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Subject:Re: Writing Conventions From:Geoff Bradbury <bradg -at- INTEXT -dot- CPSG -dot- COM -dot- AU> Date:Wed, 1 Nov 1995 08:30:41 +1100
At 18:07 30/10/95 EST, you wrote:
> I am currently assisting in writing an Installation Guide, and have run
> into some problems with writing conventions. What conventions should I
> use to denote the following types of information (information enclosed by
> asterisks):
> 1. Directories / Subdirectories
> Example: " Expanding the tar file will create a subdirectory
> *mcinstal*.
> 2. Script names
> Example: " Make sure that Oracle scripts *coraenv* and *oraenv*
> were copied.
> 3. Attributes
> Example: "If this file does not exist, create it with owner *oracle*
> and group *dba*.
__________________________________________________________
At 8:18 1/11/95 AEST, I wrote:
Greetings Jennifer...
Good to see the recent flamewars haven't scared all the students away!
There aren't any hard-and-fast rules about the conventions in which you're
interested. From my point, consistency is the priority. You could simply
italicize the relevant items. Or, you could italicize items 2 and 3, but
format item 1 in a contrasting face. Arial 10pt, for example (assuming your
body text is in something like Times 12pt). I'd steer clear of bolding,
underlining or excessive formats: they quickly clutter the page and break
your readers' flow.
Whatever convention you settle on make sure you document it at the front of
your publication. I always include a small section entitled "Conventions
used in this publication" in the Preface.
Hope this helps.
__________________________________________________
Geoff Bradbury - Technical Writer for InTEXT Systems
"Makers of extraordinarily fine text storage, retrieval, routing & analysis
software."