INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH
ULUSLARARASI MÜHENDİSLİK VE TEKNOLOJİ ARAŞTIRMALARI DERGİSİ /
e-ISSN: 2564-6184
Journal homepage:
Article Title [EN]
Makale Başlığı [TR]
First Author Name and Surname1[*], Second Author Name and Surname2, Third Author Name and Surname3
1First Author Affiliation, City, Country
2Second Author Affiliation, City, Country
3Third Author Affiliation, City, Country
ABSTRACT
Uniformity of formatting is a desirable attribute for papers published in the online International Journal of Engineering and Technology Research (IJENTE). This guide is written in the recommended format for papers and outlines the required page length, spacing, margins, font sizes, headings, references, quotations, and other stylistic features that lead to an appealing visual image. The Word version of this document has the recommended styles embedded and may be downloaded from the home page at / Article History
Received
Revised
Accepted
Published
Keywords:
Keyword1
Keyword2
Keyword3
Keyword4
Keyword5
ÖZ
Uniformity of formatting is a desirable attribute for papers published in the online International Journal of Engineering and Technology Research (IJENTE). This guide is written in the recommended format for papers and outlines the required page length, spacing, margins, font sizes, headings, references, quotations, and other stylistic features that lead to an appealing visual image. The Word version of this document has the recommended styles embedded and may be downloaded from the home page at / Makale Geçmişi
Alındı
Düzeltildi
Kabul edildi
Yayınlandı
Anahtar Kelimeler:
Anahtar Kelimeler1
Anahtar Kelimeler2
Anahtar Kelimeler3
Anahtar Kelimeler4
Anahtar Kelimeler5
International Journal of Engineering and Technology Research, Vol(No): pp, year1
Author Names / Article TitleIntroduction
This document has been adapted from earlier style guides used for the International Journal of Technology and Engineering (IJENTE). Please write you papers using this style guide. For more information about references, please refer to the widely accepted Chicago-Style Citation Quick Guide:
And choose (2) author-date documentation system. However, do not use the hanging Chicago-Style Citation guidelines suggest for lines after the first one in a reference. Make justified all lines as we do in this style guide.
General Requirements
Papers for this journal should be no longer than 20 pages, including references, appendices, figures, and tables. Tables and figures should be inserted directly into the manuscript, close to where they are referenced. Both tables and figures should be numbered sequentially from 1 to n. Do not re-start the numbering with each section in the paper. The paper should be written in Microsoft Word. We have observed that keeping papers on the shorter side usually improves the writing and makes the logic tighter, so we are maintaining a rather strict page limit. It is important that authors follow our instructions carefully. To help you in this task, we have written this document in the recommended format and the Word version includes the embedded styles. To format your references please use the Chicago-Style Citation Quick Guide in this link:
Page Limit
The full manuscript must not exceed 20 pages. It must include an abstract of up to 250 words. The 20 pages should include all tables, figures, and references.
Quality of Your Document
Please be sure to check your document for spelling and grammar before submitting it electronically.
Margins
The left and right margins should be 1.5 cm, with text fully justified. The top margin should be 2 cm and the bottom margin should be 2 cm. You are encouraged to hyphenate words to obtain more even word spacing.
Spacing
The body text of the paper should be single-spaced and fully justified in 11point Cambria font. Do not leave one line space between paragraphs, and do not indent the first line of a new paragraph. The margins should be set the specifications set forth in Margins Section of this Guide, with headers .5 inches from the top of the page and .62 inches from the bottom of the page. Page numbers should be centered at the bottom, and the first page should be numbered 1. The editors will re-number the pages appropriately before publication..
Use one space after punctuation marks such as periods, commas, semi-colons, and colons. No space after internal periods in abbreviations (a.m., i.e., U.S.).
Do not insert one line space between paragraphs. Use 6 pt line after the final paragraph.
