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Table 2: Some Typical Command A Number \alignauthor 100 \numberofauthors 200 \table 300 \table* 400 Commands Comments Author alignment Author enumeration For tables For wider tables Figure 4: A sample black and white graphic (.eps format) that needs to span two columns of text. A Caveat for the TEX Expert Because you have just been given permission to use the \newdef command to create a new form, you might think you can use TEX’s \def to create a new command: Please refrain from doing this! Remember that your LATEX source code is primarily intended to create camera-ready copy, but may be converted to other forms – e.g. HTML. If you inadvertently omit some or all of the \defs recompilation will be, to say the least, problematic. 3. CONCLUSIONS This paragraph will end the body of this sample document. Remember that you might still have Acknowledgments or Appendices; brief samples of these follow. There is still the Bibliography to deal with; and we will make a disclaimer about that here: with the exception of the reference to the LATEX book, the citations in this paper are to articles which have nothing to do with the present subject and are used as examples only. 4. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This section is optional; it is a location for you to acknowledge grants, funding, editing assistance and what have you. In the present case, for example, the authors would like to thank Gerald Murray of ACM for his help in codifying this Author’s Guide and the .cls and .tex files that it describes. 5. ADDITIONAL AUTHORS Additional authors: John Smith (The Thørväld Group, email: [email protected]) and Julius P. Kumquat (The Kumquat Consortium, email: [email protected]). [3] M. Clark. Post congress tristesse. In TeX90 Conference Proceedings, pages 84–89. TeX Users Group, March 1991. [4] M. Herlihy. A methodology for implementing highly concurrent data objects. ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst., 15(5):745–770, November 1993. [5] L. Lamport. LaTeX User’s Guide and Document Reference Manual. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Reading, Massachusetts, 1986. [6] S. Salas and E. Hille. Calculus: One and Several Variable. John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1978. APPENDIX A. HEADINGS IN APPENDICES The rules about hierarchical headings discussed above for the body of the article are different in the appendices. In the appendix environment, the command section is used to indicate the start of each Appendix, with alphabetic order designation (i.e. the first is A, the second B, etc.) and a title (if you include one). So, if you need hierarchical structure within an Appendix, start with subsection as the highest level. Here is an outline of the body of this document in Appendix-appropriate form: A.1 A.2 A.2.1 A.2.2 Introduction The Body of the Paper Type Changes and Special Characters Math Equations Inline (In-text) Equations 6. REFERENCES [1] M. Bowman, S. K. Debray, and L. L. Peterson. Reasoning about naming systems. ACM Trans. Program. Lang. Syst., 15(5):795–825, November 1993. [2] J. Braams. Babel, a multilingual style-option system for use with latex’s standard document styles. TUGboat, 12(2):291–301, June 1991. Display Equations A.2.3 A.2.4 A.2.5 Citations Tables Figures