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References editor names

Book references must include the author or editor names, book title, publisher, city of publication, and year of publication. [Pg.290]

Author names in references book citations, 188 organization as author, 198 periodical citations, 176— 177 U.S. government publications, 204 when to replace with editor name, 188, 189... [Pg.222]

Full bibliographic reference information (name of ACS journal, book, or magazine, issue date, volume number, issue number, page numbers if an ACS book, give the book editor s name(s), the chapter author s name(s), the series tide and number, year of publication, and pages) ... [Pg.418]

With the publication of Vol. 51 we should also like to refer to editorial policy this series publishes invited, critical review articles of new developments in all areas of Polymer Science in English (authors may naturally also include works of their own). The responsible editor, that means the editor who has invited the article, discusses the scope of the review with the author on the basis of a tentative outline which the author is asked to provide. Author and editor are responsible for the scientific quality of the contribution the editor s name appears at the end of it. Manuscripts must be submitted, in content, language and form satisfactory, to Springer-Verlag. Figures and formulas should be reproducible. To meet readers wishes, the publisher adds to each volume a volume index which approximately characterizes the content. [Pg.228]

When preparing references, certain miminal information is required. References to journal articles must include the authors surnames and initials, year of publication, journal name, journal volume number, and page numbers (inclusive page numbers are preferred). References to books must include the authors surnames and initials, editors surnames and initials (when applicable), book title, publisher, city of publication, and year of publication, it is the author s responsibility to be sure this information is complete and accurate. [Pg.558]

The Board of Editors of Organic Syntheses dedicates this volume to Theodora W. Greene upon her retirement as Assistant Editor, For 22 years Theo has edited our procedures for consistent style, has provided the Chemical Abstract names and registry numbers that appear at the end of each procedure, and has verified all the references. Quiet and unassuming, she carried out these tasks thoroughly and conscientiously all of us in the enterprise are deeply indebted to her. [Pg.1]

In the reference in Table 8.7 for the PW91 correlation functional, the editor s name is "Eschrig" not "Eschig". [Pg.621]

In reply to Staudinger-Woit, Aubrey D. Jenkins, on behalf of the IUPAC Commission, wrote a Letter to the Editor" which appeared in the subsequent issue of the same journal. Evading the matter of naming the discipline, he instead discussed the definitions of the two terms, polymer and macromolecule. He pointed out that both terms had separate definitions that identified them unequivocally macromolecule referred essentially to a molecule while polymer referred to a substance. [49] The letter concluded ... [Pg.241]

The editors wish, again, to call attention to the fact that Inorganic Syntheses is a periodical publication and that references to articles appearing in it should include the names of the authors of the articles in addition to the name of the editor of the volume. [Pg.224]

Section 2 References in alphabetical order by title, when the name of the author or editor is not stated or not known. [Pg.306]

The reference citation for a book should include the title of the book (and series name and number if applicable) the name(s) of the author(s) or editor(s) the year of publication and the page numbers on which the original figures or tables appear. If appropriate, also list the title of the chapter, the name(s) of the chapter author(s), and the inclusive page numbers for that chapter. [Pg.85]

After consulting these three single-volume references, one would turn to more comprehensive multivolume sources such as the Dictionary of Organic Compounds, Fifth Edition. This dictionary, still known as Heilbron, the name of its former editor, now comprises seven volumes of specific information, with primary literature references, on the synthesis, reactions, and derivatives of more than 50,000 compounds. Rodd s Chemistry of Carbon Compounds, another valuable multivolume work with primary literature references, is organized by functional group rather than in dictionary form. Elsevier s Encyclopedia of Organic Compounds in about twenty volumes is an incomplete reference work on the chemical and physical properties of compounds. It is useful for those areas it covers. References to Elsevier are found in the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. [Pg.624]

In his published account Vauquelin unfortunately failed to give the new element a name, but referred to it as " the earth of beryl. The editors of the Annales de Chimie suggested the name glucina, meaning sweet, because of the peculiar taste of its salts. This name, however, was not uni> versally accepted, especially when it was recalled that a sweet taste is not peculiar to the compounds of this element. The German chemists used the name " beryl earth, from which the name beryllium was applied to the element. Whether the element shall be called glucinum or beryllium seems to depend rather upon personal preference than upon any other consideration. [Pg.83]

Because Solver is such a generally useful tool, it may be desirable to call it from inside a macro. This can be especially helpful in iterative procedures, where Solver must be called repeatedly. In the more recent versions of Excel this is indeed possible. It requires that you open your spreadsheet, select the VBA editor (with Alt + Fll), and use Tools => References. In the resulting References - VBAProject dialog box, under Available References, find and activate SOLVER.xls. To do so, click on Browse, select Files of type Microsoft Excel Files (. xls,. xla) and, in Look in , find where Solver is located. For example, you may have to double-click on SystemdiskfC ), Program Files, Microsoft Office, Office, Library, and Solver. In the File name window type Solver.xla, and Open. [Pg.448]

Many authors in this field have been using the term oxo as a common name for keto and aldehyde groups. The Editors advise that the term oxo should be avoided in carbohydrate chemistry, since it refers to the replacement of a methykne group by a carbonyl group. This would rationally require the use of the absurd prefix deoxyoxo-. ... [Pg.225]


See other pages where References editor names is mentioned: [Pg.267]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.118]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.868]    [Pg.962]    [Pg.1082]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.1884]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.1357]    [Pg.1390]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.571]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.292 , Pg.293 , Pg.300 , Pg.301 , Pg.320 ]




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