University of Otago LaTeX exam template

Nigel Stanger authored on 5 Jun 2013
.gitignore Added .gitignore. 11 years ago
CreateCluster.pdf - Reformatted page styles to meet latest Examinations Office requirements. 12 years ago
CreateIndex.pdf - Reformatted page styles to meet latest Examinations Office requirements. 12 years ago
CreateObjectType.pdf - Reformatted page styles to meet latest Examinations Office requirements. 12 years ago
CreateTable1.pdf - Reformatted page styles to meet latest Examinations Office requirements. 12 years ago
CreateTable2.pdf - Reformatted page styles to meet latest Examinations Office requirements. 12 years ago
HISTORY.md - Merged FAQ and INSTALL into README. 11 years ago
MANIFEST - Updated ancillary documentation to reflect v2.3 changes. 12 years ago
Makefile - Fixed obsolete reference to EPS in the install target. 12 years ago
README.md Tidied the text a little. 11 years ago
example.tex - Added initial comments. 20 years ago
example1.tex - Added initial comments. 20 years ago
example2.tex - Added initial comments. 20 years ago
lstlang0.sty - Added file comment. 20 years ago
ouexam.dtx Fixed some typos in the documentation and updated the class checksum. 11 years ago
ouexam.ins - Added CVS ID. 20 years ago
README.md

ouexam v2.3

ouexam document class v2.3, 4 September 2012

Copyright 1999–2012 Nigel Stanger and University of Otago

This LaTeX2e document class enables the production of University of Otago formatted examination papers. It handles all the fiddly layout requirements (such as printing “TURN OVER” at the bottom of every page except the last), and also ensures that the actual number of marks for questions in the examination add up to the expected number of marks.

Requirements

You will need the verbatim, fontenc, textcomp and lmodern packages in order to use ouexam. These should all come standard with most TeX installations. To build the documentation and example files, you will need at least version 1.1 of the listings package, and pdfjam.

Installing

To install the easy way:

1 Unpack the distribution archive and cd to the distribution directory.

2 make

3 make install TEXMF_INSTALL=/path/to/texmf. /path/to/texmf should be the root of your preferred texmf tree (e.g., /usr/share/texmf). You may need to do this as root depending on which texmf tree you are installing into. You can also define TEXMF_INSTALL as an environment variable then simply type make install.

To install manually, unpack the distribution archive, cd to the distribution directory, and do the following (now you know why there’s a Makefile :)

% latex ouexam.ins
% pdflatex example1.tex
% pdflatex example1.tex
% pdfjam --outfile eg1-1.pdf example1.pdf 1
% pdfjam --outfile eg1-2.pdf example1.pdf 2
% pdfjam --outfile eg1-3.pdf example1.pdf 3
% pdflatex example2.tex
% pdflatex example2.tex
% pdfjam --outfile eg2-1.pdf example2.pdf 1
% pdfjam --outfile eg2-2.pdf example2.pdf 2
% pdfjam --outfile eg2-3.pdf example2.pdf 3
% pdfjam --outfile eg2-4.pdf example2.pdf 4
% pdflatex ouexam.dtx
% pdflatex ouexam.dtx
% pdflatex ouexam.dtx

Put ouexam.cls in /path/to/texmf/tex/latex/ouexam.

Put eg*.pdf, ouexam.pdf, ouexam.dtx, ouexam.ins, HISTORY, MANIFEST, README and TODO in /path/to/texmf/doc/latex/ouexam.

Put Create*.pdf, example*.tex, example*.pdf and lstlang0.sty in /path/to/texmf/doc/latex/ouexam/example.

ouexam requires the verbatim class, which should be standard on most LaTeX installations. The class documentation uses the graphicx and hyperref packages, so you will have to install these first if you don’t have them already.

FAQ

The number of marks for my questions are not appearing at the end of the line even though there is plenty of room for them to fit.

You probably have a blank line between the end of your question text and the \end{question} macro that actually generates the number of marks. The line break gets processed by TeX before the number of marks is generated and effectively generates a new paragraph. Until I figure out how to stop this from happening, the workaround is to not leave blank lines between the end of the question text and the \end{question}.