Authoring Scientific and Technical Documents with Microsoft Word 2000
Podlubny, I., Kassayova, K.: Authoring Scientific and Technical Documents with Microsoft Word 2000. Cambridge International Science Publishing, Cambridge, 2001, xviii+162 pages, ISBN 1898326800.
Book description
The full description of this book, including the table of contents, can be found at the publisher's web site: Cambridge International Science Publishing, Cambridge, Great Britain.
Order on-line
Compare prices
You can also try comparing the prices of this book at several on-line bookshops using:
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Text
- 2.1 Choosing the font type
- 2.2 Using different shapes of the chosen font
- 2.3 Using different font sizes
- 2.4 Enumerated lists
- 2.5 Bulletted lists
- 2.6 Hierarchical lists
- 2.7 Text quotations
- 2.8 Columns
- 2.9 Formatting with the help of styles
- 2.10 Defining and customizing paragraph and heading styles
- 2.11 Description lists
- 2.12 Using character styles - forget about bold and italic
- 2.13 Hyphens and hyphenation
- 2.14 En dash, em dash, and minus
- 2.15 Hard space as a glue
- 2.16 Ligatures and some other symbols
- 3 Mathematical Formulas
- 3.1 General recommendations for typesetting equations
- 3.2 Defining and changing a formatting style for equations
- 3.3 In-line formulas
- 3.4 Unnumbered displayed equations
- 3.5 Numbered equations: Problem formulation
- 3.6 Typesetting numbered equations
- 3.7 Defining a paragraph style for displayed equations
- 3.8 Cross-references to equations
- 3.9 Writing equations using Microsoft Equation Editor
- 3.10 Text within an equation
- 4 Figures and Tables
- 4.1 Basic recommendations for placing illustrations
- 4.2 Including figures
- 4.3 Defining own caption labels
- 4.4 In-line illustrations and floating illustrations
- 4.5 In-line figures: inserting a figure
- 4.6 In-line figures: adding a caption
- 4.7 Floating figures: inserting a figure with a caption
- 4.8 In-line tables: inserting a table
- 4.9 In-line tables: adding a caption
- 4.10 Floating tables: inserting a table with a caption
- 4.11 Diagrams, schemes, algorithms, and other illustrations
- 4.12 Cross-references to figures, tables, and other illustrations
- 5 Making Bibliography
- 5.1 Creating an enumerated bibliography list
- 5.2 Referring to items of an enumerated bibliography list
- 5.3 Sorting an enumerated bibliography list alphabetically
- 5.4 Creating a bibliography list with alphanumeric labels
- 5.5 Referring to items of a bibliography list with alphanumeric labels
- 5.6 Sorting a bibliography list with alphanumeric labels alphabetically
- 5.7 Creating a Harvard-styled bibliography list
- 5.8 Referring to items of a Harvard-styled bibliography list
- 5.9 Sorting a Harvard-styled bibliography list alphabetically
- 5.10 Separate bibliography lists for separate book chapters
- 6 Generating Contents
- 6.1 Table of contents
- 6.2 Tables of contents for separate chapters
- 6.3 List of figures
- 6.4 List of tables
- 6.5 Lists of other objects
- 6.6 Single index
- 6.7 Multiple indices: marking-up index entries
- 6.8 Multiple indices: inserting indices
- 7 Page Numbering
- 7.1 The notion of section in Microsoft Word 2000
- 7.2 Plain page numbering (1-112)
- 7.3 Book type page numbering (i-xxii, 1-90)
- 7.4 Titles of chapters and sections in page headers
- 8 Work Faster and more Efficiently
- 8.1 Copying: use Paste Special
- 8.2 AutoText
- 8.3 AutoCorrect
- 8.4 User-defined buttons on the toolbar
- 8.5 User-defined menus
- 9 Working with Long Documents
- 9.1 Dividing a long document in smaller parts
- 9.2 Working with the master document
- 9.3 Working with subdocuments
- 10 Printing
- 10.1 One-sided and double-sided printing
- 10.2 n-up printing
- 10.3 Printing leaflets and brochures
- 10.4 Creating PDF using Adobe Acrobat
- Appendix A: Table of some Language Codes
- Appendix B: Limits of Microsoft Word 2000
- Index