Mercurial > hg > webaudioevaluationtool
changeset 581:4b98df0aa112 Dev_main
WAC2016: Template update
author | Nicholas Jillings <n.g.r.jillings@se14.qmul.ac.uk> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 05 Mar 2016 09:27:16 +0000 |
parents | 6184c583ab93 |
children | fc6720146f80 |
files | docs/WAC2016/WAC2016.pdf docs/WAC2016/WAC2016.tex docs/WAC2016/sig-alternate-sample.tex docs/WAC2016/sig-alternate.cls docs/WAC2016/sigproc.bib docs/WAC2016/waccopyright.sty |
diffstat | 6 files changed, 732 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/docs/WAC2016/WAC2016.tex Mon Feb 29 15:38:35 2016 +0100 +++ b/docs/WAC2016/WAC2016.tex Sat Mar 05 09:27:16 2016 +0000 @@ -10,6 +10,9 @@ % Copyright \setcopyright{waclicense} +\conferenceinfo{Web Audio Conference WAC-2016,}{April 4--6, 2016, Atlanta, USA.} +\CopyrightYear{2016} % Allows default copyright year (20XX) to be over-ridden - IF NEED BE. + \newcommand*\rot{\rotatebox{90}}
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/docs/WAC2016/sig-alternate-sample.tex Sat Mar 05 09:27:16 2016 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,661 @@ +% This is "sig-alternate.tex" V2.1 April 2013 +% This file should be compiled with V2.8 of "sig-alternate.cls" May 2012 +% +% This example file demonstrates the use of the 'sig-alternate.cls' +% V2.8 LaTeX2e document class file. It is for those submitting +% articles to ACM Conference Proceedings WHO DO NOT WISH TO +% STRICTLY ADHERE TO THE SIGS (PUBS-BOARD-ENDORSED) STYLE. +% The 'sig-alternate.cls' file will produce a similar-looking, +% albeit, 'tighter' paper resulting in, invariably, fewer pages. +% +% ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +% This .tex file (and associated .cls V2.8) produces: +% 1) The Permission Statement +% 2) The Conference (location) Info information +% 3) The Copyright Line with ACM data +% 4) NO page numbers +% +% as against the acm_proc_article-sp.cls file which +% DOES NOT produce 1) thru' 3) above. +% +% Using 'sig-alternate.cls' you have control, however, from within +% the source .tex file, over both the CopyrightYear +% (defaulted to 200X) and the ACM Copyright Data +% (defaulted to X-XXXXX-XX-X/XX/XX). +% e.g. +% \CopyrightYear{2007} will cause 2007 to appear in the copyright line. +% \crdata{0-12345-67-8/90/12} will cause 0-12345-67-8/90/12 to appear in the copyright line. +% +% --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +% This .tex source is an example which *does* use +% the .bib file (from which the .bbl file % is produced). +% REMEMBER HOWEVER: After having produced the .bbl file, +% and prior to final submission, you *NEED* to 'insert' +% your .bbl file into your source .tex file so as to provide +% ONE 'self-contained' source file. +% +% ================= IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ======================= +% Questions regarding the SIGS styles, SIGS policies and +% procedures, Conferences etc. should be sent to +% Adrienne Griscti (griscti@acm.org) +% +% Technical questions _only_ to +% Gerald Murray (murray@hq.acm.org) +% =============================================================== +% +% For tracking purposes - this is V2.0 - May 2012 + +\documentclass{sig-alternate} + +\setlength{\paperheight}{11in} +\setlength{\paperwidth}{8.5in} +\usepackage[ + pass,% keep layout unchanged + % showframe,% show the layout +]{geometry} + +\begin{document} + +% Copyright +\setcopyright{waclicense} + + +%% DOI +%\doi{10.475/123_4} +% +%% ISBN +%\isbn{123-4567-24-567/08/06} +% +%%Conference +%\conferenceinfo{PLDI '13}{June 16--19, 2013, Seattle, WA, USA} +% +%\acmPrice{\$15.00} + +% +% --- Author Metadata here --- +\conferenceinfo{Web Audio Conference WAC-2016,}{April 4--6, 2016, Atlanta, USA.