The Abstract, Appendix, and Reference headings should be first letters caps, 12-point, bolded, and centered, with no line spaces above, and below.
Hedings
For the main headings for the abstract, references, and appendices, use 12point Cambria bold font, first letters caps, centered. Do not leave line spaces before and after.
For Level 1 headings such as “Introduction,” use centered 12-point Cambria bold font and capitalize only the first letter of the first word. The Heading 1 style in this paper automatically inserts a line space after the heading. In addition to the automatically inserted spaces, do not leave line spaces before, after.
For Level 2 headings, use centered 12-point Cambria font and capitalize the first letter of the first word. The Heading 2 style in this paper automatically inserts point line space after the heading.
Headers
You may put the headers in your paper if you wish, but the editors will do it if you do not. The header style in this document is set up to suppress the header on the first page of an article.
First Page Requirements
Titles
Do not use a separate title page. For the main title, use 12-point Cambria bold font, first letters caps, centered. Our Title style leaves a 12-point line space before and a 12-point line space after the title. There should be no line space after the title and before the name of the first author. The “Section Title” style in this document will automatically do this for you.
Authors
Leave a one line space after the paper title; and list each author separately, in alphabetical order, with the corresponding author identified with an *. Place the author’s name on the first line, the affiliation, on the next line, the city, state (if appropriate), and country on the next line; and the e-mail address on the final line for that author. Leave a one line space between each successive author.
Abstract and keywords
After the last author’s name, leave two line spaces before and one line space after the word ABSTRACT, which should be the same on this document. Use no more than 250 words in the abstract to indicate the nature of the topic and to briefly summarize the findings of the paper. Leave one line space after the abstract text, which should be in fully justified 11-point body text style. Put “Keywords:” on the next cell, followed by no more than five keywords.
The Body of the Paper
The body of the paper should be separated from the abstract by two line spaces. The “body text” style used here is left justified 11-point Cambria bold font. In body text, space no space after each period that ends a sentence. Do not leave a line space between paragraphs. Do NOT indent the first word of a new paragraph.
Acknowledgments
All acknowledgments should be footnoted at the bottom of the first page and labeled in the usual manner.
Footnotes, Figures, and Tables
Footnotes
Footnotes are generally discouraged, but may be used when necessary. They should be numbered consecutively and placed at the bottom of the page on which they appear, separated from the body of the text by a line one inch long (or 10 spaces). Two footnotes on the same page should be separated by a line space. Be sure to observe the margin requirements at the bottom of the page. Footnotes should not be attached to equations.
Figures and Tables
Use an 10 pt Cambria font for figure and table captions. Figures and tables should appear soon after their first citation in the text and should be included in a manner that allows easy reference while reading the text. Please try to make them as legible as possible.
Figure captions should be located below the figure, centered and not bolded with no period following the figure number or at the ends of the lines.
Table captions should be located above the table on two lines, not bolded, with the table number on the first line, the description on the next line, both lines left-justified and no periods at the end of the table number or the lines. Leave one blank line between the end of the caption and the table.
For both table and figure captions, capitalize only the first letter of the first word unless a word is normally capitalized because it is a proper name. Do not use bold fonts. Do not use periods after the table and figure numbers, and no periods at the ends of the lines. Refer to all tables and figures nearby in the text.
Tables should be centered, if possible across the entire page, as shown in Table 1. The entries in the cells of the table should be left justified. The font used for the cell entries is left to the discretion of the author. In general tables look better and are easier to read if you minimize the number of vertical lines and use only horizontal lines so far as possible as shown in Table 1.
