Figures
- 1Books and Journals
- 1.1 A typical copyright page
- 1.2 Copyright notice of a second edition
- 1.3 The copyright page of a translation
- 1.4 A copyright page acknowledging earlier publication of certain chapters
- 1.5 Table of contents showing front matter, introduction, parts, chapters, back matter, and location of photo gallery
- 1.6 Partial list of illustrations, with subheads for figures and tables
- 1.7 Partial list of illustrations showing numbers, titles, and placement of unpaginated plates
- 1.8 A list of abbreviations
- 1.9 Opening page of a chronology
- 1.10 Partial list of contributors to an edited collection
- 1.11 Table of contents for an issue of an online scholarly journal
- 2Manuscript Preparation, Manuscript Editing, and Proofreading
- 2.1 Sample design and production schedule for a printed book
- 2.2 Sample production schedule for a quarterly journal published in both print and electronic forms
- 2.3 Manuscript editor’s style sheet
- 2.4 A manuscript page illustrating the principles of on-screen revision marks (redlining) and author queries
- 2.5 An example of a hand-marked manuscript page
- 2.6 Proofreaders’ marks
- 2.7 Marked proofs
- 3Illustrations and Tables
- 3.1 A halftone image of an original photo
- 3.2 Detail of figure 3.1 showing the halftone dot pattern
- 3.3 A line drawing with descriptive labels
- 3.4 A line drawing with figure number and caption
- 3.5 A musical example
- 3.6 A figure consisting of a photograph and a line drawing
- 3.7 Another composite figure, whose parts are identified in the caption
- 3.8 A bar chart (also called a bar graph)
- 3.9 A graph with symbols identified in the caption
- 3.10 A genealogical chart
- 3.11 A four-column table with three column headings, three stub entries, and nine data cells
- 3.12 A four-column table with two levels of stub entries
- 3.13 A four-column table with a spanner head across the second and third columns
- 3.14 A four-column table with two cut-in heads across three columns
- 3.15 A four-column table with Total appearing in italics
- 3.16 An eleven-column table with three levels of column heads
- 3.17 A seven-column matrix
- 3.18 An eight-column matrix
- 3.19 A three-column table with no stub entries
- 3.20 A three-column table in which values are aligned on the decimal point except for N values
- 3.21 A five-column table with subtotals and total
- 3.22 A four-column table with notes on significance, or probability, levels (p)
- 3.23 A three-column table doubled into two columns
- 3.24 An eight-column table with numbers replacing column heads to reduce width
- 3.25 A six-column table with repeated column heads and “continued” indication following a page break
- 4Rights, Permissions, and Copyright Administration
- 12Mathematics in Type
- 14Documentation I: Notes and Bibliography
- 14.1 A page of text with footnotes
- 14.2 A page of endnotes
- 14.3 Chapter endnotes (first page)
- 14.4 Translator’s footnote referenced by an asterisk, followed by author’s numbered notes
- 14.5 Footnotes keyed to line numbers
- 14.6 Endnotes keyed to page numbers
- 14.7 A short list of abbreviations preceding endnotes
- 14.8 The first page of a bibliography for a book
- 14.9 The opening page of a bibliography divided into sections
- 14.10 Part of the first section of an annotated bibliography
- 14.11 Part of the first section of a bibliographic essay
- 14.12 The first page of a discography
- 15Documentation II: Author-Date References
- 16Indexes
- Appendix AProduction and Digital Technology
- A.1 An example of XML markup in a graphical interface
- A.2 Another view of figure A.1, showing the XML markup as plain text
- A.3 Sample set of rules for composition and page makeup
- A.4 Sample design specifications for a book
- A.5 A simplified XML workflow
- A.6 Principle of offset printing
- A.7 A sheet consisting of sixteen printed pages
- A.8 Two methods of sewing used in binding
- A.9 Three methods of adhesive binding