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What does the national standard mean?
The meaning of this national standard is as follows:

The so-called national standard of thesis here refers to the national standard of thesis writing. Excerpted from the national standard "Writing Specification for Academic Papers" (GB 77 13-87): The national standard GB 77 13-87 stipulates the writing format of scientific and technological reports, dissertations and academic papers, and indicates that reports and papers consist of two parts: the first part and the main body.

The front part includes: title, author, abstract and keywords. The main part includes: introduction, text, conclusion and references.

Matters needing attention in paper writing:

Don't simply repeat the existing information in the title, avoid writing the contents of the introduction as a summary, don't copy the subtitle (table of contents) in the text of the paper or the text of the conclusion part of the paper, and don't interpret the content of the paper.

Try to use text narration, and don't list the data in the text in the summary; The words should be concise, exclude the content that has become common sense in this subject field, and delete meaningless or unnecessary words; The contents should not be displayed, examples should not be cited, and the research process should not be introduced.

The content of the abstract must be complete, and the main contents (or opinions) expounded in the paper can not be omitted, but should be written into short articles that can be used independently.