} +\CopyrightYear{2016} % Allows default copyright year (20XX) to be over-ridden - IF NEED BE. +%\crdata{0-12345-67-8/90/01} % Allows default copyright data (0-89791-88-6/97/05) to be over-ridden - IF NEED BE. +% --- End of Author Metadata --- + +\title{Latex Template for WAC 2016} +%\subtitle{[Extended Abstract] +%\titlenote{A full version of this paper is available as +%\textit{Author's Guide to Preparing ACM SIG Proceedings Using +%\LaTeX$2_\epsilon$\ and BibTeX} at +%\texttt{www.acm.org/eaddress.htm}}} +% +% You need the command \numberofauthors to handle the 'placement +% and alignment' of the authors beneath the title. +% +% For aesthetic reasons, we recommend 'three authors at a time' +% i.e. three 'name/affiliation blocks' be placed beneath the title. +% +% NOTE: You are NOT restricted in how many 'rows' of +% "name/affiliations" may appear. We just ask that you restrict +% the number of 'columns' to three. +% +% Because of the available 'opening page real-estate' +% we ask you to refrain from putting more than six authors +% (two rows with three columns) beneath the article title. +% More than six makes the first-page appear very cluttered indeed. +% +% Use the \alignauthor commands to handle the names +% and affiliations for an 'aesthetic maximum' of six authors. +% Add names, affiliations, addresses for +% the seventh etc. author(s) as the argument for the +% \additionalauthors command. +% These 'additional authors' will be output/set for you +% without further effort on your part as the last section in +% the body of your article BEFORE References or any Appendices. + +\numberofauthors{8} % in this sample file, there are a *total* +% of EIGHT authors. SIX appear on the 'first-page' (for formatting +% reasons) and the remaining two appear in the \additionalauthors section. +% +\author{ +% You can go ahead and credit any number of authors here, +% e.g. one 'row of three' or two rows (consisting of one row of three +% and a second row of one, two or three). +% +% The command \alignauthor (no curly braces needed) should +% precede each author name, affiliation/snail-mail address and +% e-mail address. Additionally, tag each line of +% affiliation/address with \affaddr, and tag the +% e-mail address with \email. +% +% 1st. author +\alignauthor +Ben Trovato\titlenote{Dr.~Trovato insisted his name be first.}\\ + \affaddr{Institute for Clarity in Documentation}\\ + \affaddr{1932 Wallamaloo Lane}\\ + \email{trovato@corporation.com} +% 2nd. author +\alignauthor +G.K.M. Tobin\titlenote{The secretary disavows +any knowledge of this author's actions.}\\ + \affaddr{Institute for Clarity in Documentation}\\ + \affaddr{P.O. Box 1212}\\ + \email{webmaster@marysville-ohio.com} +% 3rd. author +\alignauthor Lars Th{\o}rv{\"a}ld\titlenote{This author is the +one who did all the really hard work.}\\ + \affaddr{The Th{\o}rv{\"a}ld Group}\\ + \affaddr{1 Th{\o}rv{\"a}ld Circle}\\ + \email{larst@affiliation.org} +\and % use '\and' if you need 'another row' of author names +% 4th. author +\alignauthor Lawrence P. Leipuner\\ + \affaddr{Brookhaven Laboratories}\\ + \affaddr{Brookhaven National Lab}\\ + \email{lleipuner@researchlabs.org} +% 5th. author +\alignauthor Sean Fogarty\\ + \affaddr{NASA Ames Research Center}\\ + \affaddr{Moffett Field}\\ + \email{fogartys@amesres.org} +% 6th. author +\alignauthor Charles Palmer\\ + \affaddr{Palmer Research Laboratories}\\ + \affaddr{8600 Datapoint Drive}\\ + \email{cpalmer@prl.com} +} +% There's nothing stopping you putting the seventh, eighth, etc. +% author on the opening page (as the 'third row') but we ask, +% for aesthetic reasons that you place these 'additional authors' +% in the \additional authors block, viz. +\additionalauthors{Additional authors: John Smith (The Th{\o}rv{\"a}ld Group, +email: {\texttt{jsmith@affiliation.org}}) and Julius P.~Kumquat +(The Kumquat Consortium, email: {\texttt{jpkumquat@consortium.net}}).} +\date{30 July 1999} +% Just remember to make sure that the TOTAL number of authors +% is the number that will appear on the first page PLUS the +% number that will appear in the \additionalauthors section. + +\maketitle +\begin{sloppypar} +\begin{abstract} +In this paper, we describe the formatting guidelines for the Proceedings of the Web Audio Conference 2016. This template has been adapted from the ACM SIG Proceedings Template available at www.acm.org.