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Print [title] Print [reaction] Print [trGibbse] Print [vectorNH] ]... [Pg.260]

Print[title] Print[reaction] Print[table]]... [Pg.322]

Excel Tip. The name Database is one of Excel s built-in names. Excel recognizes the name Database as the reference to use in database functions. Other built-in names include Criteria, Extract, Print Area, Print Titles. Don t use any of these names as variable names except within the context of their normal use. [Pg.139]

This computer-produced Index contains the printed titles of national and international standards on plastics and related materials. These standards are published by technical societies. [Pg.378]

Title 21, Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 210 and 211, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. [Pg.448]

Code of Federal Regulations, Title 40, Part 58, Ambient Air Quality Surveillance, Appendix D— Network Design for State and Local Air Monitoring Stations (SLAMS). U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, July 1992, pp. 158-172. [Pg.227]

A review article is an intensive survey of a rather narrow field for example, the titles of some recent reviews are Desulfonation Reactions Recent Developments , Pyrrolizidine and Indolizidine Syntheses Involving 1,3-Dipolar Cycloaddtion , and From Corrin Chemistry to Asymmetry Catalysis—A Personal Account. A good review article is of enormous value, because it is a thorough survey of all the work done in the field under discussion. Review articles are printed in review journals and in certain books. The most important review journals in organic chemistry (though most are not exclusively devoted to organic chemistry) are shown in Table A.3. Some of the journals listed in Table A.l, for example, the Bull Soc. Chim. Fr. and J. Organomet. Chem. also publish occasional review articles. [Pg.1619]

Most headings are sentence-fragment phrases which constitute sentences when combined. Usually a period signifies the end of a combined sentence. In order to reconstitute the context in which a heading is to be read, superior-rank titles are printed as running heads on each page. When the sentences are put together from their constituent parts, they describe the contents of the piece at hand. For an example, see 2.3 below. [Pg.16]

Information on laboratory safety is available from many places. The public library usually has material on federal, state, and local safety regulations. The Index to Books in Print, also available at libraries, lists all material published by subject, author, and title. Scientific book publishers will be glad to add new names to their mailing lists for announcements of new publications on safety. [Pg.38]


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