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Activating the Right Editing Workflows

An editing workflow can be applied to three different types of documents in Indico:

  • Paper
  • Slides
  • Poster

JACoW conferences with the aim to publish proceedings will normally always use the Paper editing workflow. Depending on your conference you may also want to activate one or several of the others. The alternative for collecting other files without passing them through a review process, is to use the standard Indico Material Submission process.

In order to activate one or several editing workflows, go to the Editing module, then activate the toggle right of the List of editable types.

Activate the toggle right of each type for which you want to activate the editing workflow, then Save.

The display then switches back to the list of activated workflows.

Click on the Manage button of the desired editing workflow in order to configure it (see following sections).

Configuring the File Types

One of the key instruments in ensuring the quality of submitted material in JACoW conferences is the possibility to limit users with regards to the type of files they submit and how they name them. This makes things more predictable so that further workflows (human and automated) can process the data accordingly and usually helps avoiding mistakes.

This is handled through File Types which can be seen as folders into which submitters upload their editable files.

Specific File Types can be set for each editing process (so independently for papers, slides and posters).

In order to configure your File Types for a given editing process, click on the Configure button in the File types section.

You can then add new File Types, edit or delete existing ones.

For each File Type, the following fields can be configured:

  • Name - which will be displayed on the interface;
  • File name template - the format which the name of the file to be uploaded should follow; this will be enforced when the user will submit the editable files; the template can include the {code} placeholder which will be replaced by the contribution programme code
  • Extensions - allowed file extensions for that file type;
  • File required - whether the file type is mandatory (at least one file required);
  • Multiple files - whether the file type allows for more than one file;
  • Publishable - whether the contents of the type should be displayed publicly once the editable is published.


A standard JACoW conference will usually implement the following File Types:

  • For Papers:

    • PDF

      • Extensions: pdf

      • Filename template: {code}

      • [x] Required

      • [x] Publishable

    • Source Files

      • Extensions: tex, doc, docx, odt

      • Filename template: {code}

      • [x] Multiple

    • Supporting files

      • No extensions restriction

      • Filename template: {code}_*

      • [x] Multiple

  • For Slides:

    • PDF

      • Extensions: pdf

      • Filename template: {code}_slides

      • [x] Required

      • [x] Publishable

    • Source Files

      • Extensions: ppt, pptx, tex,odp, keynote

      • Filename template: {code}_slides

      • [x] Multiple

  • For Posters:

    • PDF

      • Extensions: pdf

      • Filename template: {code}_poster

      • [x] Required

      • [x] Publishable

    • Source Files

      • Extensions: ppt, pptx, ai, odp, tex

      • Filename template: {code}_poster

      • [x] Multiple


Beware: If you use {code} in your file name template, make sure programme codes are assigned to all contributions before you open up the files submission.


Configuring the Ready for review Conditions

This is where you define minimum requirements an editable has to fulfil in order to be considered ready for editing. You can define conditions based on the type of the received files, combined with AND and OR operators.

In order to configure your Ready for review conditions for a given editing process, click on the Configure button in the Ready for review conditions section.

Then add the appropriate File Type conditions.