\footnote{\url{http://www.acm.org/publications/article-templates/proceedings-template.html}} This paper provides a sample of a \LaTeX\ document which conforms, +somewhat loosely, to the formatting guidelines for +ACM SIG Proceedings. It is an {\em alternate} style which produces +a {\em tighter-looking} paper and was designed in response to +concerns expressed, by authors, over page-budgets. +It complements the document \textit{Author's (Alternate) Guide to +Preparing ACM SIG Proceedings Using \LaTeX$2_\epsilon$\ and Bib\TeX}. +This source file has been written with the intention of being +compiled under \LaTeX$2_\epsilon$\ and BibTeX. + +The developers have tried to include every imaginable sort +of ``bells and whistles", such as a subtitle, footnotes on +title, subtitle and authors, as well as in the text, and +every optional component (e.g. Acknowledgments, Additional +Authors, Appendices), not to mention examples of +equations, theorems, tables and figures. + +To make best use of this sample document, run it through \LaTeX\ +and BibTeX, and compare this source code with the printed +output produced by the dvi file. A compiled PDF version +is available on the web page to help you with the +`look and feel'. +\end{abstract} + + +% +% The code below should be generated by the tool at +% http://dl.acm.org/ccs.cfm +% Please copy and paste the code instead of the example below. +% +%\begin{CCSXML} +%<ccs2012> + %<concept> + %<concept_id>10010520.10010553.10010562</concept_id> + %<concept_desc>Computer systems organization~Embedded systems</concept_desc> + %<concept_significance>500</concept_significance> + %</concept> + %<concept> + %<concept_id>10010520.10010575.10010755</concept_id> + %<concept_desc>Computer systems organization~Redundancy</concept_desc> + %<concept_significance>300</concept_significance> + %</concept> + %<concept> + %<concept_id>10010520.10010553.10010554</concept_id> + %<concept_desc>Computer systems organization~Robotics</concept_desc> + %<concept_significance>100</concept_significance> + %</concept> + %<concept> + %<concept_id>10003033.10003083.10003095</concept_id> + %<concept_desc>Networks~Network reliability</concept_desc> + %<concept_significance>100</concept_significance> + %</concept> +%</ccs2012> +%\end{CCSXML} +% +%\ccsdesc[500]{Computer systems organization~Embedded systems} +%\ccsdesc[300]{Computer systems organization~Redundancy} +%\ccsdesc{Computer systems organization~Robotics} +%\ccsdesc[100]{Networks~Network reliability} +% +% +%% +%% End generated code +%% +% +%% +%% Use this command to print the description +%% +%\printccsdesc +% +%% We no longer use \terms command +%%\terms{Theory} +% +%\keywords{ACM proceedings, \LaTeX, text tagging} + +\section{Introduction} +The \textit{proceedings} are the records of a conference. +ACM seeks to give these conference by-products a uniform, +high-quality appearance. To do this, ACM has some rigid +requirements for the format of the proceedings documents: there +is a specified format (balanced double columns), a specified +set of fonts (Arial or Helvetica and Times Roman) in +certain specified sizes (for instance, 9 point for body copy), +a specified live area (18 $\times$ 23.5 cm [7" $\times$ 9.25"]) centered on +the page, specified size of margins (1.9 cm [0.75"]) top, (2.54 cm [1"]) bottom +and (1.9 cm [.75"]) left and right; specified column width +(8.45 cm [3.33"]) and gutter size (.83 cm [.33"]). + +The good news is, with only a handful of manual +settings\footnote{Two of these, the {\texttt{\char'134 numberofauthors}} +and {\texttt{\char'134 alignauthor}} commands, you have +already used; another, {\texttt{\char'134 balancecolumns}}, will +be used in your very last run of \LaTeX\ to ensure +balanced column heights on the last page.