| % This is LLNCS.DOC the documentation file of |
| % the LaTeX2e class from Springer-Verlag |
| % for Lecture Notes in Computer Science, version 2.4 |
| \documentclass{llncs} |
| \usepackage{llncsdoc} |
| % |
| \begin{document} |
| \markboth{\LaTeXe{} Class for Lecture Notes in Computer |
| Science}{\LaTeXe{} Class for Lecture Notes in Computer Science} |
| \thispagestyle{empty} |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \LARGE\bfseries Instructions for Authors\\ |
| Coding with \LaTeX\\[2cm] |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \rule{\textwidth}{1pt} |
| \vspace{2pt} |
| \begin{flushright} |
| \Huge |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}l} |
| \LaTeXe{} Class\\ |
| for Lecture Notes\\ |
| in Computer Science\\[6pt] |
| {\Large Version 2.4} |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushright} |
| \rule{\textwidth}{1pt} |
| \vfill |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \large\itshape |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}l} |
| {\Large\upshape\bfseries Springer}\\[8pt] |
| Berlin\enspace Heidelberg\enspace New\kern0.1em York\\[5pt] |
| Barcelona\enspace Budapest\enspace Hong\kern0.2em Kong\\[5pt] |
| London\enspace Milan\enspace Paris\enspace\\[5pt] |
| Santa\kern0.2em Clara\enspace Singapore\enspace Tokyo |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \newpage |
| % |
| \section*{For further information please contact us:} |
| % |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \begin{tabular}{l@{\quad}l@{\hspace{3mm}}l@{\quad}l} |
| $\bullet$&\multicolumn{3}{@{}l}{\bfseries Springer-\kern-2pt Verlag |
| Heidelberg}\\[1mm] |
| &\multicolumn{3}{@{}l}{Department New Technologies/Product |
| Development}\\ |
| &\multicolumn{3}{@{}l}{Springer-Verlag, Postfach 105280, D-69042 |
| Heidelberg |
| 1, FRG}\\[0.5mm] |
| & Telefax: & (0\,62\,21)487688\\ |
| & & (0\,62\,21)487366\\ |
| & Internet: & \tt lncs@springer.de & for editorial questions\\ |
| & & \tt texhelp@springer.de & for \TeX{} problems |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \rule{\textwidth}{1pt} |
| % |
| \section*{Acceptable formats of your disk/magnetic tape and output:} |
| % |
| The following formats are acceptable: 5.25$^{\prime\prime}$ diskette |
| MS-DOS, 5.25$^{\prime\prime}$ CP/M, 3.5$^{\prime\prime}$ diskette |
| MS-DOS, 3.5$^{\prime\prime}$ diskette Apple MacIntosh, 9-track 1600 |
| bpi magnetic tape VAX/VMS, 9-track 1600 bpi magnetic tape ANSI with |
| label, SUN-Streamer Tape. |
| |
| Once you have completed your work using this macro package, |
| please submit your own printout of the {\em final |
| version together with the disk or magnetic tape}, containing your |
| \LaTeX{} input (source) file und the final DVI-file and make sure |
| that the text is {\em identical in both cases.} |
| |
| \bigskip |
| This macro package, as well as all other macro packages, style |
| files, and document classes that Springer distributes, are also |
| available through our mailserver (for people with only e-mail access). |
| |
| {\tt svserv@vax.ntp.springer.de}\hfil first try the \verb|help| |
| command. |
| |
| \noindent We are also reachable through the world wide web: |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \tt |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}l@{\quad}r@{\tt:}l} |
| \rmfamily URLs are & http&//www.springer.de \\ |
| & gopher&//ftp.springer.de \\ |
| & ftp&//ftp.springer.de |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| % |
| \newpage |
| \tableofcontents |
| \newpage |
| % |
| \section{Introduction} |
| % |
| Authors wishing to code their contribution |
| with \LaTeX{}, as well as those who have already coded with \LaTeX{}, |
| will be provided with a document class that will give the text the |
| desired layout. Authors are requested to |
| adhere strictly to these instructions; {\em the class |
| file must not be changed}. |
| |
| The text output area is automatically set within an area of |
| 12.2\,cm horizontally and 19.3\,cm vertically. |
| |
| If you are already familiar with \LaTeX{}, then the |
| LLNCS class should not give you any major difficulties. |
| It will change the layout to the required LLNCS style |
| (it will for instance define the layout of \verb|\section|). |
| We had to invent some extra commands, |
| which are not provided by \LaTeX{} (e.g.\ |
| \verb|\institute|, see also Sect.\,\ref{contbegin}) |
| |
| For the main body of the paper (the text) you |
| should use the commands of the standard \LaTeX{} ``article'' class. |
| Even if you are familiar with those commands, we urge you to read |
| this entire documentation thoroughly. It contains many suggestions on |
| how to use our commands properly; thus your paper |
| will be formatted exactly to LLNCS standard. |
| For the input of the references at the end of your contribution, |
| please follow our instructions given in Sect.\,\ref{refer} References. |
| |
| The majority of these hints are not specific for LLNCS; they may improve |
| your use of \LaTeX{} in general. |
| Furthermore, the documentation provides suggestions about the proper |
| editing and use |
| of the input files (capitalization, abbreviation etc.) (see |
| Sect.\,\ref{refedit} How to Edit Your Input File). |
| % |
| \section{How to Proceed} |
| % |
| The package consists of the following files: |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}p{2.5cm}l} |
| {\tt history.txt}& the version history of the package\\[2pt] |
| {\tt llncs.cls} & class file for \LaTeX{}\\[2pt] |
| {\tt llncs.dem} & an example showing how to code the text\\[2pt] |
| {\tt llncs.doc} & general instructions (source of this document),\\ |
| & {\tt llncs.doc} means {\itshape l\/}atex {\itshape doc\/}umentation for\\ |
| & {\itshape L\/}ecture {\itshape N}otes in {\itshape C\/}omputer {\itshape S\/}cience\\ |
| {\tt llncsdoc.sty} & class modifications to help for the instructions\\ |
| {\tt llncs.ind} & an external (faked) author index file\\ |
| {\tt subjidx.ind} & subject index demo from the Springer book package\\ |
| {\tt llncs.dvi} & the resultig DVI file (remember to use binary transfer!)\\[2pt] |
| {\tt sprmindx.sty} & supplementary style file for MakeIndex\\ |
| & (usage: {\tt makeindex -s sprmindx.sty <yourfile.idx>}) |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| % |
| \subsection{How to Invoke the LLNCS Document Class} |
| % |
| The LLNCS class is an extension of the standard \LaTeX{} ``article'' |
