We design and layout pages,
position chapter headings, titles, table of contents, and an index.
Not exact matches
Readers expect to crack open a book and feel the comfort of consistent
chapter headings, uniform text layout and page numbers that all land in the same
position on each page.
Amazon's description: «[This book] brings together 30
chapters from librarians and academics across the United States who've served as: board members for library organizations;
heads of special collections; state library consultants; directors of state library associations; outreach coordinators; archivists; researchers; presenters at conferences; and other
positions.»
As a result, their natural expectation is that the
headings reflect their
position in the overall hierarchy of the publication, despite the publication not actually being a single document (e.g., if a part
heading is expressed in an [HTML] h1 element, each
chapter that belongs to the part will have an h2
heading).
So we find a person in his 20's who has yet to be awarded a PhD, who has been a Greenpeace activist, but who is awarded a
position as a coordinating lead author on a vital IPCC
Chapter which concludes with very high confidence that mitigation is required to
head off the more damaging effects of man - made climate change.