[Date Prev][Date Next]
[Thread Prev][Thread Next]
[Date Index]
[Thread Index]
[New search]
Subject: Re: Opinions Please !
From: lsmalley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Lester C. Smalley)
Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1999 13:08:11 -0400
Cc: framers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx, framers@xxxxxxxxx
Sender: owner-framers@xxxxxxxxx
= ******************************************** = You can usually base a good = starting index on the text of = your headings, subheadings, = titles, and so on. = ******************************************** = = Richard Melanson = Technical Writer = Exchange Applications = 617-737-2244 = rmelanson@exapps.com Well (to paraphrase BillC) it depends on what the the meaning of 'good starting index' is. Lacking any other guideline, and not knowing the nature of the material, sure, this is probably an acceptable starting point. However, there is _no way_ the reuslt of the above should be considered the final index. A good index will also at the very least include references to all the places that 'key concepts' are used, and especially defined, in the doc. Also, you should include index entries that try, as much as possible, to use the 'unitiated readers' terminology, not merely the words/phrases in the document itself. (take for example, look at the FM User Guide index; how often have you been frustrated trying to find something that is "not" is the index, at least, not in the terminology _you_ expect) And of course, there is the issue of permuted/alternate entries - not only the string() function 46, 51-52, 177 but functions ... string() 46, 51-52, 177 to contend with. Some references (culled from _many_ previous posts to 'framers' on the subject from the likes of Hedley Finger and Conrad Taylor among others) you may want to check out: Bonura, Larry, _The Art of Indexing_, Wiley Technical Communication Library series, John Wiley, New York, 1994 This is a how-to which assumes you will be using 3x5 index cards. Wellisch, Hans H., _Indexing from A to Z_, H.W. Wilson, New York, 1991 This consists of a series of articles in alphabetical order of title which is not for the first-timer but ultimately essential once you have mastered the previous book. Knight, G[ilfil]. Norman, _Indexing, the Art of_, Allen & Unwin, London, 1979 Now well out-of-date as it was published before the widespread advent of word-processors, this is a comprehensive introduction. Unfortunately out of print and unlikely to be revised and re- issued now that the author is dead and whoever bought the copyright from the defunct Allen & Unwin did not realize what a treasure they have. Look for in secondhand book shops. Mulvaney, Nancy C., _Indexing Books_ University of Chicago Press ISBN: 0-226-55014-1 hardback 320 pp ... including index, of course Also, visit the American Society of Indexers at: http://www.well.com/user/asi/index.html http://www.asindexing.org/software.htm or http://asindexing.org/indfaq.htm - Lester ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Lester C. Smalley | email: lsmalley@infocon.com Manager, Computer Systems & Training | USMail: P. O. Box 310 Information Consultants, Inc. | Phone: (302) 239-2942 ext-13 Hockessin, DE 19707-0310 | FAX: (302) 239-1712 --------------------------------------+------------------------------- INFOCON is a Premium VAR for Adobe, Sun, and related hardware/software dedicated to providing integrated office solutions for productivity. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.infocon.com/ ** To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@omsys.com ** ** with "unsubscribe framers" (no quotes) in the body. **