| document class. Therefore you may use all ``article'' commands for the |
| body of your contribution to prepare your manuscript. |
| LLNCS class is invoked by replacing ``article'' by ``llncs'' in the |
| first line of your document: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \documentclass{llncs} |
| % |
| \begin{document} |
| <Your contribution> |
| \end{document} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| \subsection{Contributions Already Coded with \protect\LaTeX{} without |
| the LLNCS document class} |
| % |
| If your file is already coded with \LaTeX{} you can easily |
| adapt it a posteriori to the LLNCS document class. |
| |
| Please refrain from using any \LaTeX{} or \TeX{} commands |
| that affect the layout or formatting of your document (i.e. commands |
| like \verb|\textheight|, \verb|\vspace|, \verb|\headsep| etc.). |
| There may nevertheless be exceptional occasions on which to |
| use some of them. |
| |
| The LLNCS document class has been carefully designed to produce the |
| right layout from your \LaTeX{} input. If there is anything specific you |
| would like to do and for which the style file does not provide a |
| command, {\em please contact us}. Same holds for any error and bug you |
| discover (there is however no reward for this -- sorry). |
| % |
| \section{General Rules for Coding Formulas} |
| % |
| With mathematical formulas you may proceed as described |
| in Sect.\,3.3 of the {\em \LaTeX{} User's Guide \& Reference |
| Manual\/} by Leslie Lamport (2nd~ed. 1994), Addison-Wesley Publishing |
| Company, Inc. |
| |
| Equations are automatically numbered sequentially throughout your |
| contribution using arabic numerals in parentheses on the right-hand |
| side. |
| |
| When you are working in math mode everything is typeset in italics. |
| Sometimes you need to insert non-mathematical elements (e.g.\ |
| words or phrases). Such insertions should be coded in roman |
| (with \verb|\mbox|) as illustrated in the following example: |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{equation} |
| \left(\frac{a^{2} + b^{2}}{c^{3}} \right) = 1 \quad |
| \mbox{ if } c\neq 0 \mbox{ and if } a,b,c\in \bbbr \enspace . |
| \end{equation} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| {\itshape Sample Output} |
| \begin{equation} |
| \left(\frac{a^{2} + b^{2}}{c^{3}} \right) = 1 \quad |
| \mbox{ if } c\neq 0 \mbox{ and if } a,b,c\in \bbbr \enspace . |
| \end{equation} |
| |
| If you wish to start a new paragraph immediately after a displayed |
| equation, insert a blank line so as to produce the required |
| indentation. If there is no new paragraph either do not insert |
| a blank line or code \verb|\noindent| immediately before |
| continuing the text. |
| |
| Please punctuate a displayed equation in the same way as other |
| ordinary text but with an \verb|\enspace| before end punctuation. |
| |
| Note that the sizes of the parentheses or other delimiter |
| symbols used in equations should ideally match the height of the |
| formulas being enclosed. This is automatically taken care of by |
| the following \LaTeX{} commands:\\[2mm] |
| \verb|\left(| or \verb|\left[| and |
| \verb|\right)| or \verb|\right]|. |
| % |
| \subsection{Italic and Roman Type in Math Mode} |
| % |
| \begin{alpherate} |
| \item |
| In math mode \LaTeX{} treats all letters as though they |
| were mathematical or physical variables, hence they are typeset as |
| characters of their own in |
| italics. However, for certain components of formulas, like short texts, |
| this would be incorrect and therefore coding in roman is required. |
| Roman should also be used for |
| subscripts and superscripts {\em in formulas\/} where these are |
| merely labels and not in themselves variables, |
| e.g. $T_{\mathrm{eff}}$ \emph{not} $T_{eff}$, |
| $T_{\mathrm K}$ \emph{not} $T_K$ (K = Kelvin), |
| $m_{\mathrm e}$ \emph{not} $m_e$ (e = electron). |
| However, do not code for roman |
| if the sub/superscripts represent variables, |
| e.g.\ $\sum_{i=1}^{n} a_{i}$. |
| \item |
| Please ensure that {\em physical units\/} (e.g.\ pc, erg s$^{-1}$ |
| K, cm$^{-3}$, W m$^{-2}$ Hz$^{-1}$, m kg s$^{-2}$ A$^{-2}$) and |
| {\em abbreviations\/} such as Ord, Var, GL, SL, sgn, const.\ |
| are always set in roman type. To ensure |
| this use the \verb|\mathrm| command: \verb|\mathrm{Hz}|. |
| On p.\ 44 of the {\em \LaTeX{} User's Guide \& Reference |
| Manual\/} by Leslie Lamport you will find the names of |
| common mathe\-matical functions, such as log, sin, exp, max and sup. |
| These should be coded as \verb|\log|, |
| \verb|\sin|, \verb|\exp|, \verb|\max|, \verb|\sup| |
| and will appear in roman automatically. |
| \item |
| Chemical symbols and formulas should be coded for roman, |
| e.g.\ Fe not $Fe$, H$_2$O not {\em H$_2$O}. |
| \item |
| Familiar foreign words and phrases, e.g.\ et al., |
| a priori, in situ, brems\-strah\-lung, eigenvalues should not be |
| italicized. |
| \end{alpherate} |
| % |
| \section{How to Edit Your Input (Source) File} |
| \label{refedit} |
| % |
| \subsection{Headings}\label{headings} |
| % |
| All words in headings should be capitalized except for conjunctions, |
| prepositions (e.g.\ on, of, by, and, or, but, from, with, without, |
| under) and definite and indefinite articles (the, a, an) unless they |
| appear at the beginning. Formula letters must be typeset as in the text. |
| % |
| \subsection{Capitalization and Non-capitalization} |
| % |
| \begin{alpherate} |
| \item |
| The following should always be capitalized: |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item |
| Headings (see preceding Sect.\,\ref{headings}) |
| \item |
| Abbreviations and expressions |
| in the text such as Fig(s)., Table(s), Sect(s)., Chap(s)., |
| Theorem, Corollary, Definition etc. when used with numbers, e.g.\ |
| Fig.\,3, Table\,1, Theorem 2. |
| \end{itemize} |
| Please follow the special rules in Sect.\,\ref{abbrev} for referring to |
| equations. |
| \item |
| The following should {\em not\/} be capitalized: |
| \begin{itemize} |
| \item |
| The words figure(s), table(s), equation(s), theorem(s) in the text when |
| used without an accompanying number. |
| \item |
| Figure legends and table captions except for names and abbreviations. |
| \end{itemize} |
| \end{alpherate} |
| % |
| \subsection{Abbreviation of Words}\label{abbrev} |
| % |
| \begin{alpherate} |
| \item |
| The following {\em should} be abbreviated when they appear in running |
