Welcome to the UNOFFICIAL Beamer template designed for Tongji University students. This template has been created to provide a visually appealing and professional format for your presentation needs.
It's important to note that this template is not an official university document, nor is it endorsed by Tongji University. However, we have done our best to create a template that is both aesthetically pleasing and functional.
You can access this template from our dedicated GitHub repository at https://github.com/TJ-CSCCG/Tongji-Beamer. We would appreciate it if you could follow us and give us a star on the repository to show your support for our work.
Thank you for considering our template, and we hope you find it useful for your academic presentations.
This is a simplified version of the template I used to write my MSc thesis (https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.17453). It is partially inspired by (and a bit of the structure and the older code were adapted from) Martin Helsø's UiO Mathematics Master's Thesis template. The name "Tengwar Thesis" is simply because I find Garamond somewhat similar to Tolkien's tengwar alphabet, and decided to go for the joke.
The template is configured mainly for Brazilian students who want to write their thesis in English, and hence expects some input in Portuguese and some in English. This version, however, also gives the user the option to turn off the Portuguese text and keep a thesis entirely in English (as long as you don't fill in the Portuguese code).
Quite notably, this version differs from my thesis by the choice of "Garamond flavor", so to speak. My thesis used Duffner's EB Garamond, while this version is a bit simpler and uses the package ebgaramond (although the actual code is currently configured to be compiled with LuaTeX). If you liked the long stylish Q, you'll need to download Duffner's EB Garamond from his website and use it directly with LuaTeX. This TeX.SE post gives an example of how to do it: https://tex.stackexchange.com/q/114223/144146.
Official template for the final report/dissertation of the MEng/BEng/MSc degrees of the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering of Imperial College London. Approved August 2023. Last update April 2024 - Version 1.2.0.
For a while now I have kept a research journal to keep track of my progress in my MSc, which papers and books I checked, and so on. The idea is mainly to have a document with simple entries that can later help me when writing reports or when trying to remember a reference I checked months ago. Recently I've decided to update my template and make it available online. This is it.