Interactcadsample
Interactcadsample
Interactcadsample
ARTICLE HISTORY
Compiled May 3, 2023
ABSTRACT
This template is for authors who are preparing a manuscript for a Taylor & Francis
journal using the LATEX document preparation system and the interact class file,
which is available via selected journals’ home pages on the Taylor & Francis website.
KEYWORDS
Sections; lists; figures; tables; mathematics; fonts; references; appendices
1. Introduction
In order to assist authors in the process of preparing a manuscript for a journal, the
Taylor & Francis ‘Interact’ layout style has been implemented as a LATEX 2ε class file
based on the article document class. A BibTEX bibliography style file and a sample
bibliography are also provided in order to assist with the formatting of your references.
Commands that differ from or are provided in addition to standard LATEX 2ε are
described in this document, which is not a substitute for a LATEX 2ε tutorial.
The interactcadsample.tex file can be used as a template for a manuscript by
cutting, pasting, inserting and deleting text as appropriate, using the preamble and
the LATEX environments provided (e.g. \begin{abstract}, \begin{keywords}).
For convenience, simply copy the interact.cls file into the same directory as your
manuscript files (you do not need to install it in your TEX distribution). In order to
use the interact document class, replace the command \documentclass{article}
at the beginning of your document with the command \documentclass{interact}.
The following document-class options should not be used with the interact class
file:
• 10pt, 11pt, 12pt – unavailable;
• oneside, twoside – not necessary, oneside is the default;
• leqno, titlepage – should not be used;
• twocolumn – should not be used (see Subsection 1.1);
• onecolumn – not necessary as it is the default style.
To prepare a manuscript for a journal that is printed in A4 (two column) format,
use the largeformat document-class option provided by interact.cls; otherwise the
class file produces pages sized for B5 (single column) format by default. The geometry
package should not be used to make any further adjustments to the page dimensions.
3.1. Title, authors’ names and affiliations, abstracts and article types
The title should be generated at the beginning of your article using the \maketitle
command. In the final version the author name(s) and affiliation(s) must be followed
immediately by \maketitle as shown below in order for them to be displayed in your
PDF document. To prepare an anonymous version for double-blind peer review, you
can put the \maketitle between the \title and the \author in order to hide the
author name(s) and affiliation(s) temporarily. Next you should include the abstract if
2
your article has one, enclosed within an abstract environment. The \articletype
command is also provided as an optional element which should only be included if your
article actually needs it. For example, the titles for this document begin as follows:
\articletype{ARTICLE TEMPLATE}
\author{
\name{A.~N. Author\textsuperscript{a}\thanks{CONTACT A.~N. Author.
Email: latex.helpdesk@tandf.co.uk} and John Smith\textsuperscript{b}}
\affil{\textsuperscript{a}Taylor \& Francis, 4 Park Square, Milton
Park, Abingdon, UK; \textsuperscript{b}Institut f\"{u}r Informatik,
Albert-Ludwigs-Universit\"{a}t, Freiburg, Germany} }
\maketitle
\begin{abstract}
This template is for authors who are preparing a manuscript for a
Taylor \& Francis journal using the \LaTeX\ document preparation system
and the \texttt{interact} class file, which is available via selected
journals’ home pages on the Taylor \& Francis website.
\end{abstract}
An additional abstract in another language (preceded by a translation of the article
title) may be included within the abstract environment if required.
A graphical abstract may also be included if required. Within the abstract envi-
ronment you can include the code
\\\resizebox{25pc}{!}{\includegraphics{abstract.eps}}
where the graphical abstract is to appear, where abstract.eps is the name of the file
containing the graphic (note that 25pc is the recommended maximum width, expressed
in pica, for the graphical abstract in your manuscript).
3.2. Abbreviations
A list of abbreviations may be included if required, enclosed within an abbreviations
environment, i.e. \begin{abbreviations}. . . \end{abbreviations}, immediately fol-
lowing the abstract environment.
3.3. Keywords
A list of keywords may be included if required, enclosed within a keywords environ-
ment, i.e. \begin{keywords}. . . \end{keywords}. Additional keywords in other lan-
guages (preceded by a translation of the word ‘keywords’) may also be included within
the keywords environment if required.
