Indexes Indexes

Indexes

A Chapter from "The Chicago Manual of Style," Eighteenth Edition

    • USD 18.99
    • USD 18.99

Descripción editorial

Indexing A–Z from The Chicago Manual of Style—the undisputed authority for style, usage, and grammar.

In this age of searchable text, the need for an index made with human input is sometimes questioned. But a good index can do what a plain search cannot: It gathers all the substantive terms and subjects of the work, sorts them alphabetically, provides cross-references to and from related terms, and includes specific page numbers or other locators or, for electronic formats, direct links to the text. This painstaking intellectual labor serves readers of any longer work, whether it is searchable or not. For searchable texts, an index provides insurance against fruitless queries and unintended results. In a word, a good index makes the text more accessible.

Most book indexes must be assembled swiftly between the time page proofs are issued and the time they are returned to the typesetter—usually about four weeks. An author preparing their own index will have to proofread as well as index the work in that short time span.

This insightful chapter-length booklet will guide both professionals and first-time indexers in assembling an index that will do justice to both the book and the reader.  

GÉNERO
Referencia
PUBLICADO
2024
11 de noviembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
64
Páginas
EDITORIAL
University of Chicago Press
VENDEDOR
Chicago Distribution Center
TAMAÑO
888.7
KB