\maketitle
¶Synopsis:
\maketitle
Generate a title. In the standard classes the title appears on a
separate page, except in the article
class where it is at the top
of the first page. (See Document class options, for information about
the titlepage
document class option.)
This example shows \maketitle
appearing in its usual place,
immediately after \begin{document}
.
\documentclass{article} \title{Constructing a Nuclear Reactor Using Only Coconuts} \author{Jonas Grumby\thanks{% With the support of a Ginger Grant from the Roy Hinkley Society.} \\ Skipper, \textit{Minnow} \and Willy Gilligan\thanks{% Thanks to the Mary Ann Summers foundation and to Thurston and Lovey Howell.} \\ Mate, \textit{Minnow} } \date{1964-Sep-26} \begin{document} \maketitle Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale, a tale of a fateful trip. That started from this tropic port, aboard this tiny ship. The mate was a mighty sailin' man, the Skipper brave and sure. Five passengers set sail that day for a three hour tour. A three hour tour. ...
You tell LaTeX the information used to produce the title by making
the following declarations. These must come before the
\maketitle
, either in the preamble or in the document body.
\author{name1 \and name2 \and ...}
¶Required. Declare the document author or authors. The argument is a
list of authors separated by \and
commands. To separate lines
within a single author’s entry, for instance to give the author’s
institution or address, use a double backslash, \\
. If you omit
the \author
declaration then you get ‘LaTeX Warning: No
\author given’.
\date{text}
¶Optional. Declare text to be the document’s date. The text
doesn’t need to be in a date format; it can be any text at all. If you
omit \date
then LaTeX uses the current date (see \today
).
To have no date, instead use \date{}
.
\thanks{text}
¶Optional. Produce a footnote. You can use it in the author information for acknowledgements as illustrated above, but you can also use it in the title, or anywhere that a footnote mark makes sense. It can be any text at all so you can use it for any purpose, such as to print an email address.
\title{text}
¶Required. Declare text to be the title of the document. Get line
breaks inside text with a double backslash, \\
. If you
omit the \title
declaration then the \maketitle
command
yields error ‘LaTeX Error: No \title given’.
To make your own title page, see titlepage
. You can either
create this as a one-off or you can include it as part of a renewed
\maketitle
command. Many publishers will provide a class to use
in place of article
that formats the title according to their
house requirements.