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Style Manual All

Following APA Style, are references at the end of a paper numbered or or merely listed?
I find nothing in the APA Style manual to tell me this, and looking at articles, I see all three usages. If you have an answer, please provide your source.
oops, typo. That should read "numbered, bulleted, or merely listed"
Use easybib.com it's the only way I citate. It does it for you, alphabetizes them and exports it to word and all you do is copy and paste and you can see how it's done..
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THUG - Style Film (All Levels)
help me with 8 questions in web design please?
1, Formatting applied with CSS styles overrides manual HTML formatting.
true or false
2. Class names must begin with a period.
true or false
3. Custom styles can be applied to text using the Property Inspector.
true or false
4. When you edit and save a CSS style sheet that controls the text in your document, you instantly reformat all of the text controlled by that CSS style sheet.
true or false
5. CSS tags can reside in which locations:
a)External style sheets
b)Included style sheets
c)Specific style sheets
d) None of the above
6. Creating styles using the Property Inspector will place the style in the head of the document
true or false
7. If a text element has both an external style sheet and an inline CSS style affecting it, the external style is the one that is applied.
true or false
8.Because HTML is platform dependent, HTML files are plain text files and can only be created on Windows (PC) computers.
true or false
CSS rules can reside in the following locations:
External CSS style sheets: Collections of CSS rules stored in a separate, external CSS (.css) file (not an HTML file). This file is linked to one or more pages in a website using a link or an @import rule in the head section of a document.
Internal (or embedded) CSS style sheets: Collections of CSS rules included in a style tag in the head portion of an HTML document.
Inline styles: Defined within specific instances of tags throughout an HTML document. (Using Inline styles is not recommended.)
Dreamweaver recognizes styles defined in existing documents as long as they conform to CSS style guidelines. Dreamweaver also renders most applied styles directly in Design view. (Previewing the document in a browser window, however, gives you the most accurate “live” rendering of the page.) Some CSS styles are rendered differently in Microsoft Internet Explorer, Netscape, Opera, Apple Safari, or other browsers, and some are not currently supported by any browser.


9:37 am on October 22nd, 2010
I'm coming to this post a little late, but I just *have* to share (now that I've stopped gasping hysterically in shock/rolling on the floor laughing/reading this post out to my friend):
I work as an editor for the Australian Army. All sorts or strange things come across my desk, but the one book this post brought to mind was a survival manual, written by an ex-Army, at that point civilian and still working, engineer who'd been contracted and paid multiple tens off thousands of dollars to produce it. He was given the government style manual, our own department style manual, and all sorts of other forms of information and support to get the thing written to the expected standard.
Halfway through chapter one, I start noticing a lot of font-switching, and some words that have links attached to them. Some page-flicking confirmed that this happened throughout the entire manual. 30 seconds on Google … and whaddaya know? This *qualified*, *well-paid*, supposed *expert* of an engineer has plagiarised almost the entire manual from Wikipedia, some notes on historical US military encounters on an enthusiasts' site, and an article for writers about creating a realistic setting for Russian spy novels.
I shit you not.
I would have loved to talk to him and/or find out what happened after I took the manual back to my superior with the evidence and a firm 'I will not edit this' … but it disappeared into the ether of military efficiency and I never heard about it again.
Scary, no? I applaud your efforts to help stop your flakes becoming the expert plagiarists of tomorrow … but I'm afraid they're already among us!
10:09 pm on December 20th, 2010
wonders if there is an instructional manual for scammers that insists they type ALL CAPS and write in the style of a dictionary overheating?