%% %% ***************************************** %% This file is defunct: for R Journal files please visit: %% https://journal.r-project.org/ %% ***************************************** %% \title{An R Journal Article Template} \author{by the R Journal Editors} \maketitle This is a \LaTeX{} template for R Journal authors. R Journal welcomes article submissions on any topic related to \R{} (\citep{R:Ihaka+Gentleman:1996}). The file {\tt RJwrap.tex} (that you should have downloaded at the same time you downloaded this template) plays the role of the complete R Journal issue document. It includes this file ({\tt RJtempl.tex}), which is not itself a complete \LaTeX{} document (it has no \verb|\begin{document}| or \verb|\end{document}|). Running {\tt pdflatex} on {\tt RJwrap.tex} a couple of times (to get the Figure references right) will produce {\tt RJwrap.pdf} which shows how this template file would be typeset within an R Journal issue. \section*{Two-column figures and tables} Currently, R Journal is typeset in two columns. By default, figures and tables will occupy only one column (see Figure \ref{figure:onecolfig}), but you can use the \verb|figure*| or \verb|table*| environments to create a figure or table that spans both columns (see Figures \ref{figure:bibexample} and \ref{figure:bblexample}). \begin{figure} \vspace*{.1in} \framebox[\textwidth]{\hfill \raisebox{-.45in}{\rule{0in}{1in}} A picture goes here \hfill} \caption{\label{figure:onecolfig} A normal figure only occupies one column.} \end{figure} \section*{References} The standard way to produce citations for R Journal is via the \verb|\citep| and \verb|\citet| commands and a {\tt .bib} file that contains the references in {\sc Bib}\TeX{} format.\footnote{We use the {\tt natbib} package for citations.} The citation in the very first paragraph of this template is of the form \verb|\citep{R:Ihaka+Gentleman:1996}|. Figure \ref{figure:bibexample} shows an example file called {\tt example.bib} which contains a single reference. A bibliography is produced from {\tt example.bib} by placing the following line in {\tt RJtempl.tex} (or whatever you end up calling it: \begin{verbatim} \bibliography{example} \end{verbatim} and running {\tt pdflatex} then {\tt bibtex} on the file {\tt RJwrap.tex}. You can make the R Journal editors job a bit easier if, at this point, you replace the line: \begin{verbatim} \bibliography{example} \end{verbatim} with the contents of the file {\tt RJwrap.bbl}. Figure \ref{figure:bblexample} shows what this{\tt RJwrap.bbl} looks like when produced from {\tt example.bib} (in Figure \ref{figure:bibexample}). \begin{figure*}[b] \begin{center} \begin{boxedverbatim} @ARTICLE{R:Ihaka+Gentleman:1996, AUTHOR = {Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman}, TITLE = {R: A Language for Data Analysis and Graphics}, JOURNAL = {Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics}, YEAR = 1996, VOLUME = 5, NUMBER = 3, PAGES = {299--314}, URL = {http://www.amstat.org/publications/jcgs/} } \end{boxedverbatim} \end{center} \caption{\label{figure:bibexample} The contents of a file called {\tt example.bib}. This figure uses the {\tt figure*} environment to span two columns.} \end{figure*} \begin{figure*}[b] \begin{center} \begin{boxedverbatim} \begin{thebibliography}{1} \expandafter\ifx\csname natexlab\endcsname\relax\def\natexlab#1{#1}\fi \expandafter\ifx\csname url\endcsname\relax \def\url#1{{\tt #1}}\fi \bibitem[Ihaka and Gentleman(1996)]{R:Ihaka+Gentleman:1996} R.~Ihaka and R.~Gentleman. \newblock R: A language for data analysis and graphics. \newblock {\em Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics}, 5\penalty0 (3):\penalty0 299--314, 1996. \newblock URL \url{http://www.amstat.org/publications/jcgs/}. \end{thebibliography} \end{boxedverbatim} \end{center} \caption{\label{figure:bblexample} The contents of a file called {\tt RJwrap.bbl}. This figure also uses the {\tt figure*} environment to span two columns.} \end{figure*} \section*{Summary} The steps involved in preparing an article for submission to R Journal are as follows: \begin{itemize} \setlength{\itemsep}{0in} \item download {\tt RJwrap.tex}, {\tt RJtempl.tex}, and {\tt RJournal.sty}. \item rename {\tt RJtempl.tex} to something more appropriate, {\tt yourarticle.tex} say, and replace its contents with the contents of your article. \item (if appropriate) create a {\tt yourarticle.bib} file and add \\ \verb|\bibliography{yourarticle}|\\ at the end of {\tt yourarticle.tex}. \item modify {\tt RJwrap.tex} to include {\tt yourarticle} rather than {\tt RJtempl}. \item (if appropriate) run {\tt pdflatex} then {\tt bibtex} on {\tt RJwrap.tex} to create {\tt RJwrap.bbl}. Replace \\ \verb|\bibliography{yourarticle}|\\ in {\tt yourarticle.tex} with the contents of {\tt RJwrap.bbl}. \item run {\tt pdflatex} on {\tt RJwrap.tex} a couple of times (until all figure references are resolved) to produce {\tt RJwrap.pdf}. \item iterate until {\tt RJwrap.pdf} looks right, then submit \begin{itemize} \item {\tt RJwrap.pdf} \item {\tt yourarticle.tex} \item all necessary figure files \end{itemize} \end{itemize} \begin{thebibliography}{1} \expandafter\ifx\csname natexlab\endcsname\relax\def\natexlab#1{#1}\fi \expandafter\ifx\csname url\endcsname\relax \def\url#1{{\tt #1}}\fi \bibitem[Ihaka and Gentleman(1996)]{R:Ihaka+Gentleman:1996} R.~Ihaka and R.~Gentleman. \newblock R: A language for data analysis and graphics. \newblock {\em Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics}, 5\penalty0 (3):\penalty0 299--314, 1996. \newblock URL \url{http://www.amstat.org/publications/jcgs/}. \end{thebibliography} .