> How do you make indices? I need to make one in a project I am > working on. Its in Word now but I plan to port it to Apple's > "Pages" which seems nicer than Word. Well, it is something you have to learn, just like math or science. Probably the hardest part is term selection which basically means you need to learn how to properly determine what is likely to be looked up and in what ways it will be looked up. For example you might: commands new open And... new command open command You might also have creating songs opening songs I'm not an indexer myself, but have learned enough through my beta testers and attending American Society of Indexers conferences and reading Nancy Mulvany's book called "Indexing Books" that I at least have a reasonable understanding of what is appropriate and what is not. I still don't do my own indexes, I hire a professional for that. Anyway, there are also sorting rules to understand, when it is appropriate to have a cross-reference and the difference between a "see" and "see also" cross-references. A good example of one of the things that makes the Logic index bad is that if you look up punch-in, it will send you to a Glossary entry rather than pertinent information in the manual. Well... for starters, the Glossary is already in alphabetical order, the index should not include glossary items at all. Heck, if I'm looking up Punch-in, I probably already know what it means, I just want to find out how to do it. However, it *should* include information in the reference manual that applies. If your project really needs a good index, you should hire an indexer. Otherwise, you could buy Nancy's book or the Chicago Manual of Style and read up on it. Kamm
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RE: [Logic_Cafe] manuals // An inauspicious beginning
2005-05-05 by Kamm Schreiner
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