3
3.4. Subject classification codes
AMS, JEL or PACS classification codes may be included if required. The interact
class file provides an amscode environment, i.e. \begin{amscode}. . . \end{amscode},
a jelcode environment, i.e. \begin{jelcode}. . . \end{jelcode}, and a pacscode
environment, i.e. \begin{pacscode}. . . \end{pacscode} to assist with this.
4.1. Sections
The Interact layout style allows for five levels of section heading, all of which are
provided in the interact class file using the standard LATEX commands \section,
\subsection, \subsubsection, \paragraph and \subparagraph. Numbering will be
automatically generated for all these headings by default.
4.2. Lists
Numbered lists are produced using the enumerate environment, which will number
each list item with arabic numerals by default. For example,
(1) first item
(2) second item
(3) third item
was produced by
\begin{enumerate}
\item first item
\item second item
\item third item
\end{enumerate}
Alternative numbering styles can be achieved by inserting an optional argument in
square brackets to each item, e.g. \item[(i)] first item to create a list numbered
with roman numerals at level one.
Bulleted lists are produced using the itemize environment. For example,
• First bulleted item
• Second bulleted item
• Third bulleted item
1 If preferred, the endnotes package may be used to set the notes at the end of your text, before the bibliography.
The symbols will be changed to match the style of the journal if necessary by the typesetter.
4
0.3
0.25 -0.02
1 -0.04 1
0.2
0.15 0.8 -0.06 0.8
0.1 0.6 -0.08 0.6
0 0
0.2 0.4 x 0.2 0.4 x
0.4 0.4
0.6 0.2 0.6 0.2
t t 0.8
0.8
10 10
Figure 1. Example of a two-part figure with individual sub-captions showing that captions are flush left and
justified if greater than one line of text.
was produced by
\begin{itemize}
\item First bulleted item
\item Second bulleted item
\item Third bulleted item
\end{itemize}
4.3. Figures
The interact class file will deal with positioning your figures in the same way as
standard LATEX. It should not normally be necessary to use the optional [htb] location
specifiers of the figure environment in your manuscript; you may, however, find the
[p] placement option or the endfloat package useful if a journal insists on the need
to separate figures from the text.
Figure captions appear below the figures themselves, therefore the \caption com-
mand should appear after the body of the figure. For example, Figure 1 with caption
and sub-captions is produced using the following commands:
\begin{figure}
\centering
\subfigure[An example of an individual figure sub-caption.]{%
\resizebox*{5cm}{!}{\includegraphics{graph1.eps}}}\hspace{5pt}
\subfigure[A slightly shorter sub-caption.]{%
\resizebox*{5cm}{!}{\includegraphics{graph2.eps}}}
\caption{Example of a two-part figure with individual sub-captions
showing that captions are flush left and justified if greater
than one line of text.} \label{sample-figure}
\end{figure}
To ensure that figures are correctly numbered automatically, the \label command
should be included just after the \caption command, or in its argument.
The \subfigure command requires subfigure.sty, which is called in the preamble
of the interacttfssample.tex file (to allow your choice of an alternative package if
preferred) and included in the Interact LATEX bundle for convenience. Please supply
any additional figure macros used with your article in the preamble of your .tex file.
5
Table 1. Example of a table showing that its caption is
as wide as the table itself and justified.
Type
Class One Two Three Four Five Six
Alphaa A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6
Beta B2 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6
Gamma C2 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6
a This footnote shows how to include footnotes to a table
if required.
The source files of any figures will be required when the final, revised version of a
manuscript is submitted. Authors should ensure that these are suitable (in terms of
lettering size, etc.) for the reductions they envisage.
The epstopdf package can be used to incorporate encapsulated PostScript (.eps)
illustrations when using PDFLATEX, etc. Please provide the original .eps source files
rather than the generated PDF images of those illustrations for production purposes.
4.4. Tables
The interact class file will deal with positioning your tables in the same way as
standard LATEX. It should not normally be necessary to use the optional [htb] location
specifiers of the table environment in your manuscript; you may, however, find the
[p] placement option or the endfloat package useful if a journal insists on the need
to separate tables from the text.
The tabular environment can be used as shown to create tables with single hori-
zontal rules at the head, foot and elsewhere as appropriate. The captions appear above
the tables in the Interact style, therefore the \tbl command should be used before the
body of the table. For example, Table 1 is produced using the following commands:
\begin{table}
\tbl{Example of a table showing that its caption is as wide as
the table itself and justified.}
{\begin{tabular}{lcccccc} \toprule
& \multicolumn{2}{l}{Type} \\ \cmidrule{2-7}
Class & One & Two & Three & Four & Five & Six \\ \midrule
Alpha\textsuperscript{a} & A1 & A2 & A3 & A4 & A5 & A6 \\
Beta & B2 & B2 & B3 & B4 & B5 & B6 \\
Gamma & C2 & C2 & C3 & C4 & C5 & C6 \\ \bottomrule
\end{tabular}}
\tabnote{\textsuperscript{a}This footnote shows how to include
footnotes to a table if required.}
\label{sample-table}
\end{table}
To ensure that tables are correctly numbered automatically, the \label command
should be included just before \end{table}.
The \toprule, \midrule, \bottomrule and \cmidrule commands are those used
by booktabs.sty, which is called by the interact class file and included in the Interact
LATEX bundle for convenience. Tables produced using the standard commands of the
tabular environment are also compatible with the interact class file.
6
4.5. Landscape pages
If a figure or table is too wide to fit the page it will need to be rotated, along with
its caption, through 90◦ anticlockwise. Landscape figures and tables can be produced
using the rotating package, which is called by the interact class file. The following
commands (for example) can be used to produce such pages.
\setcounter{figure}{1}
\begin{sidewaysfigure}
\centerline{\epsfbox{figname.eps}}
\caption{Example landscape figure caption.}
\label{landfig}
\end{sidewaysfigure}
\setcounter{table}{1}
\begin{sidewaystable}
\tbl{Example landscape table caption.}
{\begin{tabular}{@{}llllcll}
.
.
.
\end{tabular}}\label{landtab}
\end{sidewaystable}
Before any such float environment, use the \setcounter command as above to fix
the numbering of the caption (the value of the counter being the number given to the
preceding figure or table). Subsequent captions will then be automatically renumbered
accordingly. The \epsfbox command requires epsfig.sty, which is called by the
interact class file and is also included in the Interact LATEX bundle for convenience.
Please note that if the endfloat package is used, one or both of the commands
\DeclareDelayedFloatFlavor{sidewaysfigure}{figure}
\DeclareDelayedFloatFlavor{sidewaystable}{table}
will need to be included in the preamble of your .tex file, after the endfloat package
is loaded, in order to process any landscape figures and/or tables correctly.
Proof. More recent algorithms for solving the semidefinite programming relaxation
are particularly efficient, because they explore the structure of the MAX-CUT problem.
7
Other theorem-like environments (theorem, definition, remark, etc.) need to be defined
as required, e.g. using \newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem} in the preamble of your .tex
file (see the preamble of interactcadsample.tex for more examples). You can define
the numbering scheme for these structures however suits your article best. Please note
that the format of the text in these environments may be changed if necessary to match
the style of individual journals by the typesetter during preparation of the proofs.
4.7. Mathematics
8
This is made possible by the amsmath package, which is called by the class file. If you
put a \label just after the \begin{subequations} command, references can be made
to the collection of equations, i.e. ‘(2)’ in the example above. Or, as the example also
shows, you can label and refer to each equation individually – i.e. ‘(2a)’ and ‘(2b)’.
Displayed mathematics should be given end-of-line punctuation appropriate to the
running text sentence of which it forms a part, if required.
4.7.2.2. Upright Greek characters and the upright partial derivative sign.
Upright lowercase Greek characters can be obtained by inserting the letter ‘u’ in the
control code for the character, e.g. \umu and \upi produce µ (used, for example, in
the symbol for the unit microns – µm) and π (the ratio of the circumference of a
circle to its diameter). Similarly, the control code for the upright partial derivative ∂
is \upartial. Bold lowercase as well as uppercase Greek characters can be obtained
by {\bm \gamma}, for example, which gives γ, and {\bm \Gamma}, which gives Γ.
Acknowledgement(s)
Disclosure statement
Funding
An unnumbered section, e.g. \section*{Funding}, may be used for grant details, etc.
if required and included in the non-anonymous version before any Notes or References.
Notes on contributor(s)
9
Nomenclature/Notation
Notes
An unnumbered ‘Notes’ section may be included before the References (if using the
endnotes package, use the command \theendnotes where the notes are to appear,
instead of creating a \section*).
5. References
10
editor(s), etc., arrange by year of publication, with undated works at the end. A single-
author entry precedes a multi-author entry that begins with the same name. If the
reference list contains two or more items by the same author(s) in the same year, add a,
b, etc. and list them alphabetically by title. Successive entries by two or more authors
when only the first author is the same are alphabetized by co-authors’ surnames. If
a reference has more than ten named authors, list only the first seven, followed by
‘et al.’. If a reference has no author or editor, order by title; if a date of publication is
impossible to find, use ‘n.d.’ in its place.
The following list shows some sample references prepared in the Taylor & Francis
Chicago author-date style.
References
11
in Illinois Archaeology 6. Springfield: Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.
Gould, Glenn. 1984. “Streisand as Schwarzkopf.” In The Glenn Gould Reader, edited by Tim
Page, 308–311. New York: Vintage.
Greenberg, Joel, ed. 2008. Of Prairie, Woods, and Water: Two Centuries of Chicago Nature
Writing. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Harrington, Elaine. 1987. “International Influences on Henry Hobson Richardson’s Gless-
ner House.” In Chicago Architecture, 1872–1922: Birth of a Metropolis, edited by John
Zukowsky, 189–207. Munich: Prestel-Verlag in association with the Art Institute of Chicago.
Harris, Beth, and Steven Zucker. 2015. “Haussmann the Demolisher and the Creation of
Modern Paris.” Smarthistory. https://smarthistory.org/haussmann-the-demolisher-and-the-
creation-of-modern-paris.
Heinrich, Larissa. 2008. The Afterlife of Images: Translating the Pathological Body between
China and the West. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Jacobs, Sue-Ellen, Wesley Thomas, and Sabine Lang, eds. 1997. Two-Spirit People: Native
American Gender Identity, Sexuality, and Spirituality. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Kelly, John D. 2010. “Seeing Red: Mao Fetishism, Pax Americana, and the Moral Economy
of War.” In Anthropology and Global Counterinsurgency, edited by John D. Kelly, Beatrice
Jauregui, Sean T. Mitchell, and Jeremy Walton, 67–83. Chicago: University of Chicago
Press.
Kogan, Herman. 1974. The First Century: The Chicago Bar Association, 1874–1974. Chicago:
Rand McNally.
Kogan, Herman, and Lloyd Wendt. 1958. Chicago: A Pictorial History. New York: Dutton.
Levitt, Steven D., and Stephen J. Dubner. 2005. Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores
the Hidden Side of Everything. New York: William Morrow.
Mnookin, Robert, and Lewis Kornhauser. 1979. “Bargaining in the Shadow of the Law: The
Case of Divorce.” Yale Law Journal 88 (5): 950–997. https://doi.org/10.2307/795824.
Morasse, Sébastien, Helga Guderley, and Julian J. Dodson. 2008. “Paternal Reproductive
Strategy Influences Metabolic Capacities and Muscle Development of Atlantic Salmon
(Salmo salar L.) Embryos.” Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 81 (4): 402–413.
https://doi.org/10.1086/589012.
Nowacki, J. S., D. Creech, and M. Parks. 2020. “Political Climate, Voter Suppression Poli-
cies and Federal Sentencing Outcomes.” British Journal of Criminology 60 (5): 1115–1180.
https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azaa017.
Pelikan, Jaroslav. 1971. The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition (100–600). Vol. 1 of The
Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
Piaget, Jean. 1995. “Logical Operators and Social Life.” Translated by Wolfe Mays. In Socio-
logical Studies, edited by Leslie Smith, 134–157. Hove, UK: Routledge.
Pollan, Michael. 2006. The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. New York:
Penguin.
Prinzie, Peter, Geert Jan J. M. Stams, Maja Deković, Albert H. A. Reijntjes, and Jay Bel-
sky. 2009. “The Relations between Parents’ Big Five Personality Factors and Parenting:
A Meta-analytic Review.” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 97 (2): 351–362.
https://doi.org/10.1037/a0015823.