| text {\em unless\/} they come at the beginning of a sentence: Chap., |
| Sect., Fig.; e.g.\ The results are depicted in Fig.\,5. Figure 9 reveals |
| that \dots .\\ |
| {\em Please note\/}: Equations should usually be referred to solely by |
| their number in parentheses: e.g.\ (14). However, when the reference |
| comes at the beginning of a sentence, the unabbreviated word |
| ``Equation'' should be used: e.g.\ Equation (14) is very important. |
| However, (15) makes it clear that \dots . |
| \item |
| If abbreviations of names or concepts are used |
| throughout the text, they should be defined at first occurrence, |
| e.g.\ Plurisubharmonic (PSH) Functions, Strong Optimization (SOPT) |
| Problem. |
| \end{alpherate} |
| % |
| \section{How to Code the Beginning of Your Contribution} |
| \label{contbegin} |
| % |
| The title of a single contribution (it is mandatory) should be coded as |
| follows: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \title{<Your contribution title>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| All words in titles should be capitalized except for conjunctions, |
| prepositions (e.g.\ on, of, by, and, or, but, from, with, without, |
| under) and definite and indefinite articles (the, a, an) unless they |
| appear at the beginning. Formula letters must be typeset as in the text. |
| Titles have no end punctuation. |
| |
| If a long \verb|\title| must be divided please use the code \verb|\\| |
| (for new line). |
| |
| If you are to produce running heads for a specific volume the standard |
| (of no such running heads) is overwritten with the \verb|[runningheads]| |
| option in the \verb|\documentclass| line. For long titles that do not |
| fit in the single line of the running head a warning is generated. |
| You can specify an abbreviated title for the running head on odd pages |
| with the command |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \titlerunning{<Your abbreviated contribution title>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| There is also a possibility to change the text of the title that goes |
| into the table of contents (that's for volume editors only -- there is |
| no table of contents for a single contribution). For this use the |
| command |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \toctitle{<Your changed title for the table of contents>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| An optional subtitle may follow then: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \subtitle{<subtitle of your contribution>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Now the name(s) of the author(s) must be given: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \author{<author(s) name(s)>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| Numbers referring to different addresses or affiliations are |
| to be attached to each author with the \verb|\inst{<no>}| command. |
| If there is more than one author, the order is up to you; |
| the \verb|\and| command provides for the separation. |
| |
| If you have done this correctly, this entry now reads, for example: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \author{Ivar Ekeland\inst{1} \and Roger Temam\inst{2}} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| The first name\footnote{Other initials are optional |
| and may be inserted if this is the usual |
| way of writing your name, e.g.\ Alfred J.~Holmes, E.~Henry Green.} |
| is followed by the surname. |
| |
| As for the title there exist two additional commands (again for volume |
| editors only) for a different author list. One for the running head |
| (on odd pages) -- if there is any: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \authorrunning{<abbreviated author list>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| And one for the table of contents where the |
| affiliation of each author is simply added in braces. |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \tocauthor{<enhanced author list for the table of contents>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Next the address(es) of institute(s), company etc. is (are) required. |
| If there is more than one address, the entries are numbered |
| automatically with \verb|\and|, in the order in which you type them. |
| Please make sure that the numbers match those placed next to |
| to the authors' names to reflect the affiliation. |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \institute{<name of an institute> |
| \and <name of the next institute> |
| \and <name of the next institute>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| In addition, you can use |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \email{<email address>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| to provide your email address within \verb|\institute|. If you need to |
| typeset the tilde character -- e.g. for your web page in your unix |
| system's home directory -- the \verb|\homedir| command will happily do |
| this. |
| |
| \medskip |
| If footnote like things are needed anywhere in the contribution heading |
| please code |
| (immediately after the word where the footnote indicator should be |
| placed): |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \thanks{<text>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \verb|\thanks| may only appear in \verb|\title|, \verb|\author| |
| and \verb|\institute| to footnote anything. If there are two or more |
| footnotes or affiliation marks to a specific item separate them with |
| \verb|\fnmsep| (i.e. {\itshape f}oot\emph note \emph mark |
| \emph{sep}arator). |
| |
| \medskip\noindent |
| The command |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \maketitle |
| \end{verbatim} |
| then formats the complete heading of your article. If you leave |
| it out the work done so far will produce \emph{no} text. |
| |
| Then the abstract should follow. Simply code |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{abstract} |
| <Text of the summary of your article> |
| \end{abstract} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| or refer to the demonstration file {\tt llncs.dem} for an example or |
| to the {\em Sample Input\/} on p.~\pageref{samppage}. |
| |
| \subsubsection{Remark to Running Heads and the Table of Contents} |
| \leavevmode\\[\medskipamount] |
| If you are the author of a single contribution you normally have no |
| running heads and no table of contents. Both are done only by the editor |