}, the \LaTeX\ document +class file handles all of this for you. + +The remainder of this document is concerned with showing, in +the context of an ``actual'' document, the \LaTeX\ commands +specifically available for denoting the structure of a +proceedings paper, rather than with giving rigorous descriptions +or explanations of such commands. + +\section{The {\secit Body} of The Paper} +Typically, the body of a paper is organized +into a hierarchical structure, with numbered or unnumbered +headings for sections, subsections, sub-subsections, and even +smaller sections. The command \texttt{{\char'134}section} that +precedes this paragraph is part of such a +hierarchy.\footnote{This is the second footnote. It +starts a series of three footnotes that add nothing +informational, but just give an idea of how footnotes work +and look. It is a wordy one, just so you see +how a longish one plays out.} \LaTeX\ handles the numbering +and placement of these headings for you, when you use +the appropriate heading commands around the titles +of the headings. If you want a sub-subsection or +smaller part to be unnumbered in your output, simply append an +asterisk to the command name. Examples of both +numbered and unnumbered headings will appear throughout the +balance of this sample document. + +Because the entire article is contained in +the \textbf{document} environment, you can indicate the +start of a new paragraph with a blank line in your +input file; that is why this sentence forms a separate paragraph. + +\subsection{Type Changes and {\subsecit Special} Characters} +We have already seen several typeface changes in this sample. You +can indicate italicized words or phrases in your text with +the command \texttt{{\char'134}textit}; emboldening with the +command \texttt{{\char'134}textbf} +and typewriter-style (for instance, for computer code) with +\texttt{{\char'134}texttt}. But remember, you do not +have to indicate typestyle changes when such changes are +part of the \textit{structural} elements of your +article; for instance, the heading of this subsection will +be in a sans serif\footnote{A third footnote, here. +Let's make this a rather short one to +see how it looks.} typeface, but that is handled by the +document class file. Take care with the use +of\footnote{A fourth, and last, footnote.} +the curly braces in typeface changes; they mark +the beginning and end of +the text that is to be in the different typeface. + +You can use whatever symbols, accented characters, or +non-English characters you need anywhere in your document; +you can find a complete list of what is +available in the \textit{\LaTeX\ +User's Guide}\cite{Lamport:LaTeX}. + +\subsection{Math Equations} +You may want to display math equations in three distinct styles: +inline, numbered or non-numbered display. Each of +the three are discussed in the next sections. + +\subsubsection{Inline (In-text) Equations} +A formula that appears in the running text is called an +inline or in-text formula. It is produced by the +\textbf{math} environment, which can be +invoked with the usual \texttt{{\char'134}begin. . .{\char'134}end} +construction or with the short form \texttt{\$. . .\$}. You +can use any of the symbols and structures, +from $\alpha$ to $\omega$, available in +\LaTeX\cite{Lamport:LaTeX}; this section will simply show a +few examples of in-text equations in context. Notice how +this equation: \begin{math}\lim_{n\rightarrow \infty}x=0\end{math}, +set here in in-line math style, looks slightly different when +set in display style. (See next section). + +\subsubsection{Display Equations} +A numbered display equation -- one set off by vertical space +from the text and centered horizontally -- is produced +by the \textbf{equation} environment. An unnumbered display +equation is produced by the \textbf{displaymath} environment. + +Again, in either environment, you can use any of the symbols +and structures available in \LaTeX; this section will just +give a couple of examples of display equations in context. +First, consider the equation, shown as an inline equation above: +\begin{equation}\lim_{n\rightarrow \infty}x=0\end{equation} +Notice how it is formatted somewhat differently in +the \textbf{displaymath} +environment. Now, we'll enter an unnumbered equation: +\begin{displaymath}\sum_{i=0}^{\infty} x + 1\end{displaymath} +and follow it with another numbered equation: +\begin{equation}\sum_{i=0}^{\infty}x_i=\int_{0}^{\pi+2} f\end{equation} +just to demonstrate \LaTeX's able handling of numbering. + +\subsection{Citations} +Citations to articles \cite{bowman:reasoning, +clark:pct, braams:babel, herlihy:methodology}, +conference proceedings \cite{clark:pct} or +books \cite{salas:calculus, Lamport:LaTeX} listed +in the Bibliography section of your +article will occur throughout the text of your article. +You should use BibTeX to automatically produce this bibliography; +you simply need to insert one of several citation commands with +a key of the item cited in the proper location in +the \texttt{.tex} file \cite{Lamport:LaTeX}. +The key is a short reference you invent to uniquely +identify each work; in this sample document, the key is +the first author's surname and a +word from the title. This identifying key is included +with each item in the \texttt{.bib} file for your article. + +The details of the construction of the \texttt{.bib} file +are beyond the scope of this sample document, but more +information can be found in the \textit{Author's Guide}, +and exhaustive details in the \textit{\LaTeX\ User's +Guide}\cite{Lamport:LaTeX}. + +This article shows only the plainest form +of the citation command, using \texttt{{\char'134}cite}. +This is what is stipulated in the SIGS style specifications. +No other citation format is endorsed or supported. + +\subsection{Tables} +Because tables cannot be split across pages, the best +placement for them is typically the top of the page +nearest their initial cite. To +ensure this proper ``floating'' placement of tables, use the +environment \textbf{table} to enclose the table's contents and +the table caption. The contents of the table itself must go +in the \textbf{tabular} environment, to +be aligned properly in rows and columns, with the desired +horizontal and vertical rules. Again, detailed instructions +on \textbf{tabular} material +is found in the \textit{\LaTeX\ User's Guide}. + +Immediately following this sentence is the point at which +Table 1 is included in the input file; compare the +placement of the table here with the table in the printed +dvi output of this document. + +\begin{table} +\centering +\caption{Frequency of Special Characters} +\begin{tabular}{|c|c|l|} \hline +Non-English or Math&Frequency&Comments\\ \hline +\O & 1 in 1,000& For Swedish names\\ \hline +$\pi$ & 1 in 5& Common in math\\ \hline +\$ & 4 in 5 & Used in business\\ \hline +$\Psi^2_1$ & 1 in 40,000& Unexplained usage\\ +\hline\end{tabular} +\end{table} + +To set a wider table, which takes up the whole width of +the page's live area, use the environment +\textbf{table*} to enclose the table's contents and +the table caption. As with a single-column table, this wide +table will ``float" to a location deemed more desirable. +Immediately following this sentence is the point at which +Table 2 is included in the input file; again, it is +instructive to compare the placement of the +table here with the table in the printed dvi +output of this document. + + +\begin{table*} +\centering +\caption{Some Typical Commands} +\begin{tabular}{|c|c|l|} \hline +Command&A Number&Comments\\ \hline +\texttt{{\char'134}alignauthor} & 100& Author alignment\\ \hline +\texttt{{\char'134}numberofauthors}& 200& Author enumeration\\ \hline +\texttt{{\char'134}table}& 300 & For tables\\ \hline +\texttt{{\char'134}table*}& 400& For wider tables\\ \hline\end{tabular} +\end{table*} +% end the environment with {table*}, NOTE not {table}! + +\subsection{Figures} +Like tables, figures cannot be split across pages; the +best placement for them +is typically the top or the bottom of the page nearest +their initial cite. To ensure this proper ``floating'' placement +of figures, use the environment +\textbf{figure} to enclose the figure and its caption. + +This sample document contains examples of \textbf{.eps} files to be +displayable with \LaTeX. If you work with pdf\LaTeX, use files in the +\textbf{.pdf} format. Note that most modern \TeX\ system will convert +\textbf{.eps} to \textbf{.pdf} for you on the fly. More details on +each of these is found in the \textit{Author's Guide}. + +\begin{figure} +\centering +\includegraphics{fly} +\caption{A sample black and white graphic.