Jeanneret is a simple, clean theme designed for personal academic websites. This theme is built for the Zola static website generator.

It features:

  1. A blogging section (just write your blogposts in the content/posts/ directory). see example post
  2. Standalone pages (e.g. for a course you are teaching), just use the standalone.html template.
  3. A homepage layout to present yourself.

Features

  • Clean, readable typography and content layout
  • Math rendering using MathJax. Simply add math=true to the frontmatter of your post.
  • Reference rendering from a BibTex file (see below)
  • Standalone pages

Rendering BibTex

The following bibliography is generated from the bibtex file shown below. It represents all the entries that this theme can deal with.


Bibtex content used to generate this bibliography
@article{abouelhodaReplacingSuffixTrees2004,
  title = {Replacing Suffix Trees with Enhanced Suffix Arrays},
  author = {Abouelhoda, Mohamed Ibrahim and Kurtz, Stefan and Ohlebusch, Enno},
  year = 2004,
  month = mar,
  journal = {Journal of Discrete Algorithms},
  series = {The 9th {{International Symposium}} on {{String Processing}} and {{
            Information Retrieval}}},
  volume = {2},
  number = {1},
  pages = {53--86},
  issn = {1570-8667},
  doi = {10.1016/S1570-8667(03)00065-0},
  urldate = {2022-09-05},
  abstract = {The suffix tree is one of the most important data structures in
              string processing and comparative genomics. However, the space
              consumption of the suffix tree is a bottleneck in large scale
              applications such as genome analysis. In this article, we will
              overcome this obstacle. We will show how every algorithm that uses
              a suffix tree as data structure can systematically be replaced with
              an algorithm that uses an enhanced suffix array and solves the same
              problem in the same time complexity. The generic name enhanced
              suffix array stands for data structures consisting of the suffix
              array and additional tables. Our new algorithms are not only more
              space efficient than previous ones, but they are also faster and
              easier to implement.},
  langid = {english},
  keywords = {Genome comparison,Pattern matching,Repeat analysis,Suffix array,
              Suffix tree},
}

@book{sungAlgorithmsBioinformaticsPractical2011,
  title = {Algorithms in {{Bioinformatics}}: {{A Practical Introduction}}},
  shorttitle = {Algorithms in {{Bioinformatics}}},
  author = {Sung, Wing-Kin},
  year = 2011,
  month = oct,
  publisher = {{Chapman and Hall/CRC}},
  address = {New York},
  doi = {10.1201/9781420070347},
  abstract = {Thoroughly Describes Biological Applications, Computational
              Problems, and Various Algorithmic Solutions Developed from the
              author's own teaching material, Algorithms in Bioinformatics: A
              Practical Introduction provides an in-depth introduction to the
              algorithmic techniques applied in bioinformatics. For each topic,
              the author clearly details the bi},
  isbn = {978-0-429-14149-2},
}

@booklet{example_booklet,
  title = {Conference Proceedings},
  author = {Jane Doe and John Smith},
  year = 2022,
  month = {July},
  address = {San Francisco, CA},
  note = {This is a sample entry for a conference proceedings booklet.},
  howpublished = {Presented at the Annual Conference on Technology},
  editor = {Bob Johnson},
}

@conference{sugirepeated,
  AUTHOR = {Spector, P.C.},
  TITLE = {Strategies for Repeated Measures analysis of variance},
  BOOKTITLE = {Proceedings of the 12th SAS User’s Group},
  YEAR = {1987},
  Pages = {1174-1177},
}

@inbook{Winskel:1995:MC:218623.218630,
  author = {Winskel, Glynn and Nielsen, Mogens},
  chapter = {Models for Concurrency},
  title = {Handbook of Logic in Computer Science},
  editor = {Abramsky, S. and Gabbay, Dov M. and Maibaum, T. S. E.},
  volumn = {4},
  year = {1995},
  isbn = {0-19-853780-8},
  pages = {1--148},
  numpages = {148},
  url = {http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=218623.218630},
  acmid = {218630},
  publisher = {Oxford University Press},
  address = {Oxford, UK},
}

