LaTeX class and template for Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellow grant applications.
- Details and original template is provided here (calls are updated each year).
- For the official editable version of the template, you must start the submission process. The template will then be available on the left-hand side in a section named "Download Part B templates".
- For a similar template for the Doctoral Network see msca-dn.
Caution: Only the 2022 template was submitted and deemed eligible by the Horizon program. Newer versions are simply updated based on the official template. Reporting any discrepancies is highly appreciated!
The official MSCA guidelines require the Times New Roman font on Windows or
macOS and the Nimbus Roman font on Linux. When using PDFLaTeX this package
uses the mathptmx
font. When using XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX, we try to load
the Times New Roman font and, if it is not available, the Nimbus Roman font.
If these do not work for you, you can load fonts yourself using e.g.
% on PDFLaTeX
\usepackage{newtxtext}
\usepackage{newtxmath}
% on XeLaTeX / LuaLaTeX
\setmainfont{Times New Roman}
The resulting PDF files are included for easy viewing, but it is recommended to build the two parts with e.g. latexmk as follows
latexmk -pdflua msca-pf-part-b1-template.tex
latexmk -pdflua msca-pf-part-b2-template.tex
This packages provides the msca-pf
class that is based on the
KOMA-script scrartcl
class and accepts any options meant for it. It can
be used as
\documentclass[11pt,layoutgrid,draftproposal]{msca-pf}
% ... preamble ...
\begin{document}
% ... content ...
\end{document}
The class has two options meant for drafting:
layoutgrid
: overlays a grid on top of each page to check margins and other alignment issues.draftproposal
: adds helpful drafting options, such as line numbers and a time stamp.
It also provides a few useful commands that can be used in the proposal. The following commands are mandatory:
mscaidentifier
: the call identifier, e.g.HORIZON-MSCA-2022-PF-01
. This should be set to the appropriate version by default.mscaproject
: the acronym for the project.
Additionally, there are also some commands to help constructing the CV and other little tables in the submission:
mscaorgoverview
: an environment (wrapper aroundtabular
) that defines the table template from Section 5.1 for participating organisations. This is a fixed 6 column table.mscaorgcapacity
: an environment (wrapper aroundlongtable
) that defines the table template from Section 5.2 for participating organisations. This is a fixed 2 column table.cvitem
: an environment to define a nicely aligned CV item.\cventry{dates}{name}{details}{location}
: a generic entry in the CV. Use\cventryitem
to get one already wrapped in thecvitem
environment.\cvpub{date}{authors}{title}{journal}
: a publication. Use\cvpubitem
to get one already wrapped in thecvitem
environment.\cvdetail{name}{description}
: a additional description for an entry. This must be added in the samecvitem
environment as the entry itself to use the same alignment.
The CV commands can be used in the following fashion:
% examples for a general entry
\begin{cvitem}
\cventry{DD/MM/YYYY DD/MM/YYYY}{Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering}{University Name}{Location}
\cvdetail{Title}{Title of my Ph.D}
\cvdetail{Advisor}{John Doe}
\end{cvitem}
\begin{cvitem}
\cventry{DD/MM/YYYY DD/MM/YYYY}{Job Title}{Company / University}{Location}
\cvdetail{Description}{Job description in short}
\end{cvitem}
% example of a bare entry (same as above without the details)
\cventryitem{DD/MM/YYYY DD/MM/YYYY}{Job Title}{Company / University}{Location}
% example for a publication
\begin{cvitem}
\cvpub{DD/MM/YYYY}{John Doe, Jane Doe}{Title of the Paper}
{Journal Name, Vol. XX, pp. XX--XX}
\cvdetail{Description}{Main findings of the paper}
\cvdetail{URL}{DOI or arXiV URL}
\end{cvitem}
% example for a bare publication (same as above without the details)
\cvpubitem{DD/MM/YYYY}{John Doe, Jane Doe}{Title of the Paper}
{Journal Name, Vo. XX, pp. XX-XX}
A Gantt chart must also be provided in the proposal. There are some LaTeX packages, e.g. pgfgantt, that can be used to create such charts. However, you can also just use a third party application, export the chart as a PNG or PDF, and include it like that.