You might have noticed that all of the LaTeX documents we have created
so far have started with a \documentclass
line, and that
\documentclass{article}
has been the far most common choice. (We needed
\documentclass{report}
in the previous lesson to try out the
\chapter
command.) This line is required in all LaTeX documents, and is
(almost) always the first command you should have.
The document class sets up the general layout of the document, for example
Document classes can also add new commands more generally; that’s particularly true for specialist cases like creating presentation slides.
The document class line can also set global options: things that apply to
the document as a whole. These are given in square brackets:
\documentclass[<options>]{<name>}
. This syntax, with optional information
given first in square brackets, is used in many LaTeX commands.
LaTeX is supplied with a set of standard classes, all of which look similar but with some variations:
article
: short documents without chaptersreport
: longer documents with chapters, single-sided printingbook
: longer documents with chapters, double-sided printing, with
front- and back-matter (for example an index)letter
: correspondence with no sectionsslides
: for presentations (but see below)The article
, report
and book
classes have very similar commands available,
as we’ve already seen. When writing a letter
, the commands available are
a bit different
\documentclass{letter}
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\begin{document}
\begin{letter}{Some Address\\Some Street\\Some City}
\opening{Dear Sir or Madam,}
The text goes Here
\closing{Yours,}
\end{letter}
\end{document}
See how \\
is used to separate lines of the address; we’ll look at line
breaking a bit later. Also see how the letter
class creates a
new environment for each letter and has specialised commands.
The standard article
, report
and book
classes take the options 10pt
,
11pt
and 12pt
to change font size, and twocolumn
to make a two-column
document.
The core classes are very stable, but that means they are also quite conservative in both design and the range of commands available. Over time, a number of more powerful classes have been written, that let you alter the design without having to do things manually (which we’ll mention a bit later).
The American Mathematical Society provide variants of the standard
classes (amsart
, amsbook
) with a more traditional design closer to
that used in mathematics journal publications.
The two largest and most popular ‘extended’ classes are the KOMA-Script bundle
and the memoir class. KOMA-Script offers a set of classes which ‘parallel’ the
standard ones: scrartcl
, scrreprt
and scrbook
, while there is a single
memoir
class that is most like an extension of book
.
These extended classes have lots of customisation hooks, which we’ll explore a bit in an exercise. You might wonder how we can know about the hooks they provide; we will cover that in a later lesson, but you can always jump ahead!
The slides
class was developed for making physical slides in the mid-1980s, so
doesn’t have any features for creating interactive PDF-based presentations.
There are modern classes that do exactly that: they are somewhat specialist
compared to general LaTeX documents, so we’ve covered them in the additional
information.
Explore how changing the document class between the standard ones, the KOMA
bundle and memoir
affects the appearance of the document.
\documentclass{article} % Change the class here
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\begin{document}
\section{Introduction}
This is a sample document with some dummy
text\footnote{and a footnote}. This paragraph is quite
long as we might want to see the effect of making the
document have two columns.
\end{document}
Add the class option twocolumn
and see how the layout changes.
Change the \section
above for \chapter
and find out what effect the
following class options have when using the scrreprt
class.
chapterprefix
headings=small
headings=big
numbers=enddot