@incollection{acioly-regnierIdentifyingDidacticSociocultural2008,
  title = {Identifying Didactic and Sociocultural Obstacles to Conceptualization
           through {{Statistical Implicative Analysis}}},
  booktitle = {Statistical {{Implicative Analysis}}: {{Theory}} and {{
               Applications}}},
  author = {{Acioly-R{\'e}gnier}, Nadja Maria and R{\'e}gnier, Jean-Claude},
  editor = {Gras, R{\'e}gis and Suzuki, Einoshin and Guillet, Fabrice and
            Spagnolo, Filippo},
  year = 2008,
  series = {Studies in {{Computational Intelligence}}},
  pages = {347--379},
  publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
  address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
  doi = {10.1007/978-3-540-78983-3_16},
  urldate = {2019-09-26},
  abstract = {To understand culture's relationship to cognition, this field has
              studied children or adults with little schooling and often alien to
              well-educated Western culture. Traditionally centered on
              extra-curricular knowledge, school-based variables must be
              considered: written culture and teaching/learning strategies can
              generate obstacles to conceptualization. Subjects are adults who
              studied at least three years at university: some are professionals.
              Data was from short clinical-style interviews as well as a
              questionnaire based survey taken from an observational sample. To
              find regularities linked to conceptual strength, S.I.A. determined
              implicative rules between responses and pre-ordered structures.
              Results suggested representations linked to specific conceptual
              aspects constitute didactical and/or socio-cultural obstacles.},
  isbn = {978-3-540-78983-3},
  langid = {english},
  keywords = {conceptualization,culture and cognition,obstacles,prototypical
              figures,scientific concepts},
}

@proceedings{DBLP:conf/iclr/2024,
  title = {The Twelfth International Conference on Learning Representations, {
           ICLR} 2024, Vienna, Austria, May 7-11, 2024},
  publisher = {OpenReview.net},
  year = {2024},
  url = {https://openreview.net/group?id=ICLR.cc/2024/Conference},
  timestamp = {Mon, 29 Jul 2024 16:19:40 +0200},
  biburl = {https://dblp.org/rec/conf/iclr/2024.bib},
  bibsource = {dblp computer science bibliography, https://dblp.org},
}

@inproceedings{NIPS2017_3f5ee243,
  author = {Vaswani, Ashish and Shazeer, Noam and Parmar, Niki and Uszkoreit,
            Jakob and Jones, Llion and Gomez, Aidan N and Kaiser, Lukasz and
            Polosukhin, Illia},
  booktitle = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
  editor = {I. Guyon and U. Von Luxburg and S. Bengio and H. Wallach and R.
            Fergus and S. Vishwanathan and R. Garnett},
  pages = {},
  publisher = {Curran Associates, Inc.},
  title = {Attention is All you Need},
  url = {
         https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper_files/paper/2017/file/3f5ee243547dee91fbd053c1c4a845aa-Paper.pdf
         },
  volume = {30},
  year = {2017},
}

@manual{mymanual,
  title = {Example User Guide},
  author = {John Smith and Jane Doe},
  year = {2022},
  month = {June},
  address = {Example City, CA},
  note = {Available at \url{https://example.com/manual.pdf}},
  organization = {Example Corporation},
  edition = {3rd},
}

@mastersthesis{mythesis,
  title = {Dispossession, violence, resistance: First Nations and Mapuche women
           in the face of settler colonial patriarchy},
  author = {Piaroa Nunez},
  year = 2025,
  address = {Winnipeg, CA},
  url = {http://hdl.handle.net/1993/39021},
  school = {University of Manitoba},
  type = {Master's thesis},
}

@misc{kingma2017adammethodstochasticoptimization,
  title = {Adam: A Method for Stochastic Optimization},
  author = {Diederik P. Kingma and Jimmy Ba},
  year = {2017},
  eprint = {1412.6980},
  archivePrefix = {arXiv},
  primaryClass = {cs.LG},
  url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/1412.6980},
}


@phdthesis{blassel:tel-04041483,
  title = {{From sequences to knowledge, improving and learning from sequence
           alignments}},
  author = {Blassel, Luc},
  url = {https://theses.hal.science/tel-04041483},
  number = {2022SORUS385},
  school = {{Sorbonne Universit{\'e}}},
  year = {2022},
  month = Dec,
  type = {Theses},
  pdf = {
         https://theses.hal.science/tel-04041483v1/file/BLASSEL_Luc_these_2022.pdf
         },
  hal_id = {tel-04041483},
  hal_version = {v1},
  highlight_author = {0},
}

@techreport{xrandom,
  author = {Breiman, L. and Spector, P.},
  title = {Submodel selection and evaluation in regression -- the X- random case
           },
  number = {197},
  institution = {Department of Statistics, University of California, Berkeley},
  address = {Berkeley, CA},
  month = {June},
  year = {1990},
}

@unpublished{key2,
  author = {John Doe},
  title = {The Importance of Unpublished Sources},
  institution = {University of Example},
  year = {2022},
}


Using the BibTex Capabilities

In practice this is achieved with macros defined in the bibmacros.html file.

For any entry in the bibtex file, you can add the highlight_author={index} in order to print the highlighted name in bold (e.g. useful for listing your own publication). The index is 0-based, and invalid indices will result in no highlight being applied.