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TITLE IN ALL CAPS A graduation project submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences of International University of Sarajevo in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in PROGRAMME NAME by Your Name Graduation Date 1

Dissertation - ius.edu.ba€¦ · Web viewtitle in all caps. A graduation project submitted to. the Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences of . International University of Sarajevo

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TITLE IN ALL CAPS

A graduation project submitted to

the Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences of

International University of Sarajevo in partial

fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

Bachelor of Science

in PROGRAMME NAME

by

Your Name

Graduation Date

1

Graduation project written by

NAME

Graduation Committee

Prof. Dr. Affiliation, Country, ChairProf. Dr. Affiliation, Country, SupervisorProf. Dr. Affiliation, CountryProf. Dr. Affiliation, CountryProf. Dr. Affiliation, CountryProf. Dr. Affiliation, CountryProf. Dr. Affiliation, Country

2

I hereby declare that all information in this document has been obtained and presented in

accordance with academic rules and ethical conduct. I also declare that, as required by these

rules and conduct, I have fully cited and referenced all material and results that are not

original to this work.

NAME LAST NAME

iii

INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SARAJEVO

DECLARATION OF COPYRIGHT AND AFFIRMATION

OF FAIR USE OF UNPUBLISHED WORK

Copyright 2017 © by Student Name Last name rights reserved.

GRADUATION PROJECT TITLE

No part of this unpublished work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or

transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,

recording or otherwise without prior written permission of the copyright holder and

IUS Library.

Affirmed by Student NAME

Signature Date

iv

ABSTRACT

v

DEDICATION

Optional dedication page.

vi

TABLE OF CONTENTS

LIST OF FIGURES........................................................................................................IX

LIST OF TABLES............................................................................................................X

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS.........................................................................................XI

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.........................................................................................XIII

CHAPTER 1.....................................................................................................................14

1.1 Abstracts...................................................................................................................14

1.2 Introduction..............................................................................................................14

1.3 How to Use this template.........................................................................................14

1.4 Cross-References.....................................................................................................14

1.5 References and Bibliography...................................................................................15

CHAPTER 2.....................................................................................................................16

2.1 Style Guide and Instructions for Thesis and Dissertation........................................16

2.1.1 Font Styles.....................................................................................................16

2.1.2 Margins..........................................................................................................16

2.1.3 Figures............................................................................................................16

2.1.4 Tables............................................................................................................18

2.2 Bibliographies/References.......................................................................................19

2.3 Footnotes..................................................................................................................19

2.4 Appendices...............................................................................................................19

APPENDIX A EXAMPLE OF AN APPENDIX...........................................................21

APPENDIX B ANOTHER APPENDIX EXAMPLE...................................................22

REFERENCES................................................................................................................23

vii

LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 2.1. An Example figure..........................................................................................17

viii

LIST OF TABLES

Table 2.1. An Example table. Chapter Number and Table Number within chapter..........17

Table 2.2. Another table....................................................................................................18

ix

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

BDS Bidirectional Similarity

DRIM Dynamic Range Independent Metric

EV Exposure Value

HDR High Dynamic Range

x

xi

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Acknowledge those who helped or supported you in finishing this dissertation/thesis.

Your Name

Defense Date, City, State

xii

CHAPTER 1

1.1 Abstracts

This is external to the thesis and not counted in the page count. There is another

template for the abstract – see ThesisAbstract-Template.dot.

Added Note: Abstract is not part of thesis and must not be paginated and must not

affect the page count of thesis or front matter.

1.2 Introduction

1.3 How to Use this template

You can open this document Thesis Dissertation-Tempate.dot and do a “save as”. Or

you can put this .dot file in your templates folder for MS Word and do a “New…” and

select this template.

MS Word allows you to define styles. For example this text is “Body Text”. You

should use the “Styles and Formatting” tool bar for changing and applying styles to

your text. Select the text and apply the appropriate style. The chapter heading is

Heading 1 and the sub section is Heading 2 and Heading 3 for sub-subsections.

1.4 Cross-References

Word allows you to automatically generate the Table of Contents and List of

Figures/Tables via the “Insert Reference Index and Table” function. If you use the

styles properly for each heading and captions this tool will save a large amount of

time.

13

14

1.5 References and Bibliography

Use EndNote or some other plugin tool to manage your references and insert your

citations. These tools automatically generate your bibliography and will save you

100’s of hours. The references in this document are done with EndNote.

15

CHAPTER 2

2.1 Style Guide and Instructions for Thesis and Dissertation

2.1.1 Font Styles

Scalable fonts (E.g. Arial, Times New Roman) should be 12 points in size. Do not use

exotic fonts (slanted, square, or script type) for the entire document, but special fonts

may be used for emphasis or when otherwise appropriate. Students should make sure

that the print is uniformly letter quality. Laser print, ink jet print, or high-quality

photocopying is acceptable. Dot matrix or near letter quality print is not acceptable.

