
Masters of Bioinformatics Thesis Template KUL
Author
Hakim Elakhrass
Last Updated
8年前
License
Creative Commons CC BY 4.0
Abstract
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: