LaTeX Dissertation Formatting Tips

= LaTeX tips for building an electronic thesis or dissertation at the University of Washington =

''Note: these notes are based on Nathan TeBlunthuis’s experience dissertating in 2021. As time goes on, rules and policies might change and render all or part of this advice obsolete.''

''I use a Makefile and some Linux utilities to build my documents. If you’re on a different operating system and want to reproduce my workflow, you might have to install some additional software like a   utility compatible with   and. The source code for my dissertation is available to CDSC members and is located in the .''

Front matter
The only hard formatting requirements for the electronic thesis or dissertation (ETD) are the copyright, title, and abstract pages. You can get Microsoft Word templates for each these pages from the graduate school or, as I did, you can use a template in a single Word File maintained by Alex Mamishev, Professor in Electrical Engineering.

I filled out the template and then exported the copyright, title_page, and abstract as separate  files. I build a single pdf with all of my chapters and then use  to staple on the front matter:

pdftk copyright_page.pdf title_page.pdf abstract.pdf ETD_version.pdf cat output diss_ecology_of_online_communities.pdf

Project Organization
You probably want to break your dissertation up into several different  files. Although I prefer to work on paper-length projects of 8,000 to 14,000 words or so in a single file, for a book or dissertation-length project it clearly makes more sense to keep each chapter in a different file. Building a very large  project can take too long. Very long files are more cumbersome to edit, even when using a powerful editor like Emacs. You are likely to publish different chapters as stand-alone articles. Indeed, the central 3 chapters of my dissertation were composed as stand-alone research articles, and two of them were under review when I defended.

To synchronize the publication and dissertation versions of these articles, I created a special  branch in the repositories for each project. The sole purpose of these branches was to make it convenient to merge any changes I made to the articles into the dissertation.

I added the  files from these project-repositories into my dissertation project using a symbolic links.

I used to build my tables and figures in these projects, but I did not find it necessary to include the knitr source code in my dissertation project. So when I edited these chapters, I worked on the  files  in the project repositories. To bring these changes into the dissertation, I ran knitr and then, in a manual step, edited the resulting  files to turn them from stand-alone LaTeX projects into   chapters, as described below. I then used the  LaTeX command to insert the contents of   files into the main document. I used the git branches to track these versions of the  files.

I realize I could have used a more careful organization of my LaTeX projects to avoid the manual step. C’est la vie. For simplicity, I didn’t include all the project-specific stuff in  and just copied the final   files instead.

If you need some help reproducing this workflow in your project, please reach out to Nate.

Using the Package
I use the LaTeX package to format my dissertation as a book. You may have encountered  before if you’ve used the latex templates in the   repository that Mako maintains. Memoir really shines for book length projects such as your dissertation, and like a book, it is aware of when pages are on the right or the left side of the book. It comes with some attractive formatting styles, creates a fancy table of contents and lets you insert section-specific bibliographies.

Following the required front matter, my dissertation opens like an academic book, with a table of contents, a list of tables and a list of figures. Memoir generates these automatically with the spell:

\tableofcontents \listoffigures \listoftables Following these tables and lists, I have an “Acknowledgments” section and a “Dedication.” I created these with the  command. starts a new chapter on the next right-hand page and adds the chapter to the table of contents. does the same, but leaves the chapter out of the table of contents. I also used  to insert prefaces for each chapter that note if the chapter is published, has been presented and credit my collaborators.

Converting Articles into Chapters
As described above, I used the  command to insert a   file for chapter into the main document. Each stand-alone article has its own LaTeX preamble, which begins with a  command and ends with   Since I built my dissertation as a single document, I stripped the preambles from each chapter file and added any dependencies from any of my projects to the preamble of the main file. I also removed  and   commands from the end of the file.

Finally, chapters don’t normally have abstracts, and the  command doesn’t work to insert an abstract in each chapter. Fortunately, you can use the  command provided by   to insert an abstract at the beginning of the chapters.