Table 1. Sample table
Shop floor / Shop floor 1 / Shop floor 2 / Shop floor 3# of machines / 20 / 30 / 40
# of Jobs / 50 / 100 / 200
# of Routes / 5 / 5 / 3
Figure 1. Sample figure
Citations
To format your references please use the Chicago-Style Citation Quick Guide in this link:
Please left-justify your references and do not use the hanging indents preferred by the Chicago. Books, journals, and other references should be cited in the main document text by enclosing the author’s or authors’ surname(s) and the year of publication in parentheses. Examples: (Saaty, 1994a) or (Wedley, Schoner, and Choo, 1993). If you cite more than one reference by the same author in the same year, use letters after the year to refer to the different publications. Example: (Saaty, 1994b). If a reference contains no author, use the first two or three words of the title and the year. Example: (Scale Reversals, 1991). Arrange the reference section in alphabetical order. Exercise discretion when citing your own work. Remember, the refereeing process is intended to be a double-blind review, so referring to too many of your own papers might give away your identity.
Quotations
If a quotation contains two or more sentences and four or more lines, it should be set off from the body of the text with 1.5-inch left and right margins.
Formulas
All formulas should be placed on separate lines, centered, and numbered consecutively. Be certain that all symbols are adequately defined. Identification numbers should be placed in the bottom of the formula.
Equation 1
Equation 2
Appendices
Appendices, if needed, should immediately follow the body of the paper and precede the references. Please use appendices sparingly. All tables and figures should be referred to in the text and located in the body of the paper, as near as possible to where they are referred to in the text.
References
The bibliography of cited sources should be titled “References”, centered and first letters caps, and should appear at the end of the paper. References should come after the main body of the paper and the appendices. Please follow the Chicago Guidelines for references given in the site below:
Acknowledgments
This study is supported by Sakarya University Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit. Project Number: 2016-01-02-001.
References
Abdennadher, S., and M. Marte. "University course timetabling using constraint handling rules." Journal of Applied Artificial Intelligence, 2000: 311-326.
Abdullah, S., and H. Turabieh. "Generating university course timetable using genetic algorithm and local search." Proc. of the 3rd Int. Conf. on Hybrid Information Technology. 2008. 254-260.
Asmuni, H., E.K. Burke, J.M. Garibaldi, and B. McCollum. "Fuzzy multiple heurisitc orderings for examination timetabling." PATAT 2004. Pittsburgh, PA, USA: Berlin: Springer, 2005. Practice and theory of automated timetabling.
Awad, Rania, and John Chinneck. "Proctor Assignment at Carleton University." Interfaces 28, no. 2 (1998): 58-71.
Babaei, Hamed, Jaber Karimpour, and Amin Hadidi. "A survey of approaches for university course timetabling problem." Computers & Industrial Engineering 11 (2014): 1-17.
Boizumault, P., Y. Delon, and L. Peridy. " Constraint logic programming for examination timetabling. ." The Journal of Logic Programming, 1996: 217-233.
Burke, E. K., P. De Causmaecker, G. Vanden VErghe, and H. Van Landeghem. "The state of the Art of Nurse Rostering." Journal of Scheduling, 2004: 441-499.
Burke, E.K., and J.P. Newall. "A multi-stage evolutionary algorithm for the timetable problem." IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation, 1999: 63-74.
Burke, E.K., and M.W. Carter. "The Practice and Theory of Automatic Timetabling: Selected Papers from the Third." Konstanz. Berlin, 2001.
Burke, E.K., J.P. Newall, and R.F. Weare. " A memetic algorithm for university exam timetabling. ." Practice and theory of automated timetabling, 1996: 241-253.
Calderia, J. P., and A. C. Rosa. "School Timetabling using Genetic Search." PATAT 97, 1997: 115-122.
Carter, M. W., and G. Laporte. "Recent developments in practical course timetabling." Practice and theory of Automated Timetabling, 1998: 3-19.
Carter, M. W., and G. Laporte. "Recent developments in practical examination timetabling." Practice and Theory of Automated Timetabling, 1996: 1-21.
Colorni, A., M. Dorigo, and V. Maniezzo. "Genetic Algorithms and highly constrained problems: The time-table case." Parallel Problem Solving from Nature, 1991: 55-59.
