A thesis LaTeX template that complies with the University of Aveiro's
guidelines and provides a simple CLI workflow around make
that was developed
and tested for cross-compatibility on Linux (Slackware, ArchLinux, Debian, Ubuntu) and macOS
(High Sierra 10.13.6).
This template was developed by professors and students and it is not endorsed by the University. We will try to keep up to date with thesis requirements but some discrepancies may exist. Feel free to open issues and pull requests with new options, packages and fixes.
Build a development version of the document:
make [build]
Continuously build the development version of the document:
make preview
This option is great when paired with a document viewer (such as Okular) which automatically reloads the document on file change. This means you can keep writing and on save the updated document is compiled and displayed!
Build versions of the document for publishing:
make print
make ebook
Run linters (for now only proselint) against a TeX file (e.g. chapter 1):
make lint [texfile=chapter1.tex]
If you do not specify the texfile
to lint, then all TeX files in chapters/
will be linted.
Clean the build directory:
make clean[all]
clean
will leave the output products (the PDFs) in place, while cleanall
will remove these too. If your document is not compiling for some reason and
you think you've already solved the problem in the LaTeX sources, maybe try a
cleanall
before insisting. Sometimes the underlying build programs (namely
latexmk
) get stuck in inconsistent temporary files.
This is all great, but how can this repository be used as a starting point for writing your own thesis?
In our opinion you have mostly three options:
- Download/clone the repository and copy all files to a directory of your
desire, for instance to inside some special folder within you own thesis
repository.
Notice that this will not allow you to easily keep up with this template should it change. - Fork the repository to your own and work there. If you want to include it
within your own thesis repository, you can use
git submodules
for this. - Use
git subtree
to pull this repository to your main thesis repository and work directly there. Changes in your copy will be versioned by your main thesis repo, while you will still be able to pull new updates from here should they appear.
I've chosen the last of these options, as it seems to be the most flexible and easy-to-use alternative. Here follow the main commands you will need should you choose to go along with this too.
$ mkdir mythesis
$ git init .
$ git commit --allow-empty -n -m "Initial commit."
$ git subtree add --prefix document https://github.com/detiuaveiro/ua-thesis-template.git master --squash;
$ git subtree pull --prefix document https://github.com/detiuaveiro/ua-thesis-template.git --squash;
- The first line will init a new repository for your thesis
- It will create an initial commit
- It will pull this repository for the first time to
document
- The second is used for subsequent pulls.
The result should be a git repository for your thesis work. In the $DESTDIR
(e.g. document
)
you will have the document to edit. If you wish you can add a reference to another git repository
to track your own changes.
Please check the github instructions to create your own repository using this as a template.
Use it in Overleaf
It is possible to use this template in overleaf.
To enable it:
- in
matter.tex
change\def\useoverleaf{0}
to 1 - add
fc-portuges.def
to the project the file be can found in here - change the main document to
matter.tex
- A TeX distribution: TeX Live or MacTeX
- gs (for
make print
,make ebook
andsimplify-colors.sh
) - pandoc (for
make lint
) - imagemagick and poppler (for
simplify-colors.sh
) - pygments (for minted)
As for pygments and proselint, those can by installed with pip by issuing pip install -r requirements.txt
at the root of this repository.
On Ubuntu relatives the following dependencies, installable with apt
may
also be required
- biber
- texlive-bibtex-extra
- texlive-latex-extra
- texlive-science
These endorse dependencies which may or may not come with the TeX Live package distributed with your Linux distribution.
Usually TeX Live is split into a minimal package and a texlive-extra
which is
filled with the remainder of TeX Live, be it fonts, styles, language support,
and so on. So, if a LaTeX dependency is missing on your installation, do verify
that you are not missing one of these packages.
Tomás Oliveira e Silva created the original template which was later picked up by João Paulo Barraca who improved and maintained it for years.
This is a fork by Fábio Maia and Ricardo Jesus who wanted to further improve the template and setup a clean environment and workflow for writing their MSc thesis.