CERN ATLAS Note Template
Autor:
ATLAS
Last Updated:
hace 5 años
License:
Creative Commons CC BY 4.0
Resumen:
Template for ATLAS Notes.
\begin
Discover why 18 million people worldwide trust Overleaf with their work.
\begin
Discover why 18 million people worldwide trust Overleaf with their work.
\documentclass{cernatlasnote}
\usepackage[colorinlistoftodos]{todonotes}
\usepackage{placeins}
\title{CERN ATLAS Note title}
\author{ATLAS collaboration}
\date{\today}
% Here is the information that will be entered in the title page
\DocAuthors{A.~Person \\ B.~Person \\ C.~Person}
\DocCheckedBy{ D.~Person \\ E.~Person}
\DocApprovedBy{F.~Person \\ G.~Person }
\EDMSDocNo{xxx-yyy-zzzz}
\EDMSDocId{123456}
\draftversion{0.1}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\begin{abstract}
For this style of document, the abstract has more the function of a summary.
\end{abstract}
% Make the review table at the bottom of the title page
\vfill
\makereviewtable
\clearpage
% Short documentes dont always need a Table of Content / Figures / Tables, so comment out what is not needed
\begingroup
\color{black}
\tableofcontents
\listoffigures
\listoftables
\endgroup
\pagebreak
\section{Introduction}
Its always good to have an introduction, if only to have an example for a section. And here is an example for a reference from the bibtex file (see \cite{einstein}). Its also pretty easy to reference figures (see Figure \ref{fig:examplecernlogo}). \\
\begin{figure}[ht]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth]{images/cernlogo.eps}
\caption{\label{fig:examplecernlogo} Example of how to include a figure. This works with all sorts of formats, eps, pdf, png.}
\end{figure}
% this will prevent float objects like figures to be moved past this point in the document.
\FloatBarrier
You also have the option of using colored text, for example \color{blue} this part in blue, \color{red} this part in red \color{green} and this part in green, before \color{black} going back to black.
\begin{enumerate}
\item Everyone loves an enumerated list.
\item If you prefer bulleted lists, see below.
\end{enumerate}
Of course there are always use cases for list with enumerations, and lists with bullets only, which is why it is useful to have examples of both.
\begin{itemize}
\item Everyone loves a bulleted list.
\item If you prefer an enumerated list, see above.
\end{itemize}
\section{The first section after the introduction}
Since an example of a ToC is not much fun with only one section, lets make another one and throw in some subsections as well.
\subsection{The first sub-section}
How about structuring the document into more subsections.
\subsection{The second sub-section}
Tables are just as easy as figures to construct and reference, for example this one here (see Table \ref{tab:exampletable}).
\begin{table}[h]
\begin{center}
\begin{tabular}{ |c|c|c|p{0.1\textwidth}| }
\hline
\rowcolor{lightgray}
col1 & col2 & col3 & col4\\
\hline
\multirow{3}{4em}{Multiple row} & cell2 & cell3 & cell4 \\
\cline{3-4}
& cell5 & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{cell6 and cell7} \\
\cline{3-4}
& cell8 & cell9 & cell10 \\
\hline
cell11 & cell12 & cell13 & cell14 \\
\hline
\multicolumn{4}{|c|}{ Multicolumn} \\
\hline
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
\caption{A table is as happy about a caption as a fiugre.}
\label{tab:exampletable}
\end{table}
\section{Conclusions}
If the document purpose calls for conclusions, this would be the place to put them.
\bibliography{references}
\bibliographystyle{plain}
\end{document}