Colorni, A., M. Dorigo, and V. Maniezzo. "Genetic Algorithms-A new approach to the Timetabling Problem." NATO ASI Series, 1990: 235-239.
Davis, L. Handbook of Genetic Algorithms. Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1991.
Deris, S., S. Omatu, and P. Saad H. Ohta. "Incorporating constraint propagation in genetic algorithm for university timetabling planning." Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence, 1999: 241-253.
Easton, K., G. Nemhauster, and M. Trick. Handbook of Scheduling: algorithms, models and performance analysis. CRC Press, 2004.
Erben, W., and J. Keppler. "A Genetic Algorithm Solving a Weekly Course-Timetabling Problem." Practice and Theory of Automated Timetabling (Springer), 1995.
Fonseca, C., E. Mendes, Fleming, and S. A. Billings. "Nonlinear model term selection with genetic algorithms." Proceedings of the IEE/IEEE Workshop on Natural Algorithms in Signal Processing. 1993.
Guéret, C., N. Jussien, P. Boizumault, and C. Prins. "Building university timetables using constraint logic programming." Practice and theory of automated timetabling, 1996: 130-145.
Holland, J. Adaptation in Natural and Artificial System. Michigan: University of Michigan Press, 1975.
Holland, J. H. "Genetic Algorithms." Scientific American, 1992: 66-72.
Kristinsson, K., and G. Dumont. "System identification and." IEEE Transaction on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics 22, no. 5 (1992): 1022-1046.
Lewis, R., and B. Paechter. "Application of the Grouping Genetic Algorithm to University Course Timetabling." Proc. of the 5th European Conf. on Evol. Comput. in Combinatorial Optimization (EvoCOP 2005). LNCS 3448, 2005. 144-153.
Ling, S. E. "Integrating Genetic Algorithms with a prolog assignment program as a hybrid solution for a polytecnic timetable problem." Parallel Problem Solving from Nature, 1992: 321-329.
Michalewics, Z. Genetic Algorithms + Data Structures = Evolutionary Programs. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1994.
Petrovic, S., V. Patel, and Y. Yang. "University timetabling with fuzzy constraints." PATAT 2004. Pittsburgh, PA, USA: Berlin: Springer, 2005.
Pinedo, Michael L. Scheduling Theory, Algorithms, and Systems. New York: Springer-Verlag, 2012.
Piola, R. "Evolutionary solutions to a highly constrained combinatorial problem." Dipartimento di Informatica Universita degli di Torino, 1992.
Pongcharoen, P., W. Promtet, P. Yenradee, and C. Hicks. "Schotastic Optimisation Timetabling Tool for University Course Scheduling." International Journal of Production Economics, 2008: 903-918.
Qu, R., E.K. Burke, B. McCollum, L.T.G. Merlot, and S.Y. Lee. "A survey of search approaches and automated system development for examination timetabling." Journal of Scheduling 12, no. 1 (2009): 55-89.
Rich, D. C. "A Smart Genetic Algorithm for University Timetabling." Practice and Theory of Automated Timetabling, 1995.
Schultz, A., and J. Grefenstette. "Evolving robot behavior." Proceedings of Artificial Life Conference (MIT Press), 1994.
Thompson, J. M., and K. A. Dowsland. "A robust simulated annealing based examination timetabling system." Computers & Operations Reasearch, 1998: 637-648.
Ueda, H., D. Ouchi, K. Takahashi, and T. Miyahara. "Comparisons of genetic algorithms for timetabling problems." Systems and Computers, 2004: 1-12.
Yang, Y., and S. Petrovic. "A novel similarity measure for heuristic selection in examination timetabling." 5th international conference, PATAT. Pittsburgh, PA, USA: Berlin: Springer, 2005.
International Journal of Engineering and Technology Research, Vol(No): pp, year1
[*] Corresponding Author: Affiliation, Phone:, e-mail:.