Announcement — Processing of LATEX manuscripts
- Book ID
- 103049323
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 71 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0010-4655
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The growing use of electronic mail and sophisticated text processing packages on a world-wide basis is increasingly enabling us to improve the speed and reliability of our publishing procedures. In response to the increasing number of authors using LATEX for the preparation of their manuscripts, we encourage authors to send electronic files of their accepted papers to the publisher by electronic mail or on a diskette.
The Publisher
Instructions
Papers that have been accepted for publication may be sent as an electronic file to the publisherby electronic mail or on a diskette. If the electronic file is suitable for processing by the publisher, proofs will be produced without rekeying the full text. The article should be encoded in ESP~LATEXor in standard LATEX (in document style 'article'). The ESP~LATEXpackage (includingdetailed instructions) can be obtained using anonymous ftp from the Comprehensive TEX Archive Network: Host name CTAN directory ftp.dante.de /pub/tex/macros/latex/contrib/elsevier ftp.tex.ac.uk /pub/archive/macros/latex/contrib/elsevier ftp.shsu.edu /tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/elsevier
The files, as well as instructions in the form of a booklet, can also be obtained from Elsevier.
No changes from the version accepted by the editor of the journal are permissible, without the prior and explicit approval by the editor.
The publisher reserves the right to decide whether to process a manuscript from authors' files or not. Articles coded in a simple manner with few user-defined macros are most likely to be handledthis way.
If sent via electronic mail, files should be accompanied by a clear identification ofthe article (name ofjournal, editor's reference number) in the "subject field" of your electronic-mail message. Authors should include an ASCII table (available from the publisher) in their files, to enable any transmission errors to be detected. For diskettes, allowed formats are 3.5" or 5.25" MS-DOS, or 3.5" Macintosh.
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