Author’s guidelines
This page provides some general writing guidelines for authors of the page. This page takes inspiration from (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023), (IEEE Editing Mathematics 2023), (The Chicago Manual of Style 2017), (“IEEE Standard Dictionary of Electrical and Electronics Terms” 1996).
1 Peer Review
Two reviews will be proposed for each article addition/modification:
- A first review will be based on the form, the quality of the explanations and compliance with the template and guidelines. For example, correction or question of grammatical errors, obvious inconsistencies or omissions, spelling, and punctuation.
- A second review will be based on the technical background, the accuracy and consistency of the equations
2 Writing principles
Depending on the nature of the page, the model or the test case template should be used. in both cases, the writing principles are the same.
2.1 Title
Please refer to chapter 2 part A of the (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023)
2.3 Nomenclature
When nomenclature is needed, it should appear in a decicated section of the page, preferably at the beginning of the page.
2.4 Equations
When the equation is at the beginning of an item, align the equal sign with the right-hand side capitals, end the equation with a period, begin the definition with a capital, and end with a period.
When the equation is at the end of an item, end the definition with a comma, follow with an equal sign and the rest of the equation, then end with a period as shown in the following example.
Consecutive Numbering: Equations within an article are numbered consecutively from the beginning of the article to the end. Appendix Equations: Continued consecutive numbering of equations is best in the Appendix, but equation numbering that starts over with (A1), (A2), etc., for Appendix equations is permissible.
Material in displayed equations is automatically italic unless you indicate otherwise. Some simple general rules apply. All variables are italic. Function names and abbreviations are Roman, as are units, unit abbreviations, complete words, and abbreviations of words. Superscripts and subscripts follow this same formula: when they are variables, they are italic; when they are abbreviations of words (such as “in” and “out” for input and output), they are Roman. Single-letter superscripts and subscripts may be italic even if they are abbreviations, unless this leads to inconsistency between italic and Roman characters for similar types of subscripts.
2.5 References
Please consult the decicated section on references and other types of Papers in (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023).
2.6 Text citation of Figures and Tables
Please consult the decicated section on text citations of Figures and Tables in (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023).
2.7 Other text
Please consult the decicated section on inclusive language, footnotes, and lists in text in (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023).
2.8 Writing style
Please consult the decicated section on : Acronyms, spelling, trademarks, plurals, hyphenation rules, grammar, contractions, capitalization, Dates, percentages and decimals, Ranges wit units in chapter E. Writing Style for Transactions in (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023).
2.9 Grammar and usage
For guidance in grammar and usage, please consult the (The Chicago Manual of Style 2017) and Chapter III. Grammer and usage in transactions from (IEEE Editorial Style Manual for Authors 2023).
2.10 Mathematical editing
Please consult the (IEEE Editing Mathematics 2023) for guidelines on how to write mathematics.
2.11 Electrical and Electronics Terms, notations and conventions
Please consult the (“IEEE Standard Dictionary of Electrical and Electronics Terms” 1996) for the terms to be used in Electrical and Electronics fields.
For notations and conventions, please look at this page
For electrical and eletronic diagram, you can refer to (Graphic Symbols for Electrical and Electronics Diagrams 1993) and (“American National Standard - Supplement to Graphic Symbols for Electrical and Electronics Diagrams” 1986)
For control terminology, you can check: (Terminological Dictionary of Automatic Control, Systems and Robotics 2024)