Page Numbers: Yes X: 530 Y: 10.5" First Page: 0 Not-on-first-page
Columns: 1 Edge Margin: .6" Between Columns: .4"
Margins: Top: 1.3" Bottom: 1"
Line Numbers: No Modulus: 5 Page-relative
Even Heading:
DOCUMENT TITLE
Odd Heading: Not-on-first-page
DOCUMENT TITLE OR CHAPTER HEADING
Title: Font 9, bold
Author1, Author2, and Author3
CSL-82-x Month 1982 [P82-xxxxx]
c Copyright Xerox Corporation 1982. All rights reserved.
c Copyright Association for Computing Machinery 1982. Printed with permission.
c Copyright John Q. Author 1982. All rights reserved.
Delete all but the applicable copyright notice; see [Maxc]<Forms>Publications.press for details.
Abstract: The abstract goes here, unless it is very long. In that case, you should omit the Abstract, CR categories, and Key words and phrases from the title page, and instead put them on a page by themselves.
The second and succeeding paragraphs, if any, should have the looks of this paragraph, not those of the first one.
A version of this paper appeared/will appear in Publication, vol. xx no. xx, Month Year.
CR categories: Computing Reviews categories go here.
Key words and phrases: Key words and phrases go here.
XEROX
Xerox Corporation
Palo Alto Research Centers
3333 Coyote Hill Road
Palo Alto, California 94304
1. Chapter heading, font 5 bold, starts a new page
Most short to medum-size reports don’t need chapter headings. If you do use them, you should begin each chapter in a new Bravo file. This is so that you can use the chapter heading as the ‘‘Odd Heading’’ in the document profile. Chapters should always begin on odd-numbered, right-hand pages.
This paragraph’s looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of a section. They are identical to those of the first paragraph except for a paragraph (Y) leading of zero.
1. Major section heading, 36 pt paragraph leading, 120 pt keep
This is a text paragraph appropriate for the first paragraph of a section: font 0, paragraph leading 8, line leading 6, keep 40; left margin 90, right margin 530; first line indented 20; justified.
This paragraph’s looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of any section. They are identical to those of the first paragraph except for a paragraph (Y) leading of zero.
1.1 Minor section heading, 24 pt paragraph leading, 80 pt keep
This is a text paragraph appropriate for the first paragraph of a section: font 0, paragraph leading 8, line leading 6, keep 40; left margin 90, right margin 530; first line indented 20; justified.
This paragraph’s looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of any section. They are identical to those of the first paragraph except for a paragraph (Y) leading of zero.
Run-in section heading. This is a text paragraph appropriate for the first paragraph of a section begun with a run-in heading. Run-in section headings are usually not numbered. You can use them either in place of minor section headings or at a level below them.
This paragraph’s looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of any section. They are identical to those of the first paragraph except for a paragraph (Y) leading of zero.
2. Major section heading
Sample paragraph whose looks are appropriate for the first paragraph of a section.
Sample paragraph whose looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of any section.
You should leave these sample paragraphs at the end of your document, and not delete them until you have finished it. This is so that they are available to be copied (or to have their looks copied) to other parts of the document.
2.1 Minor section heading
Sample paragraph whose looks are appropriate for the first paragraph of a section.
Sample paragraph whose looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of any section.
Run-in section heading. Sample paragraph whose looks are appropriate for the first paragraph of a section begun with a run-in heading.
Sample paragraph whose looks are appropriate for the second and subsequent paragraphs of any section.
References
1.Author, Book title, Publisher, date.
2.Author, ‘‘Article title’’, Publication title, vol. xx, no. xx, date.
3.Donald E Knuth, The Art of Computer Programming, vol. 1, Addison-Wesley, 1968.
4.Robert M. Metcalfe and David R. Boggs, ‘‘Ethernet: Distributed Packet Switching for Local Computer Networks’’, Communications of the ACM, vol. 19 no. 7, July 1976.
Alternative style:
[Knuth, 1968]
Donald E Knuth,
The Art of Computer Programming, vol. 1, Addison-Wesley, 1968.
[Metcalfe & Boggs, 1976]
Robert M. Metcalfe and David R. Boggs, ‘‘Ethernet: Distributed Packet Switching for Local Computer Networks’’,
Communications of the ACM, vol. 19 no. 7, July 1976.