Journal of Combinatorics

ISSN Print 2156-3527  ISSN Online 2150-959X

4 issues per year

Editor-in-Chief

Fan Chung (University of California at San Diego)

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General Information

Submit your paper for consideration to:  https://www.e-publications.org/ip/sbs/index.php/JOC/login

General point of contact: .

MSC Codes. Your submission should include relevant Mathematics Subject Classification (MSC) codes.

Authoring Template/Instructions: Available here.

Consent-to-Publish: Upon acceptance of a paper for publication, the author(s) must sign and submit a consent-to-publish agreement to International Press.

Copyright: Author has the option to retain copyright of his or her paper.

Paper format(s) of initial submission. Required: Adobe PDF file.

Paper format(s) upon acceptance. Required: LaTeX, author-compiled Adobe PDF as reference. Preferred: LaTeX 2e, using the specified LaTeX 2e authoring template.

Selection and Acceptance

Accepted papers, submitted in their final form for publication, must use the Latex authoring template designed for the Journal of Combinatorics, available at https://github.com/vtex-soft/texsupport.intlpress-joc. If the authoring template is not used, the author will be billed for the additional typesetting costs incurred by International Press.

Accepted papers must be submitted through our online paper-submission system (EJMS).

There are great benefits to using the online submission system—including reliable tracking of the status of your submission. Instructions for registration, and answers to frequently asked questions, are provided on the EJMS web page. Should you have any questions or difficulties using the system, please contact us at .

Upon submission of a manuscript for publication in the Journal of Combinatorics, it shall be understood that the work is original and is not being submitted to another journal. When a paper is accepted for publication, the author may transfer the copyright to International Press, or, optionally, retain the copyright. Should the copyright be transferred to International Press, the authors (and their employers) retain the right to reproduce their work for “fair use” under copyright law, which precludes any profit-making use of the work.