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\documentclass{book, report, article or letter}

A LaTeX document starts with the command \documentclass [option] {type}. The most common document-classes in LaTex are:

  1. book
  2. report
  3. article
  4. letter

All of them are similar, except letter. The main differences can be summerised as follows:

Available document structure commands:

Book: \part{}, \chapter{}, \section{}, \subsection{}, \subsubsection{}, \paragraph{}, \subparagraph{}.

Report: \part{}, \chapter{}, \section{}, \subsection{}, \subsubsection{}, \paragraph{}, \subparagraph{}.

Article: \part{}, \section{}, \subsection{}, \subsubsection{}, \paragraph{}, \subparagraph{}.

Letter: A letter does not know the same structuring commands as other formats, but more specific commands like \signature{}, \address{}, \opening{} and \closing{}.

Except \part{}, all structuring commands build a hierarchy. They have a standard formating and numeration.

Other less common document-classes:

  1. “proc” for a protocol (two columns by default and smaller borders on the left and right)
  2. “slides” for a presentations
  3. “minimal, a prototype for your own document type

You can always change the standard document types, by adapting the *.cls-file to your needs.

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