} +\end{figure} + +\begin{figure} +\centering +\includegraphics[height=1in, width=1in]{fly} +\caption{A sample black and white graphic +that has been resized with the \texttt{includegraphics} command.} +\end{figure} + + +As was the case with tables, you may want a figure +that spans two columns. To do this, and still to +ensure proper ``floating'' placement of tables, use the environment +\textbf{figure*} to enclose the figure and its caption. +and don't forget to end the environment with +{figure*}, not {figure}! + +\begin{figure*} +\centering +\includegraphics{flies} +\caption{A sample black and white graphic +that needs to span two columns of text.} +\end{figure*} + + +%\begin{figure} +%\centering +%\includegraphics[height=1in, width=1in]{rosette} +%\caption{A sample black and white graphic that has +%been resized with the \texttt{includegraphics} command.} +%\vskip -6pt +%\end{figure} + +\subsection{Theorem-like Constructs} +Other common constructs that may occur in your article are +the forms for logical constructs like theorems, axioms, +corollaries and proofs. There are +two forms, one produced by the +command \texttt{{\char'134}newtheorem} and the +other by the command \texttt{{\char'134}newdef}; perhaps +the clearest and easiest way to distinguish them is +to compare the two in the output of this sample document: + +This uses the \textbf{theorem} environment, created by +the\linebreak\texttt{{\char'134}newtheorem} command: +\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem} +\begin{theorem} +Let $f$ be continuous on $[a,b]$. If $G$ is +an antiderivative for $f$ on $[a,b]$, then +\begin{displaymath}\int^b_af(t)dt = G(b) - G(a).\end{displaymath} +\end{theorem} + +The other uses the \textbf{definition} environment, created +by the \texttt{{\char'134}newdef} command: +\newdef{definition}{Definition} +\begin{definition} +If $z$ is irrational, then by $e^z$ we mean the +unique number which has +logarithm $z$: \begin{displaymath}{\log e^z = z}\end{displaymath} +\end{definition} + +Two lists of constructs that use one of these +forms is given in the +\textit{Author's Guidelines}. + +There is one other similar construct environment, which is +already set up +for you; i.e. you must \textit{not} use +a \texttt{{\char'134}newdef} command to +create it: the \textbf{proof} environment. Here +is a example of its use: +\begin{proof} +Suppose on the contrary there exists a real number $L$ such that +\begin{displaymath} +\lim_{x\rightarrow\infty} \frac{f(x)}{g(x)} = L. +\end{displaymath} +Then +\begin{displaymath} +l=\lim_{x\rightarrow c} f(x) += \lim_{x\rightarrow c} +\left[ g{x} \cdot \frac{f(x)}{g(x)} \right ] += \lim_{x\rightarrow c} g(x) \cdot \lim_{x\rightarrow c} +\frac{f(x)}{g(x)} = 0\cdot L = 0, +\end{displaymath} +which contradicts our assumption that $l\neq 0$. +\end{proof} + +Complete rules about using these environments and using the +two different creation commands are in the +\textit{Author's Guide}; please consult it for more +detailed instructions. If you need to use another construct, +not listed therein, which you want to have the same +formatting as the Theorem +or the Definition\cite{salas:calculus} shown above, +use the \texttt{{\char'134}newtheorem} or the +\texttt{{\char'134}newdef} command, +respectively, to create it. + +\subsection*{A {\secit Caveat} for the \TeX\ Expert} +Because you have just been given permission to +use the \texttt{{\char'134}newdef} command to create a +new form, you might think you can +use \TeX's \texttt{{\char'134}def} to create a +new command: \textit{Please refrain from doing this!