Literary Theory: Figures, Notes and Tables

Figures

From the Figure page, you can use the Page Toolbar to return to the Search page, open the contextual Table of Contents page and open a context-sensitive Help page .

Pictorial material such as graphs and diagrams are known as figures. Since it is not possible for figures to appear on the screen as they do in the original text, each figure appears as the icon figure icon in the Full text page: clicking this icon accesses the Figure page. The download size in bytes of the figure appears next to the Figure icon. The larger the download size, the longer the corresponding Figure page will take to download.

To return to the Full Text page, you can either use the Back button on the Page Toolbar or the relevant function key of your browser. For example Netscape Navigator users should use the Back button.

Tables

Some of the data in Literary Theory is in tabular format. Since it is not possible for tables to appear on the screen as they do in the original text, each table appears as the icon table icon in the Full Text/Record page: clicking this icon accesses the Table page. The download size in bytes of the table appears next to the Table icon. The larger the download size of a table, the longer the corresponding Table page will take to download.

Notes

Some works in Literary Theory contain notes such as sidenotes or footnotes. You can access these notes by clicking the Note icon note icon appearing in the Full Text/Record. This will download a page containing the contents of the note. The Note page can be navigated in the same way as the Full Text/Record page.

For all notes, the download size in bytes appears next to the icon in the text. The larger the download size, the longer the corresponding page will take to download.


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(Literary Theory version 00:1)