Vertical Spacing on Title Pages

2009-10-07 Thread Rob
Hi,  

I'm using the article document class and want to alter the title page.  In
particular, for many reasons I don't want to use the author environments, but
rather list the authors and affiliations as standard text.  However, when I do
this, the vertical spacing is off.  And when I insert vertical spacing between
each author, it's not recognized (whether it's protected or not).  

How can I specify vertical spacing for my standard text on my title page?  

Thanks very much.

Rob



Re: Vertical Spacing on Title Pages

2009-10-07 Thread rgheck

On 10/07/2009 10:53 AM, Rob wrote:

Hi,

I'm using the article document class and want to alter the title page.  In
particular, for many reasons I don't want to use the author environments, but
rather list the authors and affiliations as standard text.  However, when I do
this, the vertical spacing is off.  And when I insert vertical spacing between
each author, it's not recognized (whether it's protected or not).

How can I specify vertical spacing for my standard text on my title page?

   
This kind of question has been much discussed on the list. The short 
answer is that there is no simple way to do this. The design of the 
title page is specified by the document class and is not intended to be 
customized within the document. So lots of things you might try simply 
won't work, as LaTeX will ignore them.


So, if you want to customize the title page, you have four options.

  1. The Easy Option: Try some other classes, such as paper or
 koma-script, and see if you like their title pages better.
  2. The Steve Litt Option: Turn off the title page and make one
 manually, not using the Title and Author environments to do so but
 by just making it your first page and then fingerpainting it.
 (Yet another option: Do the title page in OpenOffice, or some such
 thing, and then add it to the PDF later, using some appropriate
 tool.) This works, but is suitable only for one-off projects,
 i.e., if you need a special title page for this article but won't
 reuse it.
  3. The LaTeX Way: Redefine the \maketitle command that is used to
 make the title page. You can look in article.cls to see how it is
 defined, and then put a \renewcommand\maketitle{...} into your
 preamble or, better yet, into a package or even a LyX module that
 you can then easily reuse. This is the most reusable option, but
 requires the most work, especially if your LaTeX skills are less
 than what they might be.
  4. The Other LaTeX Way: Decide that it doesn't really matter very
 much what the title page looks like, and that anyway maybe the
 designers of the article class knew more than we do about
 typesetting, so we're likely just to make a hash of it.

Your choice, of course.

Richard



Vertical Spacing on Title Pages

2009-10-07 Thread Rob
Hi,  

I'm using the article document class and want to alter the title page.  In
particular, for many reasons I don't want to use the author environments, but
rather list the authors and affiliations as standard text.  However, when I do
this, the vertical spacing is off.  And when I insert vertical spacing between
each author, it's not recognized (whether it's protected or not).  

How can I specify vertical spacing for my standard text on my title page?  

Thanks very much.

Rob



Re: Vertical Spacing on Title Pages

2009-10-07 Thread rgheck

On 10/07/2009 10:53 AM, Rob wrote:

Hi,

I'm using the article document class and want to alter the title page.  In
particular, for many reasons I don't want to use the author environments, but
rather list the authors and affiliations as standard text.  However, when I do
this, the vertical spacing is off.  And when I insert vertical spacing between
each author, it's not recognized (whether it's protected or not).

How can I specify vertical spacing for my standard text on my title page?

   
This kind of question has been much discussed on the list. The short 
answer is that there is no simple way to do this. The design of the 
title page is specified by the document class and is not intended to be 
customized within the document. So lots of things you might try simply 
won't work, as LaTeX will ignore them.


So, if you want to customize the title page, you have four options.

  1. The Easy Option: Try some other classes, such as paper or
 koma-script, and see if you like their title pages better.
  2. The Steve Litt Option: Turn off the title page and make one
 manually, not using the Title and Author environments to do so but
 by just making it your first page and then fingerpainting it.
 (Yet another option: Do the title page in OpenOffice, or some such
 thing, and then add it to the PDF later, using some appropriate
 tool.) This works, but is suitable only for one-off projects,
 i.e., if you need a special title page for this article but won't
 reuse it.
  3. The LaTeX Way: Redefine the \maketitle command that is used to
 make the title page. You can look in article.cls to see how it is
 defined, and then put a \renewcommand\maketitle{...} into your
 preamble or, better yet, into a package or even a LyX module that
 you can then easily reuse. This is the most reusable option, but
 requires the most work, especially if your LaTeX skills are less
 than what they might be.
  4. The Other LaTeX Way: Decide that it doesn't really matter very
 much what the title page looks like, and that anyway maybe the
 designers of the article class knew more than we do about
 typesetting, so we're likely just to make a hash of it.

Your choice, of course.

Richard



Vertical Spacing on Title Pages

2009-10-07 Thread Rob
Hi,  

I'm using the article document class and want to alter the title page.  In
particular, for many reasons I don't want to use the author environments, but
rather list the authors and affiliations as standard text.  However, when I do
this, the vertical spacing is off.  And when I insert vertical spacing between
each author, it's not recognized (whether it's protected or not).  

How can I specify vertical spacing for my standard text on my title page?  

Thanks very much.

Rob



Re: Vertical Spacing on Title Pages

2009-10-07 Thread rgheck

On 10/07/2009 10:53 AM, Rob wrote:

Hi,

I'm using the article document class and want to alter the title page.  In
particular, for many reasons I don't want to use the author environments, but
rather list the authors and affiliations as standard text.  However, when I do
this, the vertical spacing is off.  And when I insert vertical spacing between
each author, it's not recognized (whether it's protected or not).

How can I specify vertical spacing for my standard text on my title page?

   
This kind of question has been much discussed on the list. The short 
answer is that there is no simple way to do this. The design of the 
title page is specified by the document class and is not intended to be 
customized within the document. So lots of things you might try simply 
won't work, as LaTeX will ignore them.


So, if you want to customize the title page, you have four options.

  1. The Easy Option: Try some other classes, such as paper or
 koma-script, and see if you like their title pages better.
  2. The Steve Litt Option: Turn off the title page and make one
 manually, not using the Title and Author environments to do so but
 by just making it your first page and then "fingerpainting" it.
 (Yet another option: Do the title page in OpenOffice, or some such
 thing, and then add it to the PDF later, using some appropriate
 tool.) This works, but is suitable only for one-off projects,
 i.e., if you need a special title page for this article but won't
 reuse it.
  3. The LaTeX Way: Redefine the \maketitle command that is used to
 make the title page. You can look in article.cls to see how it is
 defined, and then put a \renewcommand\maketitle{...} into your
 preamble or, better yet, into a package or even a LyX module that
 you can then easily reuse. This is the most reusable option, but
 requires the most work, especially if your LaTeX skills are less
 than what they might be.
  4. The Other LaTeX Way: Decide that it doesn't really matter very
 much what the title page looks like, and that anyway maybe the
 designers of the article class knew more than we do about
 typesetting, so we're likely just to make a hash of it.

Your choice, of course.

Richard