} +Remember that your \LaTeX\ source code is primarily intended +to create camera-ready copy, but may be converted +to other forms -- e.g. HTML. If you inadvertently omit +some or all of the \texttt{{\char'134}def}s recompilation will +be, to say the least, problematic. + +\section{Conclusions} +This paragraph will end the body of this sample document. +Remember that you might still have Acknowledgments or +Appendices; brief samples of these +follow. There is still the Bibliography to deal with; and +we will make a disclaimer about that here: with the exception +of the reference to the \LaTeX\ book, the citations in +this paper are to articles which have nothing to +do with the present subject and are used as +examples only. +%\end{document} % This is where a 'short' article might terminate + +%ACKNOWLEDGMENTS are optional +\section{Acknowledgments} +This section is optional; it is a location for you +to acknowledge grants, funding, editing assistance and +what have you. In the present case, for example, the +authors would like to thank Gerald Murray of ACM for +his help in codifying this \textit{Author's Guide} +and the \textbf{.cls} and \textbf{.tex} files that it describes. + +% +% The following two commands are all you need in the +% initial runs of your .tex file to +% produce the bibliography for the citations in your paper. +\bibliographystyle{abbrv} +\bibliography{sigproc} % sigproc.bib is the name of the Bibliography in this case +% You must have a proper ".bib" file +% and remember to run: +% latex bibtex latex latex +% to resolve all references +% +% ACM needs 'a single self-contained file'! +% +%APPENDICES are optional +%\balancecolumns +\appendix +%Appendix A +\section{Headings in Appendices} +The rules about hierarchical headings discussed above for +the body of the article are different in the appendices. +In the \textbf{appendix} environment, the command +\textbf{section} is used to +indicate the start of each Appendix, with alphabetic order +designation (i.e. the first is A, the second B, etc.) and +a title (if you include one). So, if you need +hierarchical structure +\textit{within} an Appendix, start with \textbf{subsection} as the +highest level. Here is an outline of the body of this +document in Appendix-appropriate form: +\subsection{Introduction} +\subsection{The Body of the Paper} +\subsubsection{Type Changes and Special Characters} +\subsubsection{Math Equations} +\paragraph{Inline (In-text) Equations} +\paragraph{Display Equations} +\subsubsection{Citations} +\subsubsection{Tables} +\subsubsection{Figures} +\subsubsection{Theorem-like Constructs} +\subsubsection*{A Caveat for the \TeX\ Expert} +\subsection{Conclusions} +\subsection{Acknowledgments} +\subsection{Additional Authors} +This section is inserted by \LaTeX; you do not insert it. +You just add the names and information in the +\texttt{{\char'134}additionalauthors} command at the start +of the document. +\subsection{References} +Generated by bibtex from your ~.bib file. Run latex, +then bibtex, then latex twice (to resolve references) +to create the ~.bbl file. Insert that ~.bbl file into +the .tex source file and comment out +the command \texttt{{\char'134}thebibliography}. +% This next section command marks the start of +% Appendix B, and does not continue the present hierarchy +\section{More Help for the Hardy} +The sig-alternate.cls file itself is chock-full of succinct +and helpful comments. If you consider yourself a moderately +experienced to expert user of \LaTeX, you may find reading +it useful but please remember not to change it. +%\balancecolumns % GM June 2007 +% That's all folks! +\end{sloppypar} +\end{document}