Schuman, Howard, and Jacqueline Scott. 1987. “Problems in the Use of Sur-
vey Questions to Measure Public Opinion.” Science 236 (4804): 957–959.
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.236.4804.957.
Schuman, Howard, and Jacqueline Scott. 1989. “Generations and Collective Memories.” Amer-
ican Sociological Review 54 (3): 359–381. https://doi.org/10.2307/2095611.
Soltes, Ori Z., ed. 1999. Georgia: Art and Civilization through the Ages. London: Philip Wilson.
Stearns, A. A. 1864. “Armory Square Hospital Nursing Diary.” MS B 372. History of Medicine
Division. National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD.
Strunk, William, Jr., and E. B. White. 2000. The Elements of Style. 4th ed. New York: Allyn
and Bacon.
12
Van Wagenen, Gertrude, and Miriam E. Simpson. 1973. Postnatal Development of the Ovary
in Homo sapiens and Macaca mulatta and Induction of Ovulation in the Macaque. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Wagmiller, R. L., K. LaParo, D. Schrider, Wildfeuer R, M. Ford, and S. M. Hitchcock. 2018.
“Attitudes towards Interracial Marriage in a Diverse and Unequal Metropolis: A Lost Letter
Study.” Poster presented at the American Sociological Association 113th Annual Meeting,
Philadelphia, PA, August 2018.
Wauchope, Robert. 1950. A Tentative Sequence of Pre-Classic Ceramics in Middle America.
Vol. 1 of Middle American Research Records. New Orleans, LA: Tulane University.
Weber, Max. 2010. Politik als Beruf [Politics as vocation]. 11th ed. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.
Weigel, Detlef, and Jane Glazebrook. 2002. Arabidopsis: A Laboratory Manual. Cold Spring
Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. 2009. Philosophical Investigations. Translated by G. E. M. Anscombe,
P. M. S. Hacker, and Joachim Schulte. 4th ed. Oxford: Wiley–Blackwell.
Woodward, David. 1977. The All-American Map: Wax Engraving and Its Influence on Car-
tography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Woodward, David, ed. 1987. Art and Cartography: Six Historical Essays. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press.
Woodward, David. 1996. Catalogue of Watermarks in Italian Printed Maps, ca. 1540–1600.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Albiston(2005)]{Alb05}
Albiston, Catherine~R. 2005. ‘‘Bargaining in the Shadow of Social Institutions:
Competing Discourses and Social Change in the Workplace Mobilization of Civil
Rights.’’ \emph{Law and Society Review} 39 (1): 11--47.
https://doi.org/{10.1111/j.0023-9216.2005.00076.x}.
\bibitem[Blair(1977)]{Blair1977}
Blair, Walter. 1977. ‘‘Americanized Comic Braggarts.’’ \emph{Critical Inquiry}
4 (2): 331--349. https://doi.org/{10.1086/447940}.
\bibitem[Choi(2008)]{Cho08}
Choi, Mihwa. 2008. ‘‘Contesting \emph{Imaginaires} in Death Rituals during the
13
Northern {S}ong Dynasty.’’ PhD diss., University of Chicago.
{http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/6820707}.
\bibitem[Draper(1987)]{Draper1987}
Draper, Joan~E. 1987. ‘‘Paris by the Lake: Sources of {B}urnham’s Plan of
{C}hicago.’’ In \emph{Chicago Architecture, 1872--1922: Birth of a
Metropolis}, edited by John Zukowsky, 107--119. Munich: Prestel-Verlag in
association with the Art Institute of Chicago.
\bibitem[Edelman(1992)]{Edelman1992}
Edelman, Lauren~B. 1992. ‘‘Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures:
Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law.’’ \emph{American Journal of
Sociology} 97 (6): 1531--1576. https://doi.org/{10.1086/229939}.
