TeX - LaTeX Asked on March 30, 2021
I am a regular user of LaTeX. I have written my Master’s thesis in the book
documentclass
and it worked out pretty well, given I did not know many useful packages back then to make it look nicer. I would like to know which are the packages that you find useful to organize and structure a doctoral thesis in Physics? For example, mathtools
, tikz
and tcolorbox
are few packages that are indispensable for writing equations, positioning and editing figures and making tables for notes, highlights and similar.
Since our thesis consists of an introduction and collection of all articles written during PhD, is there a nice structure to follow? Like including the papers as separate tex file so that fonts and styles of all the papers match? I am trying to build a template from scratch so all nitty-gritty details are welcome.
There are several obvious ones, such as amsmath
, and a few of the ones you have mentioned. Of course it would be remiss not to mention the physics
package, although it is a bit of a matter of taste (cf. Alternatives to the physics package), although I generally like it.
Some of the tools I have found great include:
todonotes
(package)latexdiff
(a command line tool)cleveref
(package)citet
and citep
from natbib
(package).lineno
and setspace
(packages, great for proof reading).This is a matter of taste and department regulations. Some allow a collection of papers, others one coherent thesis, so I won't comment on this much more.
Correct answer by oliversm on March 30, 2021
In addition to @oliversm answer, the memoir
class (a superset of book
and report
) provides many means to enhance the appearance of your thesis. The documentation (> texdoc memoir
) describes, and provides the code for, an example book design and a thesis design.
Answered by Peter Wilson on March 30, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Answers
Recent Questions
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP