I want to use LaTeX/XeLaTeX (I'm a newbie) for my psychology PhD thesis, and my trial document currently uses apa6
for the document layout (and biblatex-apa
/biber for referencing). It seems that apa6
does not allow for \chapter{}
, and while there are two related posts on this (1, 2), I can't actually tell if it is sensible or not to use apa6
for a thesis in the first place! What I would like to be able to have is:
- My document structured and formatted in APA 6th style (provided by
apa6
). - Citations and reference list in APA 6th style (provided
biblatex-apa
). - Allow for chapters (missing from
apa6
). - Introduce some customised styling (e.g. for quoting chunks of transcribed interviews).
Is there a relatively pain-free way to achieve goals 1 to 4? I have also considered that it might be easier to use something like memoir
in combination with biblatex-apa
, and give up on strict adherence to APA style (i.e. everything from apa6
).
\chapter{}
commands, things like the ToC, bibliography etc. will all be wrong. Better to figure out which few thingsapa6
does which you actually want and are applicable to a thesis.memoir
with APA referencing frombiblatex-apa
) is the way to go?memoir
specifically but I would definitely look for something along the lines of thebook
orreport
classes. That is, something which provides functionality similar to those..cls
file for theses, but that they will still have strict (or not) requirements about how the final theses must look (and it is unlikely that the institution, in general, will care to be APA-compliant in regarding general layout parameters). That is, you can choose any way you like to get to the destination (MS Word, LaTeX, whatever), but the destination must be the same. For the sake of flexibility and built-in functionality, I'd strongly consider usingmemoir
or one of theKOMA-Script
classes.