| of the volume or at the printers. |
| % |
| \section{Special Commands for the Volume Editor} |
| The volume editor can produce a complete camera ready output including |
| running heads, a table of contents, preliminary text (frontmatter), and |
| index or glossary. For activating the running heads there is the class |
| option \verb|[runningheads]|. |
| |
| The table of contents of the volume is printed wherever |
| \verb|\tableofcontents| is placed. A simple compilation of all |
| contributions (fields \verb|\title| and \verb|\author|) is done. If you |
| wish to change this automatically produced list use the commands |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \titlerunning \toctitle |
| \authorrunning \tocauthor |
| \end{verbatim} |
| to enhance the information in the specific contributions. See the |
| demonstration file \verb|llncs.dem| for examples. |
| |
| An additional structure can be added to the table of contents with the |
| \verb|\addtocmark{<text>}| command. It has an optional numerical |
| argument, a digit from 1 through 3. 3 (the default) makes an unnumbered |
| chapter like entry in the table of contents. If you code |
| \verb|\addtocmark[2]{text}| the corresponding page number is listed |
| also, \verb|\addtocmark[1]{text}| even introduces a chapter number |
| beyond it. |
| % |
| \section{How to Code Your Text} |
| % |
| The contribution title and all headings should be capitalized |
| except for conjunctions, prepositions (e.g.\ on, of, by, and, or, but, |
| from, with, without, under) and definite and indefinite articles (the, |
| a, an) unless they appear at the beginning. Formula letters must be |
| typeset as in the text. |
| |
| Headings will be automatically numbered by the following codes.\\[2mm] |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \section{This is a First-Order Title} |
| \subsection{This is a Second-Order Title} |
| \subsubsection{This is a Third-Order Title.} |
| \paragraph{This is a Fourth-Order Title.} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \verb|\section| and \verb|\subsection| have no end punctuation.\\ |
| \verb|\subsubsection| and \verb|\paragraph| |
| need to be punctuated at the end. |
| |
| In addition to the above-mentioned headings your text may be structured |
| by subsections indicated by run-in headings (theorem-like environments). |
| All the theorem-like environments are numbered automatically |
| throughout the sections of your document -- each with its own counter. |
| If you want the theorem-like environments to use the same counter |
| just specify the documentclass option \verb|envcountsame|: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \documentclass[envcountsame]{llncs} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| If your first call for a theorem-like environment then is e.g. |
| \verb|\begin{lemma}|, it will be numbered 1; if corollary follows, |
| this will be numbered 2; if you then call lemma again, this will be |
| numbered 3. |
| |
| But in case you want to reset such counters to 1 in each section, |
| please specify the documentclass option \verb|envcountreset|: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \documentclass[envcountreset]{llncs} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| Even a numbering on section level (including the section counter) is |
| possible with the documentclass option \verb|envcountsect|. |
| |
| \section{Predefined Theorem like Environments}\label{builtintheo} |
| The following variety of run-in headings are at your disposal: |
| \begin{alpherate} |
| \item |
| {\bfseries Bold} run-in headings with italicized text |
| as built-in environments: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{corollary} <text> \end{corollary} |
| \begin{lemma} <text> \end{lemma} |
| \begin{proposition} <text> \end{proposition} |
| \begin{theorem} <text> \end{theorem} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \item |
| The following generally appears as {\itshape italic} run-in heading: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{proof} <text> \qed \end{proof} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| It is unnumbered and may contain an eye catching square (call for that |
| with \verb|\qed|) before the environment ends. |
| \item |
| Further {\itshape italic} or {\bfseries bold} run-in headings with roman |
| environment body may also occur: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{definition} <text> \end{definition} |
| \begin{example} <text> \end{example} |
| \begin{exercise} <text> \end{exercise} |
| \begin{note} <text> \end{note} |
| \begin{problem} <text> \end{problem} |
| \begin{question} <text> \end{question} |
| \begin{remark} <text> \end{remark} |
| \begin{solution} <text> \end{solution} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \end{alpherate} |
| |
| \section{Defining your Own Theorem like Environments} |
| We have enhanced the standard \verb|\newtheorem| command and slightly |
| changed its syntax to get two new commands \verb|\spnewtheorem| and |
| \verb|\spnewtheorem*| that now can be used to define additional |
| environments. They require two additional arguments namely the type |
| style in which the keyword of the environment appears and second the |
| style for the text of your new environment. |
| |
| \verb|\spnewtheorem| can be used in two ways. |
| \subsection{Method 1 {\itshape (preferred)}} |
| You may want to create an environment that shares its counter |
| with another environment, say {\em main theorem\/} to be numbered like |
| the predefined {\em theorem\/}. In this case, use the syntax |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \spnewtheorem{<env_nam>}[<num_like>]{<caption>} |
| {<cap_font>}{<body_font>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \noindent |
| Here the environment with which the new environment should share its |
| counter is specified with the optional argument \verb|[<num_like>]|. |
| |
| \paragraph{Sample Input} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \spnewtheorem{mainth}[theorem]{Main Theorem}{\bfseries}{\itshape} |
| \begin{theorem} The early bird gets the worm. \end{theorem} |
| \begin{mainth} The early worm gets eaten. \end{mainth} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \medskip\noindent |
| {\em Sample Output} |
| |
| \medskip\noindent |
| {\bfseries Theorem 3.}\enspace {\em The early bird gets the worm.} |
| |
| \medskip\noindent |
