F1 Self-Evaluation Project Explanations/pages 351-360
351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360
351
Two tables and two thought breaks.
The headings in the tables contain small-caps, which will be converted to all-caps for the Plain Text version of the eBook and therefore will take the same space as the untagged text. So, the easiest way to format these tables is to add the small-caps tags at the very end. Align the names and numbers in the columns, draw the dividers using hyphens (not underscores or macrons) for the horizontal lines, vertical bars for the vertical lines, and plus signs at their intersections. Enclose each table in no-wraps, and when finished, remember to add the small-caps tags.
Please ignore the blank line at the bottom of the page if you see that when checking your diffs. It would usually be stripped by the system, but as the pages were artificially handled when the project was set up, the blank line has inadvertently been retained.
352
Same as page 351, above, but without the error on the top border.
353
Tag the illustrations and move them to paragraph breaks. "Fig." is in mixed small-caps, so change the proofers' all-caps. The identification of the illustration includes its number, so include it and the trailing period in the small-caps, as shown in the formatted example: <sc>Fig. 29.</sc>
Some of the text is in italics, so tag them as well.
354
A chapter is a Major Division, so precede its heading with four blank lines, separate the main and sub-headings with one blank line, and separate the headings from the text body with two blank lines. The sub-heading is wrappable and should not be tagged in any way.
The in-line heading is boldface and on a line with normal text, so it needs to be tagged. It's a complete sentence, entirely in boldface, so its ending period goes INSIDE the tags.
355
An entire sentence is in italics at the top of the page, so its period goes INSIDE the tags.
The in-line heading is boldface and on a line with normal text, so it needs to be tagged. It's a complete sentence, entirely in boldface, so its ending period goes INSIDE the tags.
356
Tag the illustrations; since there are no paragraph breaks on the page, move them to the very top of the page, precede each one's opening bracket with an asterisk to signal the need to move them during post-processing, and follow each one with a blank line for separation.
"Fig." is in mixed small-caps. The identification of the illustration includes its number, so include it and the trailing period in the small-caps, as shown in the formatted example: <sc>Fig. 29.</sc>
357
A thoughtful proofer prepared this page for formatting: the illustration captions already are at paragraph breaks, properly spaced, and "Fig." is in mixed-case. All we have to do is tag them as illustrations and add the small-caps tags as explained just above, for page 356.
358
Similar to page 356, above.
359
A "Part" often is a Major Division, and is so here, so precede its heading with four blank lines and separate its components with one blank line. The sub-heading is wrappable and in italics, so tag it that way (italics, no block tags). Since it's followed by another Major Division (a chapter), there will be four blank lines twice on this page.
A chapter is a Major Division, so precede its heading with four blank lines and precede the text body with two blank lines.
The in-line headings are boldface and on lines with normal text, so they need to be tagged. Each one is a complete sentence, entirely in boldface, so its ending period goes INSIDE the tags.
There's extra space between each definition here, suggesting the need for Section breaks (two blank lines) rather than simple paragraph breaks. The next page in the original project (which happens to be the next example here) confirms this, because one of the topics contains several paragraphs, and they are not separated by extra whitespace.
360
The in-line headings are boldface and on lines with normal text, so they need to be tagged. Each one is a complete sentence, entirely in boldface, so its ending period goes INSIDE the tags.
There's extra space between each definition here, suggesting the need for Section breaks (two blank lines) rather than simple paragraph breaks. The topic at the top of the page is described by several paragraphs, and there's no extra space between them.