The type style and size must be the same throughout the thesis or dissertation.

Added note: The font size and style (e.g., New Times Roman) must be same

throughout the thesis, table of content (TOC), and abstract. Different/variable size

and style is not allowed for chapter headings or any other titles. However, titles can

be bold, italics, etc.

2.1.2 Margins

On all sides use standard one inch margin. Illustrations, graphs, and tables must not

extend beyond the margins. Materials that extend beyond these margins should be

retyped or reduced in size.

2.1.3 Figures

Word allows you to insert a caption (figure or table). This is down with “Insert

Reference Caption”. More importantly Word also has facilities to reference these

figures. Use “Insert Reference Cross-Reference” to insert a reference to a figure,

16

table, or heading. This is really helpful when you (because you will) rearrange

sections or placement of figures/tables. Word will keep track of this for you if you use

the cross reference tool.

Additionally, by using the insert-caption you can automatically generate a list of

figures and a list of tables. If the location of table/figure moves, you just regenerate

the list and it is updated.

17

Figure 2.1. An Example figure.

2.1.4 Tables

Again, make sure tables are consistent and neat. Table heading go before the table.

We have two examples of tables below Table 2.1 and Table 2.2. Notice they are

numbered with the chapter, that is table 1 of chapter 2 (2.1).

Table 2.1. An Example table. Chapter Number and Table Number within chapter

18

Document Engineering Software Engineering

Viewing/Editing

Linking/Querying

Software Visualization

Static Analysis

Plain-Text Source Code Medium None None None

AST & Symbol Table Low Low Low Medium

srcML High High High Medium

Table 2.2. Another table.

Prev

ious

Ben

chm

ark

Res

ults Fact Extractor Full Answer Partial Answer No Answer

Acacia 32% 16% 52%

Columbus 19% 11% 70%

Cppx 45% 19% 35%

TkSee/SN 28% 18% 54%

2.2 Bibliographies/References

Make sure that the bibliography is properly and consistently formatted. Use EndNote

or some other plugin tool to manage your references and insert your citations. The

references in this document are done with EndNote.

2.3 Footnotes

A footnote1, this is an example of a footnote and the formatting. Again, everything has

to be in the same font and size. You should use footnote sparingly.

1 This is a footnote. A place to put additional information.

19

2.4 Appendices

Appendices are a good place to put things like source code, DTDs, and extra

mathematical information. They are page numbered. Examples are in this document

as Appendix A and B. Use Appendix Heading for the heading of the appendix.

20

APPENDIX AExample of an Appendix

This appendix contains vital information.

21

APPENDIX BAnother Appendix Example

22

REFERENCES

[Aiken, Ngwenyama, Broome 1999] Aiken, P., Ngwenyama, O., and Broome, L.,

(1999), "Reverse Engineering New Systems for Smooth Implementation", IEEE

Software, vol. 16, no. 2, March/April, pp. 36-43.

[Biggerstaff, Mitbander, Webster 1993] Biggerstaff, T. J., Mitbander, B. G., and

Webster, D., (1993), "The concept assignment problem in program understanding", in

Proceedings of International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE'93),

Baltimore, Maryland, pp. 482 - 498.

[Bruegge, Dutoit 2000] Bruegge, B. and Dutoit, A.,(2000),Object-Oriented Software

Engineering Conquering Complex and Changing Systems, Prentice Hall.

[Collard 2004] Collard, M. L., (2004), Meta-Differencing: An Infrastructure for

Source Code Difference Analysis, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio USA, Ph.D.

Dissertation Thesis.

[Collard, Kagdi, Maletic 2003] Collard, M. L., Kagdi, H. H., and Maletic, J. I.,

(2003), "An XML-Based Lightweight C++ Fact Extractor", in Proceedings of 11th

IEEE International Workshop on Program Comprehension (IWPC'03), Portland, OR,

May 10-11, pp. 134-143.

[Cordy 2003] Cordy, J. R., (2003), "Generalized Selective XML Markup of Source

Code Using Agile Parsing", in Proceedings of 11th IEEE International Workshop on

Program Comprehension (IWPC'03), Portland, Oregon, USA, May 10 - 11, pp. 134-

143.

23

24

[Faloutsos, Oard 1995] Faloutsos, C. and Oard, D. W., (1995), "A Survey of

Information Retrieval and Filtering Methods": University of Maryland, CS-TR-3514.

[OMG 2003] OMG, (2003), "Unified Modeling Language, 1.5": http://www.omg.org.