TITLE
Author Name
Affiliation
Address
ABSTRACT
The paper must have an abstract. The abstract should be self-contained and understandable by a general reader outside the context of the paper.
KEYWORDS
Maximum of 6 words.
1. INTRODUCTION
A template is a set of styles and page layout settings that determine the appearance of a document. This template matches the printer settings that will be used in the proceeding and the CD-Rom. Use of the template is mandatory.
Clearly explain the nature of the problem, previous work, purpose, and contribution of the paper.
2. BODY OF PAPER
Enter the text here.
2.1 Figures and tables
Figures should de numbered consecutively as they appear in the text.
Table 1. Font sizes of headings. Table captions should always be positioned above the tables. The final sentence of a table caption should end without a period
Heading level |
Example |
Font
size and style |
First level heading |
1. INTRODUCTION |
13
point, bold |
Second level heading Third level heading |
1.1 Printing Area 1.1.1 Text |
13
point, bold 11
point, bold |
Figures and Tables should be placed as close to their reference point in text as possible. All figures and Tables must have titles and must be referenced from within the text.
Avoid colour images as the proceedings will be printed in black and white.
2.1.1 Heading
Enter the text here.
3. CONCLUSION
Clearly indicate advantages, limitations and possible applications.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
A brief acknowledgement section may be included here.
REFERENCES
References and Citations should follow the Harvard (or author-date) system convention. Check the examples. If a referenced paper has three or more authors the reference should always appear as the first author followed by et al.
Book
Author, year. Title (in italics). Publisher, location of publisher.
Abiteboul, S. et al, 2000. Data on the Web: From Relations to Semistructured Data and XML.
Morgan Kaufmann Publishers,
Journal
Author, year. Paper title. Journal name (in italics), volume and issue numbers, inclusive pages.
Bodorik P. et al, 1991. Deciding to Correct Distributed Query Processing. In IEEE Transactions on Data and Knowledge Engineering, Vol. 4, No. 3,pp 253-265.
Conference paper
or contributed volume
Author, year, paper title. Proceedings title (in italics). City, country, inclusive pages.
Beck, K. and Ralph, J., 1994. Patterns Generates
Architectures. Proceedings of European Conference of Object-Oriented
Programming. Bologna, Italy, pp.
139-149.
Formatting Instructions for Papers:
These
guidelines include complete descriptions of the fonts, spacing, and related
information for producing your Paper.
Paper
Size:
A4
Margins: Top: 3,3 cm
Bottom: 4 cm
Left: 3 cm
Right: 2,5 cm
Header: 1,5 cm
Footer: 2,5 cm
Do NOT Use
footers, headers and page numbers.
Title: The title should
be centered in 16pt Times New Roman, boldface, all capitalized and paragraph
spacing after 24pt.
Authors: The Authors name
should be centered in 11pt Times New Roman.
Affiliation: The Affiliation
should be centered italicized in 9pt Times New Roman.
Abstract: Use the word
ABSTRACT as the title, in 9 pt Times New Roman, boldface, paragraph spacing
before 42pt and paragraph spacing after 6pt. The abstract is to be in 9pt Times
New Roman and justified.
Keywords: Use the word
KEYWORDS as the title, in 9 pt Times New Roman, boldface, paragraph spacing
before 18pt and paragraph spacing after 6pt. The keywords are to be in 10pt
Times New Roman and justified.
Main
Text:
Type your main text in 10 pt Times New Roman and justified. Please do not place
any additional blank line between paragraphs. The second paragraph and
subsequent paragraphs should be indented first line 0,5 cm.
Program
listings or program commands in the text are normally set in typewriter font,
e.g., CMTT9 or Courier.
First-order
Headings:
For example, "1. HEADING", should be 13pt Times New Roman, boldface,
paragraph spacing before 24pt, paragraph spacing after 12pt, flush left and all
capitalized. Use a period (".") after the heading number, not a
colon.
Second-order
Headings:
For example, "1.1 Heading", should be 13pt Times New Roman, boldface,
initially capitalized, flush left, paragraph spacing after 12pt and paragraph
spacing before 12pt. Do not use a period (".") after the heading
number.
Third-order
Headings:
For example, "1.1.1 Heading", should be 11pt Times New Roman,
boldface, initially capitalized, flush left, paragraph spacing after 6pt and
paragraph spacing before 6pt. Do not use a period (".") after the
heading number.
Do NOT Use
more than three levels of heading.
Footnotes: Use footnotes
sparingly (or not at all!) and place them at the bottom of the page on which
they are referenced. Use 8pt Times New Roman, justified. To help your readers,
avoid using footnotes altogether and include necessary peripheral observations
in the text (within parentheses, if you prefer, as in this sentence).
Figures
and Tables: All figures and tables should have caption. Figure and
table captions should be 9pt Times New Roman. Initially capitalize only the
first word of each figure caption and table title. Figures and tables must be
numbered separately. For example "Figure 1. Text here", "Table
1. Text here". Figure captions are to be centered below the figures with
paragraph spacing after 6pt and paragraph spacing before 6pt. Table titles are
to be centered above the tables, paragraph spacing after 6pt and paragraph
spacing before 6pt.
References: The references
must be listed alphabetically. References should be 9pt Times New Roman,
justified, indentation hanging 0,5 cm and paragraph spacing after 2pt.