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Table of Contents and Inter-Section Structure

A table of contents must be provided if there are numbered sections in order to assign addresses to sections. Whether this table of contents get passed to Latex depends on the setting described in Article Profile.

The basic structure is a nesting of lists of object references to section objects. A sequence of adjacent sections at the same level of nesting is indicated by a sequence of

SimpleLatexMode: <words go here>
<words go here>

operators (how these binary operators are nested doesn't matter, and double line breaks are okay too), such as

SimpleLatexMode: Introduction
Source Preparation
Article Structure

A section may have subsections, which is indicated by placing the subsections under the supersection with

SimpleLatexMode: <words go here>
<words go here>
<words go here>
<words go here>

(the indentation distance doesn't matter) an example in combination with the above being

SimpleLatexMode: Introduction
Source Preparation
Escaping Article Mode
Title Page
Section Content

Article Structure
Subsections
Subsubsections

If appendices are to be included, insert the word "Appendix" or "Appendices" or "Appendixes", or any upper- or lower-case variant of these, into the table of contents at a location appropriate for a top level section. All the sections below it will be treated as appendices. For ease of reading, one level of indentation underneath the "Appendix" mark will be ignored. Example:

SimpleLatexMode: Introduction
Source Preparation
Escaping Article Mode
Title Page
Section Content

Article Structure

APPENDIX

Example: Latexing This Document

In Latex, as usual, appendices will be labeled with a letter instead of a number at the head. IF YOU CAN SEE THIS go to /sfa/Nuprl/Shared/Xindentation_hack_doc.html

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