 691
634 692
635 693
636 694
637 695
638 2020-02-11 08:22. Page 6 of 1–6. 696