\bibitem[Ellet(1968)]{Ell1968}
Ellet, Elizabeth F.~L. 1968. ‘‘By Rail and Stage to Galena.’’ In \emph{Prairie
State: Impressions of {I}llinois, 1673--1967, by Travelers and Other
Observers}, edited by Paul~M. Angle, 271--279. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Fogel(2004a)]{FogEHPD04}
Fogel, Robert~William. 2004a. \emph{The Escape from Hunger and
Premature Death, 1700--2100: {E}urope, {A}merica, and the {T}hird {W}orld}.
New York: Cambridge University Press.
\bibitem[Fogel(2004b)]{FogJEE04}
Fogel, Robert~William. 2004b. ‘‘Technophysio Evolution and the
Measurement of Economic Growth.’’ \emph{Journal of Evolutionary Economics} 14
(2): 217--221. https://doi.org/{10.1007/s00191-004-0188-x}.
\bibitem[Fowler(1989)]{Fow89}
Fowler, Melvin~L. 1989. \emph{The {C}ahokia Atlas: A Historical Atlas of
{C}ahokia Archaeology}. Studies in Illinois Archaeology~6. Springfield:
Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.
14
\bibitem[Gould(1984)]{Gould1984}
Gould, Glenn. 1984. ‘‘Streisand as {S}chwarzkopf.’’ In \emph{The {G}lenn
{G}ould Reader}, edited by Tim Page, 308--311. New York: Vintage.
\bibitem[Greenberg(2008)]{Gre08}
Greenberg, Joel, ed. 2008. \emph{Of Prairie, Woods, and Water: Two Centuries of
{C}hicago Nature Writing}. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Harrington(1987)]{Harrington1987}
Harrington, Elaine. 1987. ‘‘International Influences on {H}enry {H}obson
{R}ichardson’s {G}lessner {H}ouse.’’ In \emph{Chicago Architecture,
1872--1922: Birth of a Metropolis}, edited by John Zukowsky, 189--207.
Munich: Prestel-Verlag in association with the Art Institute of Chicago.
\bibitem[Heinrich(2008)]{Heinrich2008}
Heinrich, Larissa. 2008. \emph{The Afterlife of Images: Translating the
Pathological Body between {C}hina and the {W}est}. Durham, NC: Duke
University Press.
\bibitem[Kelly(2010)]{Kelly2010}
Kelly, John~D. 2010. ‘‘Seeing Red: {M}ao Fetishism, {P}ax {A}mericana, and the
Moral Economy of War.’’ In \emph{Anthropology and Global Counterinsurgency},
edited by John~D. Kelly, Beatrice Jauregui, Sean~T. Mitchell, and Jeremy
Walton, 67--83. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Kogan(1974)]{Kogan1974}
Kogan, Herman. 1974. \emph{The First Century: The {C}hicago {B}ar
{A}ssociation, 1874--1974}. Chicago: Rand McNally.
15
Law: The Case of Divorce.’’ \emph{Yale Law Journal} 88 (5): 950--997.
https://doi.org/{10.2307/795824}.
\bibitem[Pelikan(1971)]{Pelikan1971}
Pelikan, Jaroslav. 1971. \emph{The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition
(100--600)}. Vol.~1 of \emph{The {C}hristian Tradition: A History of the
Development of Doctrine}. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Piaget(1995)]{Piaget1995}
Piaget, Jean. 1995. ‘‘Logical Operators and Social Life.’’ Translated by Wolfe
Mays. In \emph{Sociological Studies}, edited by Leslie Smith, 134--157.
Hove, UK: Routledge.
\bibitem[Pollan(2006)]{Pollan2006}
Pollan, Michael. 2006. \emph{The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four
Meals}. New York: Penguin.
\bibitem[Prinzie et~al.(2009)]{Prinzie09}
Prinzie, Peter, Geert Jan J.~M. Stams, Maja Dekovi{\’c}, Albert H.~A.
Reijntjes, and Jay Belsky. 2009. ‘‘The Relations between Parents’ Big Five
Personality Factors and Parenting: A Meta-analytic Review.’’ \emph{Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology} 97 (2): 351--362.
https://doi.org/{10.1037/a0015823}.
\bibitem[Soltes(1999)]{Sol99}
Soltes, Ori~Z., ed. 1999. \emph{Georgia: Art and Civilization through the
Ages}. London: Philip Wilson.
