The IEEE provides guidelines for the preparation of papers and presentations for their conference proceedings, including a series of LaTeX templates.
A number of templates using the IEEE style are available on Overleaf to help you get started - click above to use this template for Computer Science journals, or use the tags below to find more.
IEEEtran.cls version: 1.8b
(c) 2002 Matthew Boedicker (original author) http://mboedick.org
(c) 2003-2007 David J. Grant http://www.davidgrant.ca
(c) 2008 Nathaniel Johnston http://www.nathanieljohnston.com
(l) 2012 Arun I B http://www.ee.iitm.ac.in/~ee10s026/
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.5 License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 543 Howard Street, 5th Floor, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.
LaTeX isn't just for reports and papers - the powerful TikZ package can be used to create professional graphics and diagrams with only a few lines of text
Here's the perfect example from TeXample.net that's pre-loaded in writeLaTeX for you to try out - just click to open & edit online instantly.
For comments and discussions on this example, see the TeXample page.
New to LaTeX and want to find out more? Our Interactive Introduction to LaTeX course is freely available online, and Part 3 gives some great tips for creating your own presentations and drawings. Check it out today!
Generating invoices is made easy with LaTeX. The invoice package created by Oliver Corff allows you to create a simple invoice with the minimum of code.
We've loaded up an example template from Paul Asmuth's blog so you can give it a try with one-click - no sign up required!
Invoice package by Oliver Corff, example by Paul Asmuth