Section 4.26 Notation
We continue the introduction at Section 3.22. A notation list, like an index, is a specialized collection of cross-references. So some of the philosophy here applies equally well to the
<idx>
and <index-list>
elements, and vice-versa. (See Section 4.25.)To generate a list of notation employed in a book or article, use the
<notation-list/>
element. This empty element belongs in an <appendix>
. Likely it is the only content, or you might include some preliminary material. The title of the <appendix>
is up to you and is not automatic.Some authors like to make definitions inside of paragraphs, ideally using a
<term>
element. This is a natural place for a <notation>
element. So this approach gives an author a lot of flexibility in location.Other authors like to make definitions using the
<definition>
element, since it creates a heading and number, allows a <title>
, and can easily serve as the target of a cross-reference. So this is another good place for a <notation>
element. But now, associate it clearly with the <defintion>
by placing it in the metadata, early on, after the <title>
. And not in some subsequent paragraph. The reason will be clear in just a bit.How is a
<notation>
element constructed? It has two elements. The <usage>
should be a sample piece of mathematics using the necessary symbols, and wrapped in a single <m>
element. The second element is <description>
and should be a short phrase, or sentence-like material, decoding the sample usage, and may include <m>
elements. The reader sees nothing in the output at the location of the <notation>
element.The automatically-generated notation list is then a three-column table, in the order of appearance, with the sample usage, the description, and a locator. For output derived from LaTeX, such as print or PDF, the locator will be the page number of wherever you placed the
<notation>
element. For HTML the locator is much better—it is a knowl, for either a paragraph or for an entire definition. The latter possibility explains why it is better to place the <notation>
element inside a <definition>
, if possible, rather than in a paragraph that is a constituent of a <definition>
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