| {\bfseries Main Theorem 4.} The early worm gets eaten. |
| |
| \bigskip |
| The sharing of the default counter (\verb|[theorem]|) is desired. If you |
| omit the optional second argument of \verb|\spnewtheorem| a separate |
| counter for your new environment is used throughout your document. |
| |
| \subsection[Method 2]{Method 2 {\itshape (assumes {\tt[envcountsect]} |
| documentstyle option)}} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \spnewtheorem{<env_nam>}{<caption>}[<within>] |
| {<cap_font>}{<body_font>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \noindent |
| This defines a new environment \verb|<env_nam>| which prints the caption |
| \verb|<caption>| in the font \verb|<cap_font>| and the text itself in |
| the font \verb|<body_font>|. The environment is numbered beginning anew |
| with every new sectioning element you specify with the optional |
| parameter \verb|<within>|. |
| |
| \medskip\noindent |
| \paragraph{Example} \leavevmode |
| |
| \medskip\noindent |
| \verb|\spnewtheorem{joke}{Joke}[subsection]{\bfseries}{\rmfamily}| |
| |
| \medskip |
| \noindent defines a new environment called \verb|joke| which prints the |
| caption {\bfseries Joke} in boldface and the text in roman. The jokes are |
| numbered starting from 1 at the beginning of every subsection with the |
| number of the subsection preceding the number of the joke e.g. 7.2.1 for |
| the first joke in subsection 7.2. |
| |
| \subsection{Unnumbered Environments} |
| If you wish to have an unnumbered environment, please |
| use the syntax |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \spnewtheorem*{<env_nam>}{<caption>}{<cap_font>}{<body_font>} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \section{Program Codes} |
| In case you want to show pieces of program code, just use the |
| \verb|verbatim| environment or the \verb|verbatim| package of \LaTeX. |
| (There also exist various pretty printers for some programming |
| languages.) |
| % |
| \noindent |
| \subsection*{Sample Input {\rmfamily(of a simple |
| contribution)}}\label{samppage} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \title{Hamiltonian Mechanics} |
| |
| \author{Ivar Ekeland\inst{1} \and Roger Temam\inst{2}} |
| |
| \institute{Princeton University, Princeton NJ 08544, USA |
| \and |
| Universit\'{e} de Paris-Sud, |
| Laboratoire d'Analyse Num\'{e}rique, B\^{a}timent 425,\\ |
| F-91405 Orsay Cedex, France} |
| |
| \maketitle |
| % |
| \begin{abstract} |
| This paragraph shall summarize the contents of the paper |
| in short terms. |
| \end{abstract} |
| % |
| \section{Fixed-Period Problems: The Sublinear Case} |
| % |
| With this chapter, the preliminaries are over, and we begin the |
| search for periodic solutions \dots |
| % |
| \subsection{Autonomous Systems} |
| % |
| In this section we will consider the case when the Hamiltonian |
| $H(x)$ \dots |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{The General Case: Nontriviality.} |
| % |
| We assume that $H$ is |
| $\left(A_{\infty}, B_{\infty}\right)$-subqua\-dra\-tic |
| at infinity, for some constant \dots |
| % |
| \paragraph{Notes and Comments.} |
| The first results on subharmonics were \dots |
| % |
| \begin{proposition} |
| Assume $H'(0)=0$ and $ H(0)=0$. Set \dots |
| \end{proposition} |
| \begin{proof}[of proposition] |
| Condition (8) means that, for every $\delta'>\delta$, there is |
| some $\varepsilon>0$ such that \dots \qed |
| \end{proof} |
| % |
| \begin{example}[\rmfamily (External forcing)] |
| Consider the system \dots |
| \end{example} |
| \begin{corollary} |
| Assume $H$ is $C^{2}$ and |
| $\left(a_{\infty}, b_{\infty}\right)$-subquadratic |
| at infinity. Let \dots |
| \end{corollary} |
| \begin{lemma} |
| Assume that $H$ is $C^{2}$ on $\bbbr^{2n}\backslash \{0\}$ |
| and that $H''(x)$ is \dots |
| \end{lemma} |
| \begin{theorem}[(Ghoussoub-Preiss)] |
| Let $X$ be a Banach Space and $\Phi:X\to\bbbr$ \dots |
| \end{theorem} |
| \begin{definition} |
| We shall say that a $C^{1}$ function $\Phi:X\to\bbbr$ |
| satisfies \dots |
| \end{definition} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| {\itshape Sample Output\/} (follows on the next page together with |
| examples of the above run-in headings) |
| \newcounter{save}\setcounter{save}{\value{section}} |
| {\def\addtocontents#1#2{}% |
| \def\addcontentsline#1#2#3{}% |
| \def\markboth#1#2{}% |
| % |
| \title{Hamiltonian Mechanics} |
| |
| \author{Ivar Ekeland\inst{1} \and Roger Temam\inst{2}} |
| |
| \institute{Princeton University, Princeton NJ 08544, USA |
| \and |
| Universit\'{e} de Paris-Sud, |
| Laboratoire d'Analyse Num\'{e}rique, B\^{a}timent 425,\\ |
| F-91405 Orsay Cedex, France} |
| |
| \maketitle |
| % |
| \begin{abstract} |
| This paragraph shall summarize the contents of the paper |
| in short terms. |
| \end{abstract} |
| % |
| \section{Fixed-Period Problems: The Sublinear Case} |
| % |
| With this chapter, the preliminaries are over, and we begin the search |
| for periodic solutions \dots |
| % |
| \subsection{Autonomous Systems} |
| % |
| In this section we will consider the case when the Hamiltonian |
| $H(x)$ \dots |
| % |
| \subsubsection{The General Case: Nontriviality.} |
| % |
| We assume that $H$ is |
| $\left(A_{\infty}, B_{\infty}\right)$-subqua\-dra\-tic at |
| infinity, for some constant \dots |
| % |
| \paragraph{Notes and Comments.} |
| The first results on subharmonics were \dots |
| % |
| \begin{proposition} |
| Assume $H'(0)=0$ and $ H(0)=0$. Set \dots |
| \end{proposition} |
| \begin{proof}[of proposition] |
| Condition (8) means that, for every $\delta'>\delta$, there is |
| some $\varepsilon>0$ such that \dots \qed |
| \end{proof} |
| % |
| \begin{example}[{{\rmfamily External forcing}}] |
| Consider the system \dots |
| \end{example} |
| \begin{corollary} |
| Assume $H$ is $C^{2}$ and |
| $\left(a_{\infty}, b_{\infty}\right)$-subquadratic |
| at infinity. Let \dots |
| \end{corollary} |
| \begin{lemma} |
| Assume that $H$ is $C^{2}$ on $\bbbr^{2n}\backslash \{0\}$ |
| and that $H''(x)$ is \dots |
| \end{lemma} |
| \begin{theorem}[Ghoussoub-Preiss] |
| Let $X$ be a Banach Space and $\Phi:X\to\bbbr$ \dots |
| \end{theorem} |
| \begin{definition} |
| We shall say that a $C^{1}$ function $\Phi:X\to\bbbr$ satisfies \dots |
| \end{definition} |
| % |
| }\setcounter{section}{\value{save}} |
| \section{Fine Tuning of the Text} |
| % |