\bibitem[Stearns(1864)]{Stearns1864}
16
Stearns, A.~A. 1864. ‘‘Armory {S}quare {H}ospital Nursing Diary.’’ MS B 372.
History of Medicine Division. National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD.
\bibitem[Wagmiller et~al.(2018)]{Wagmiller18}
Wagmiller, R.~L., K.~LaParo, D.~Schrider, Wildfeuer R, M.~Ford, and S.~M.
Hitchcock. 2018. ‘‘Attitudes towards Interracial Marriage in a Diverse and
Unequal Metropolis: A Lost Letter Study.’’ Poster presented at the American
Sociological Association 113th Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, August
2018.
\bibitem[Wauchope(1950)]{Wau50}
Wauchope, Robert. 1950. \emph{A Tentative Sequence of Pre-Classic Ceramics in
Middle {A}merica}. Vol.~1 of \emph{Middle {A}merican Research Records}. New
Orleans, LA: Tulane University.
\bibitem[Weber(2010)]{Weber2020}
Weber, Max. 2010. \emph{Politik als Beruf \emph{[Politics as vocation]}}. 11th
ed. Berlin: Duncker \& Humblot.
\bibitem[Wittgenstein(2009)]{Wittgenstein2009}
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. 2009. \emph{Philosophical Investigations}. Translated by
G.~E.~M. Anscombe, P.~M.~S. Hacker, and Joachim Schulte. 4th ed. Oxford:
Wiley--Blackwell.
\bibitem[Woodward(1977)]{Woodward1977}
Woodward, David. 1977. \emph{The All-{A}merican Map: Wax Engraving and Its
Influence on Cartography}. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Woodward(1987)]{Woodward1987}
Woodward, David, ed. 1987. \emph{Art and Cartography: Six Historical Essays}.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\bibitem[Woodward(1996)]{Woodward1996}
Woodward, David. 1996. \emph{Catalogue of Watermarks in {I}talian Printed Maps,
ca.~1540--1600}. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
\end{thebibliography}
17
Each entry takes the form:
\bibitem[authors’ names(date of publication)]{key}
Bibliography entry
where ‘authors’ names’ is the list of names to appear where the bibitem is cited
in the text, and ‘key’ is the tag that is to be used as an argument for the \cite{}
commands in the text of the article. ‘Bibliography entry’ is the material that is to
appear in the list of references, suitably formatted. The commands
\usepackage{natbib}
\bibpunct[, ]{(}{)}{;}{a}{}{,}
\renewcommand\bibfont{\fontsize{10}{12}\selectfont}
need to be included in the preamble of your .tex file in order to generate the citations
and bibliography as described above.
Instead of typing the bibliography by hand, you may prefer to create the list of
references using a BibTEX database. The tfcad.bst file needs to be in your working
folder or an appropriate directory, and the lines
\bibliographystyle{tfcad}
\bibliography{interactcadsample}
included where the list of references is to appear, where tfcad.bst is the name of the
BibTEX bibliography style file for Taylor & Francis’ Chicago author-date reference
style and interactcadsample.bib is the bibliographic database included with the
Interact-CAD LATEX bundle (to be replaced with the name of your own .bib file).
LATEX/BibTEX will extract from your .bib file only those references that are cited in
your .tex file and list them in the References section.
Please include a copy of your .bib file and/or the final generated .bbl file among
your source files if your .tex file does not contain a reference list in a thebibliography
environment.
6. Appendices
Any appendices should be placed after the list of references, beginning with the com-
mand \appendix followed by the command \section for each appendix title, e.g.
\appendix
\section{This is the title of the first appendix}
\section{This is the title of the second appendix}
produces:
Appendix A. This is the title of the first appendix
Appendix B. This is the title of the second appendix
Subsections, equations, figures, tables, etc. within appendices will then be automat-
ically numbered as appropriate. Some theorem-like environments may need to have
their counters reset manually (e.g. if they are not numbered within sections in the
main text). You can achieve this by using \numberwithin{remark}{section} (for
example) just after the \appendix command.
Please note that if the endfloat package is used on a document containing appen-
dices, the \processdelayedfloats command must be included immediately before
18
the \appendix command in order to ensure that the floats in the main body of the
text are numbered as such.
Appendix A. Troubleshooting
19