--- a/docs/WAC2016/sig-alternate.cls Mon Feb 29 15:38:35 2016 +0100 +++ b/docs/WAC2016/sig-alternate.cls Sat Mar 05 09:27:16 2016 +0000 @@ -374,7 +374,7 @@ \newfont{\affaddrit}{phvro8t at 10pt} % GM 2/4/2000 \newfont{\eaddfnt}{phvr8t at 12pt} \newfont{\ixpt}{ptmr8t at 9pt} -\newfont{\confname}{ptmri8t at 8pt} +\newfont{\confname}{ptmri8t at 7pt}%\newfont{\confname}{ptmri8t at 8pt} \newfont{\crnotice}{ptmr8t at 8pt} \newfont{\ninept}{ptmr8t at 9pt} % +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ @@ -898,8 +898,8 @@ \@float{copyrightbox}[b] \begin{center} \setlength{\unitlength}{1pc} -\begin{picture}(20,6) %Space for copyright notice -\put(0,-0.95){\crnotice{\@toappear}} +\begin{picture}(20,4) %\begin{picture}(20,6) %Space for copyright notice +\put(0,-0.25){\crnotice{\@toappear}} \end{picture} \end{center} \end@float} @@ -1512,14 +1512,14 @@ \newtoks\copyrightetc \global\copyrightetc{% -{\noindent\confname\ \the\conf\ \the\confinfo}\par\smallskip +{\noindent\confname\the\conf\ \the\confinfo}\par\smallskip%{\noindent\confname\ \the\conf\ \the\confinfo}\par\smallskip \if@printcopyright - \copyright\ \the\copyrtyr\ \@copyrightowner + \copyright\ \the\copyrtyr\ \@copyrightowner%\ \copyright\ \the\copyrtyr\ \@copyrightowner \fi \if@acmowned ISBN \else\ifnum\acm@copyrightmode=2 ISBN \else %\par\smallskip ~ \fi\fi % \the\acmcopyr -\ifx\@acmPrice\@empty.\else\dots\@acmPrice\fi\par%\smallskip +\ifx\@acmPrice\@empty\else\dots\@acmPrice\fi\par%\smallskip%\ifx\@acmPrice\@empty.\else\dots\@acmPrice\fi\par%\smallskip %{DOI: \small\expandafter\printdoi\expandafter{\@doi}% } \toappear{\fontsize{7pt}{8pt}\fontfamily{ptm}\selectfont
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/docs/WAC2016/sigproc.bib Sat Mar 05 09:27:16 2016 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +@ARTICLE{bowman:reasoning, + AUTHOR = "Mic Bowman and Saumya K. Debray and Larry L. Peterson", + TITLE = "Reasoning About Naming Systems", + JOURNAL = "ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst.", + VOLUME = {15}, + NUMBER = {5}, + PAGES = {795-825}, + MONTH = "November", + YEAR = {1993} } + +@ARTICLE{braams:babel, + AUTHOR = "Johannes Braams", + TITLE = "Babel, a Multilingual Style-Option System for Use with LaTeX's Standard Document Styles", + JOURNAL = {TUGboat}, + VOLUME = {12}, + NUMBER = {2}, + PAGES = {291-301}, + MONTH = "June", + YEAR = {1991} } + +@INPROCEEDINGS{clark:pct, + AUTHOR = "Malcolm Clark", + TITLE = "Post Congress Tristesse", + BOOKTITLE = "TeX90 Conference Proceedings", + PAGES = "84-89", + ORGANIZATION = "TeX Users Group", + MONTH = "March", + YEAR = {1991} } + +@ARTICLE{herlihy:methodology, + AUTHOR = "Maurice Herlihy", + TITLE = "A Methodology for Implementing Highly Concurrent + Data Objects", + JOURNAL = {ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst.}, + VOLUME = {15}, + NUMBER = {5}, + PAGES = {745-770}, + MONTH = "November", + YEAR = {1993} } + +@BOOK{Lamport:LaTeX, + AUTHOR = "Leslie Lamport", + TITLE = "LaTeX User's Guide and Document Reference Manual", + PUBLISHER = "Addison-Wesley Publishing Company", + ADDRESS = "Reading, Massachusetts", + YEAR = "1986" } + +@BOOK{salas:calculus, + AUTHOR = "S.L. Salas and Einar Hille", + TITLE = "Calculus: One and Several Variable", + PUBLISHER = "John Wiley and Sons", + ADDRESS = "New York", + YEAR = "1978" } + + + + + +
--- a/docs/WAC2016/waccopyright.sty Mon Feb 29 15:38:35 2016 +0100 +++ b/docs/WAC2016/waccopyright.sty Sat Mar 05 09:27:16 2016 +0000 @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ %% Right brace \} Tilde \~} \NeedsTeXFormat{LaTeX2e} \ProvidesPackage{waccopyright} -[2014/06/29 v1.2 Copyright statemens for ACM classes] +[2014/06/29 v1.2 Copyright statements for ACM classes] \newif\if@printcopyright \@printcopyrighttrue \newif\if@printpermission @@ -221,7 +221,8 @@ this article, or to allow others to do so, for Government purposes only. \or % waclicense - \includegraphics[scale=.39]{cc}\\ Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0). Attribution: owner/author(s). + \frame{\includegraphics[scale=.54]{cc}}\vspace{1mm}\vfill + Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0). \textbf{Attribution}: owner/author(s). \fi} \endinput %%