| The following should be used to improve the readability of the text: |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}p{.19\textwidth}p{.79\textwidth}} |
| \verb|\,| & a thin space, e.g.\ between numbers or between units |
| and num\-bers; a line division will not be made |
| following this space\\ |
| \verb|--| & en dash; two strokes, without a space at either end\\ |
| \verb*| -- |& en dash; two strokes, with a space at either end\\ |
| \verb|-| & hyphen; one stroke, no space at either end\\ |
| \verb|$-$| & minus, in the text {\em only} \\[8mm] |
| {\em Input} & \verb|21\,$^{\circ}$C etc.,|\\ |
| & \verb|Dr h.\,c.\,Rockefellar-Smith \dots|\\ |
| & \verb|20,000\,km and Prof.\,Dr Mallory \dots|\\ |
| & \verb|1950--1985 \dots|\\ |
| & \verb|this -- written on a computer -- is now printed|\\ |
| & \verb|$-30$\,K \dots|\\[3mm] |
| {\em Output}& 21\,$^{\circ}$C etc., Dr h.\,c.\,Rockefellar-Smith \dots\\ |
| & 20,000\,km and Prof.\,Dr Mallory \dots\\ |
| & 1950--1985 \dots\\ |
| & this -- written on a computer -- is now printed\\ |
| & $-30$\,K \dots |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| % |
| \section {Special Typefaces} |
| % |
| Normal type (roman text) need not be coded. {\itshape Italic} |
| (\verb|{\em <text>}| better still \verb|\emph{<text>}|) or, if |
| necessary, {\bfseries boldface} should be used for emphasis.\\[6pt] |
| \begin{minipage}[t]{\textwidth} |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}p{.25\textwidth}@{\hskip6pt}p{.73\textwidth}@{}} |
| \verb|{\itshape Text}| & {\itshape Italicized Text}\\[2pt] |
| \verb|{\em Text}| & {\em Emphasized Text -- |
| if you would like to emphasize a {\em definition} within an |
| italicized text (e.g.\ of a {\em theorem)} you should code the |
| expression to be emphasized by} \verb|\em|.\\[2pt] |
| \verb|{\bfseries Text}|& {\bfseries Important Text}\\[2pt] |
| \verb|\vec{Symbol}| & Vectors may only appear in math mode. The default |
| \LaTeX{} vector symbol has been adapted\footnotemark\ |
| to LLNCS conventions.\\[2pt] |
| & \verb|$\vec{A \times B\cdot C}| yields $\vec{A\times B\cdot C}$\\ |
| & \verb|$\vec{A}^{T} \otimes \vec{B} \otimes|\\ |
| & \verb|\vec{\hat{D}}$|yields $\vec{A}^{T} \otimes \vec{B} \otimes |
| \vec{\hat{D}}$ |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \end{minipage} |
| |
| \footnotetext{If you absolutely must revive the original \LaTeX{} |
| design of the vector symbol (as an arrow accent), please specify the |
| option \texttt{[orivec]} in the \texttt{documentclass} line.} |
| \newpage |
| % |
| \section {Footnotes} |
| % |
| Footnotes within the text should be coded: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \footnote{Text} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| Text with a footnote\verb|\footnote{The |{\tt footnote is automatically |
| numbered.}\verb|}| and text continues \dots |
| \end{flushleft} |
| {\itshape Sample Output} |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| Text with a footnote\footnote{The footnote is automatically numbered.} |
| and text continues \dots |
| \end{flushleft} |
| % |
| \section {Lists} |
| % |
| Please code lists as described below:\\[2mm] |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{enumerate} |
| \item First item |
| \item Second item |
| \begin{enumerate} |
| \item First nested item |
| \item Second nested item |
| \end{enumerate} |
| \item Third item |
| \end{enumerate} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| {\itshape Sample Output} |
| \begin{enumerate} |
| \item First item |
| \item Second item |
| \begin{enumerate} |
| \item First nested item |
| \item Second nested item |
| \end{enumerate} |
| \item Third item |
| \end{enumerate} |
| % |
| \section {Figures} |
| % |
| Figure environments should be inserted after (not in) |
| the paragraph in which the figure is first mentioned. |
| They will be numbered automatically. |
| |
| Preferably the images should be enclosed as PostScript files -- best as |
| EPS data using the epsfig package. |
| |
| If you cannot include them into your output this way and use other |
| techniques for a separate production, |
| the figures (line drawings and those containing halftone inserts |
| as well as halftone figures) {\em should not be pasted into your |
| laserprinter output}. They should be enclosed separately in camera-ready |
| form (original artwork, glossy prints, photographs and/or slides). The |
| lettering should be suitable for reproduction, and after a |
| probably necessary reduction the height of capital letters should be at |
| least 1.8\,mm and not more than 2.5\,mm. |
| Check that lines and other details are uniformly black and |
| that the lettering on figures is clearly legible. |
| |
| To leave the desired amount of space for the height of |
| your figures, please use the coding described below. |
| As can be seen in the output, we will automatically |
| provide 1\,cm space above and below the figure, |
| so that you should only leave the space equivalent to the size of the |
| figure itself. Please note that ``\verb|x|'' in the following |
| coding stands for the actual height of the figure: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{figure} |
| \vspace{x cm} |
| \caption[ ]{...text of caption...} (Do type [ ]) |
| \end{figure} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{figure} |
| \vspace{2.5cm} |
| \caption{This is the caption of the figure displaying a white |
| eagle and a white horse on a snow field} |
| \end{figure} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| {\itshape Sample Output} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \begin{figure} |
| \vspace{2.5cm} |
| \caption{This is the caption of the figure displaying a white eagle and |
| a white horse on a snow field} |
| \end{figure} |
| % |
| \section{Tables} |
| % |
| Table captions should be treated |
| in the same way as figure legends, except that |
| the table captions appear {\itshape above} the tables. The tables |
| will be numbered automatically. |
| % |
| \subsection{Tables Coded with \protect\LaTeX{}} |
| % |
| Please use the following coding:\\[2mm] |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{table} |
| \caption{Critical $N$ values} |
| \begin{tabular}{llllll} |
| \hline\noalign{\smallskip} |
| ${\mathrm M}_\odot$ & $\beta_{0}$ & $T_{\mathrm c6}$ & $\gamma$ |
| & $N_{\mathrm{crit}}^{\mathrm L}$ |
| & $N_{\mathrm{crit}}^{\mathrm{Te}}$\\ |
| \noalign{\smallskip} |
| \hline |
| \noalign{\smallskip} |
| 30 & 0.82 & 38.4 & 35.7 & 154 & 320 \\ |
