\documentstyle{iso}
\standard{1234} \title{A standard for egg-sucking}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\end{document}
See annex for an example standard.
Names of divisions and subdivisions The iso style permits a document to be made up of the following divisions: part, section, clause, subclause, subsubclause, subsubsubclause.
Each type of division is introduced in the normal LaTeX manner by a command, whose name is that of the division type, and a parameter which is the title of the division. For example:
\section{A typical section} \clause{This is a clause} \subclause{Winds light to variable} \subsubclause{The famous Eccles} \subsubsubclause{The Greenslade story}
Each division generates a corresponding entry in the table of contents
(see ).
Starting a new division causes all subsidiary division
numbers to start again from zero (e.g. starting a clause resets the
subclause, subsubclause and subsubsubclause numbers to zero).
There are also untitled versions of subsubclause and subsubsubclause
introduced by \namelesssubsubclause
and \namelesssubsubsubclause
respectively.
These have run-in headers and do not produce entries in the table of
contents.
Finally there is the lowest level of division: the paragraph.
This is unnumbered and untitled and introduced by either \par
or a blank line.
Special divisions
Tables of contents
Tables of contents are produced in the usual LaTeX manner, using
\tableofcontents
, \listoffigures
and
\listoftables
.
These should come before the \maketitle
, see
.
Foreword The foreword to a standard appears after the tables of contents and is unnumbered. For this reason, it uses a special macro as follows:
\forewordIn fact, the foreword to a standard is set by ISO central secretariat so it should not usually be necessary to include one in your documents.
Introduction The introduction to a standard appears after the tables of contents and the foreword and is unnumbered. Like the foreword, it uses a special macro:
\introduction
References The references section contains titles of normative documents to which reference is made in the body of the standard. The references section is constructed as follows:
\section{References} \begin{references} \bibitem[ISO 8879]{sgml} Information processing --- Text and office systems --- Standard Generalised Markup Language (SGML). \end{references}The output from this is shown in section .
The second argument of the \bibitem
command is a label which is used
in citing the document.
For instance, \cite{sgml}
gives the output [#!sgml!#].
Definitions A definition is numbered in the same way as a clause but has a run-in header and does not appear in the table of contents; see section for examples. A definition is entered as follows:
\definition{term} Text of definition...
Annexes
The main body of a standard may be followed by annexes, each of which is
either normative or informative.
The first annex should be preceded by the \annex
command.
Normative annexes are then introduced by the command:
\normative{Annex title}while informative annexes are introduced by the command:
\informative{Annex title}
Annexes may be divided into clauses, subclauses etc in the same way as
sections; the only difference is that annexes are numbered using upper-case
letters rather than Roman numerals.