enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Blurb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blurb

    The name and term stuck for any publisher's contents on a book's back cover, even after the picture was dropped and only the text remained. In Germany, the blurb is regarded to have been invented by Karl Robert Langewiesche around 1902. In German bibliographic usage, it is usually located on the second page of the book underneath the half title ...

  3. Body text - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_text

    Body text or body copy is the text forming the main content of a book, magazine, web page, or any other printed or digital work. This is as a contrast to both additional components such as headings, images, charts, footnotes etc. on each page, and also the pages of front matter that form the introduction to a book.

  4. Category:Free HTML editors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Free_HTML_editors

    Free and open-source software portal The main article for this category is Comparison of HTML editors . This is a category of articles relating to software which can be freely used, copied, studied, modified, and redistributed by everyone that obtains a copy: " free software " or " open-source software ".

  5. Book design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_design

    On the inside of the back cover page, extending from the facing page before it, is the endpaper. Its design matches the front endpaper and, in accordance with it, contains either plain paper or pattern, image etc. The back cover often contains biographical matter about the author or editor, and quotes from other sources praising the book.

  6. Wikipedia : Manual of Style/Text formatting

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Text_formatting

    In no case should the resulting font size of any text drop below 85% of the page's default font size. The HTML <small>...</small> tag has a semantic meaning of fine print or side comments; [2] do not use it for stylistic changes. For use of small text for authority names with binomials, see § Scientific names.

  7. Brackets (text editor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brackets_(text_editor)

    Brackets is a source code editor with a primary focus on web development. [5] Created by Adobe Inc., it is free and open-source software licensed under the MIT License, and is currently maintained on GitHub by open-source developers. It is written in JavaScript, HTML and CSS.

  8. Dust jacket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_jacket

    The back panel or flaps of the dust cover are printed with biographical information about the author, a summary of the book from the publisher (known as a blurb) or critical praise from celebrities or authorities in the book's subject area. The back of a dust jacket often has a barcode for retail purchase, and the book's ISBN. The information ...

  9. hOCR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hocr

    hOCR is an open standard of data representation for formatted text obtained from optical character recognition (OCR). The definition encodes text, style, layout information, recognition confidence metrics and other information using Extensible Markup Language (XML) in the form of Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) or XHTML.