| 60 & 0.67 & 42.1 & 34.7 & 138 & 340 \\ |
| 120 & 0.52 & 45.1 & 34.0 & 124 & 370 \\ |
| \hline |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{table} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| \medskip\noindent{\itshape Sample Output} |
| \begin{table} |
| \caption{Critical $N$ values} |
| \begin{center} |
| \renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.4} |
| \setlength\tabcolsep{3pt} |
| \begin{tabular}{llllll} |
| \hline\noalign{\smallskip} |
| ${\mathrm M}_\odot$ & $\beta_{0}$ & $T_{\mathrm c6}$ & $\gamma$ |
| & $N_{\mathrm{crit}}^{\mathrm L}$ |
| & $N_{\mathrm{crit}}^{\mathrm{Te}}$\\ |
| \noalign{\smallskip} |
| \hline |
| \noalign{\smallskip} |
| 30 & 0.82 & 38.4 & 35.7 & 154 & 320 \\ |
| 60 & 0.67 & 42.1 & 34.7 & 138 & 340 \\ |
| 120 & 0.52 & 45.1 & 34.0 & 124 & 370 \\ |
| \hline |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{center} |
| \end{table} |
| |
| Before continuing your text you need an empty line. \dots |
| |
| \vspace{3mm} |
| For further information you will find a complete description of |
| the tabular environment |
| on p.~62~ff. and p.~204 of the {\em \LaTeX{} User's Guide \& Reference |
| Manual\/} by Leslie Lamport. |
| % |
| \subsection{Tables Not Coded with \protect\LaTeX{}} |
| % |
| If you do not wish to code your table using \LaTeX{} |
| but prefer to have it reproduced separately, |
| proceed as for figures and use the following coding:\\[2mm] |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{table} |
| \caption{text of your caption} |
| \vspace{x cm} % the actual height needed for your table |
| \end{table} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| \subsection{Signs and Characters} |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{Special Signs.} |
| % |
| You may need to use special signs. The available ones are listed in the |
| {\em \LaTeX{} User's Guide \& Reference Manual\/} by Leslie Lamport, |
| pp.~41\,ff. |
| We have created further symbols for math mode (enclosed in \$): |
| \begin{center} |
| \begin{tabular}{l@{\hspace{1em}yields\hspace{1em}} |
| c@{\hspace{3em}}l@{\hspace{1em}yields\hspace{1em}}c} |
| \verb|\grole| & $\grole$ & \verb|\getsto| & $\getsto$\\ |
| \verb|\lid| & $\lid$ & \verb|\gid| & $\gid$ |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{center} |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{Gothic (Fraktur).} |
| % |
| If gothic letters are {\itshape necessary}, please use those of the |
| relevant \AmSTeX{} alphabet which are available using the amstex |
| package of the American Mathematical Society. |
| |
| In \LaTeX{} only the following gothic letters are available: |
| \verb|$\Re$| yields $\Re$ and \verb|$\Im$| yields $\Im$. These should |
| {\itshape not\/} be used when you need gothic letters for your contribution. |
| Use \AmSTeX{} gothic as explained above. For the real and the imaginary |
| parts of a complex number within math mode you should use instead: |
| \verb|$\mathrm{Re}$| (which yields Re) or \verb|$\mathrm{Im}$| (which |
| yields Im). |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{Script.} |
| % |
| For script capitals use the coding |
| \begin{center} |
| \begin{tabular}{l@{\hspace{1em}which yields\hspace{1em}}c} |
| \verb|$\mathcal{AB}$| & $\mathcal{AB}$ |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{center} |
| (see p.~42 of the \LaTeX{} book). |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{Special Roman.} |
| % |
| If you need other symbols than those below, you could use |
| the blackboard bold characters of \AmSTeX{}, but there might arise |
| capacity problems |
| in loading additional \AmSTeX{} fonts. Therefore we created |
| the blackboard bold characters listed below. |
| Some of them are not esthetically |
| satisfactory. This need not deter you from using them: |
| in the final printed form they will be |
| replaced by the well-designed MT (monotype) characters of |
| the phototypesetting machine. |
| \begin{flushleft} |
| \begin{tabular}{@{}ll@{ yields } |
| c@{\hspace{1.em}}ll@{ yields }c} |
| \verb|\bbbc| & (complex numbers) & $\bbbc$ |
| & \verb|\bbbf| & (blackboard bold F) & $\bbbf$\\ |
| \verb|\bbbh| & (blackboard bold H) & $\bbbh$ |
| & \verb|\bbbk| & (blackboard bold K) & $\bbbk$\\ |
| \verb|\bbbm| & (blackboard bold M) & $\bbbm$ |
| & \verb|\bbbn| & (natural numbers N) & $\bbbn$\\ |
| \verb|\bbbp| & (blackboard bold P) & $\bbbp$ |
| & \verb|\bbbq| & (rational numbers) & $\bbbq$\\ |
| \verb|\bbbr| & (real numbers) & $\bbbr$ |
| & \verb|\bbbs| & (blackboard bold S) & $\bbbs$\\ |
| \verb|\bbbt| & (blackboard bold T) & $\bbbt$ |
| & \verb|\bbbz| & (whole numbers) & $\bbbz$\\ |
| \verb|\bbbone| & (symbol one) & $\bbbone$ |
| \end{tabular} |
| \end{flushleft} |
| \begin{displaymath} |
| \begin{array}{c} |
| \bbbc^{\bbbc^{\bbbc}} \otimes |
| \bbbf_{\bbbf_{\bbbf}} \otimes |
| \bbbh_{\bbbh_{\bbbh}} \otimes |
| \bbbk_{\bbbk_{\bbbk}} \otimes |
| \bbbm^{\bbbm^{\bbbm}} \otimes |
| \bbbn_{\bbbn_{\bbbn}} \otimes |
| \bbbp^{\bbbp^{\bbbp}}\\[2mm] |
| \otimes |
| \bbbq_{\bbbq_{\bbbq}} \otimes |
| \bbbr^{\bbbr^{\bbbr}} \otimes |
| \bbbs^{\bbbs_{\bbbs}} \otimes |
| \bbbt^{\bbbt^{\bbbt}} \otimes |
| \bbbz \otimes |
| \bbbone^{\bbbone_{\bbbone}} |
| \end{array} |
| \end{displaymath} |
| % |
| \section{References} |
| \label{refer} |
| % |
| There are three reference systems available; only one, of course, |
| should be used for your contribution. With each system (by |
| number only, by letter-number or by author-year) a reference list |
| containing all citations in the |
| text, should be included at the end of your contribution placing the |
| \LaTeX{} environment \verb|thebibliography| there. |
| For an overall information on that environment |
| see the {\em \LaTeX{} User's Guide \& Reference |
| Manual\/} by Leslie Lamport, p.~71. |
| |
| There is a special {\sc Bib}\TeX{} style for LLNCS that works along |
| with the class: \verb|splncs.bst| |
| -- call for it with a line \verb|\bibliographystyle{splncs}|. |
| If you plan to use another {\sc Bib}\TeX{} style you are customed to, |
| please specify the option \verb|[oribibl]| in the |
| \verb|documentclass| line, like: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \documentclass[oribibl]{llncs} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| This will retain the original \LaTeX{} code for the bibliographic |
| environment and the \verb|\cite| mechanism that many {\sc Bib}\TeX{} |
| applications rely on. |
| % |
| \subsection{References by Letter-Number or by Number Only} |
| % |
| References are cited in the text -- using the \verb|\cite| |
| command of \LaTeX{} -- by number or by letter-number in square |
| brackets, e.g.\ [1] or [E1, S2], [P1], according to your use of the |
| \verb|\bibitem| command in the \verb|thebibliography| environment. The |
| coding is as follows: if you choose your own label for the sources by |
| giving an optional argument to the \verb|\bibitem| command the citations |
| in the text are marked with the label you supplied. Otherwise a simple |
| numbering is done, which is preferred. |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| The results in this section are a refined version |
| of \cite{clar:eke}; the minimality result of Proposition~14 |
| was the first of its kind. |
| \end{verbatim} |
| The above input produces the citation: ``\dots\ refined version of |
| [CE1]; the min\-i\-mality\dots''. Then the \verb|\bibitem| entry of |
| the \verb|thebibliography| environment should read: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{thebibliography}{[MT1]} |
| . |
| . |
| \bibitem[CE1]{clar:eke} |
| Clarke, F., Ekeland, I.: |
| Nonlinear oscillations and boundary-value problems for |
| Hamiltonian systems. |
| Arch. Rat. Mech. Anal. {\bfseries 78} (1982) 315--333 |
| . |
| . |
| \end{thebibliography} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| The complete bibliography looks like this: |
| % |
| \begin{thebibliography}{[MT1]} |
| % |
| \bibitem[CE1]{clar:eke} |
| Clarke, F., Ekeland, I.: |
| Nonlinear oscillations and |
| boundary-value problems for Hamiltonian systems. |
| Arch. Rat. Mech. Anal. {\bfseries 78} (1982) 315--333 |
| % |
| \bibitem[CE2]{clar:eke:2} |
| Clarke, F., Ekeland, I.: |
| Solutions p\'{e}riodiques, du |
| p\'{e}riode donn\'{e}e, des \'{e}quations hamiltoniennes. |
| Note CRAS Paris {\bfseries 287} (1978) 1013--1015 |
| % |
| \bibitem[MT1]{mich:tar} |
| Michalek, R., Tarantello, G.: |
| Subharmonic solutions with prescribed minimal |
| period for nonautonomous Hamiltonian systems. |
| J. Diff. Eq. {\bfseries 72} (1988) 28--55 |
| % |
| \bibitem[Ta1]{tar} |
| Tarantello, G.: |
| Subharmonic solutions for Hamiltonian |
| systems via a $\bbbz_{p}$ pseudoindex theory. |
| Annali di Matematica Pura (to appear) |
| % |
| \bibitem[Ra1]{rab} |
| Rabinowitz, P.: |
| On subharmonic solutions of a Hamiltonian system. |
| Comm. Pure Appl. Math. {\bfseries 33} (1980) 609--633 |
| \end{thebibliography} |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{Number-Only System.} |
| % |
| For this preferred system do not use the optional argument |
| in the \verb|\bibitem| command: then, only numbers will |
| appear for the citations in the text (enclosed in square brackets) |
| as well as for the marks in your |
| bibliography (here the number is only end-punctuated without |
| square brackets). |
| |
| Subsequent citation numbers in the text are collapsed to ranges. |
| Non-numeric and undefined labels are handled correctly but no sorting is |
| done. |
| |
| E.g., \verb|\cite{n1,n3,n2,n3,n4,n5,foo,n1,n2,n3,?,n4,n5}| -- where |
| \verb|n|$x$ is the key of the $x^{\mathrm{th}}$ \verb|\bibitem| |
| command in sequence, \verb|foo| is the key of a \verb|\bibitem| with an |
| optional argument, and \verb|?| is an undefined reference -- gives |
| 1,3,2-5,foo,1-3,?,4,5 as the citation reference. |
| |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{thebibliography}{1} |
| \bibitem {clar:eke} |
| Clarke, F., Ekeland, I.: |
| Nonlinear oscillations and boundary-value problems for |
| Hamiltonian systems. |
| Arch. Rat. Mech. Anal. {\bfseries 78} (1982) 315--333 |
| \end{thebibliography} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| % |
| \subsection{Author-Year System} |
| % |
| References are cited in the text by name and year in parentheses |
| and should look as follows: |
| (Smith 1970, 1980), (Ekeland et al. 1985, Theorem 2), (Jones and Jaffe |
| 1986; Farrow 1988, Chap.\,2). If the name is part of the sentence |
| only the year may appear in parentheses, |
| e.g.\ Ekeland et al. (1985, Sect.\,2.1) |
| The reference list should contain all citations occurring in the text, |
| ordered alphabetically by surname (with initials following). If there |
| are several works by the same author(s) the references should be listed |
| in the appropriate order indicated below: |
| \begin{alpherate} |
| \setlength{\hfuzz}{5pt} |
| \item |
| One author: list works chronologically; |
| \item |
| Author and same co-author(s): list works chronologically; |
| \item |
| Author and different co-authors: list works alphabetically |
| according to co-authors. |
| \end{alpherate} |
| If there are several works by the same author(s) and in the same year, |
| but which are cited separately, they should be distinguished by the use |
| of ``a'', ``b'' etc., e.g.\ (Smith 1982a), (Ekeland et al. 1982b). |
| % |
| \subsubsection*{How to Code Author-Year System.} |
| % |
| If you want to use this system you have to specify the option |
| \verb|[citeauthoryear]| in the \verb|documentclass|, like: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \documentclass[citeauthoryear]{llncs} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| Write your citations in the text explicitly except for the year, leaving |
| that up to \LaTeX{} with the \verb|\cite| command. Then give only the |
| appropriate year as the optional argument (i.e. the label in square |
| brackets) with the \verb|\bibitem| command(s).\\[2mm] |
| {\itshape Sample Input} |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| The results in this section are a refined version |
| of Clarke and Ekeland (\cite{clar:eke}); the minimality result of |
| Proposition~14 was the first of its kind. |
| \end{verbatim} |
| The above input produces the citation: ``\dots\ refined version of |
| Clarke and Ekeland (1982); the minimality\dots''. Then the |
| \verb|\bibitem| entry of \verb|clar:eke| in the \verb|thebibliography| |
| environment should read: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| \begin{thebibliography}{} % (do not forget {}) |
| . |
| . |
| \bibitem[1982]{clar:eke} |
| Clarke, F., Ekeland, I.: |
| Nonlinear oscillations and boundary-value problems for |
| Hamiltonian systems. |
| Arch. Rat. Mech. Anal. {\bfseries 78} (1982) 315--333 |
| . |
| . |
| \end{thebibliography} |
| \end{verbatim} |
| {\itshape Sample Output} |
| \bibauthoryear |
| % |
| \end{document} |