Preparing Publications
1. E-Magazine ‘On Course’
Introduction
- Technical articles
for the PIANC Magazine are submitted to the Editing
Officer. The author may be asked for correcting or
complementing the initial manuscript. This article does not apply to
manuscripts that are published in the special issue of the Magazine, which
is dedicated to the host country of the Annual General Assembly (AGA). The
articles in this special issue are published under the responsibility of
the author(s).
- Papers accepted
become the copyright of PIANC. Contributors should bear in mind that they
are addressing an international audience.
- Modern-day editing
has become a very technical skill, involving computer and graphics
technology. It is strongly advised that authors seek professional help
from a typesetting office or pre-press company, in particular with regard
to editing and formatting of text files, pictures, graphs, tables,
mathematical formulas, etc.
- Authors are encouraged
to have a look at the presentation of other articles in previous
Bulletins/Magazines in order to better understand the requirements and to
avoid delays.
- Articles and WG-reports that do not meet the
guidelines will be rejected.
Publicity
All information on publicity for the ‘On Course’
Magazine can be found at www.pianc.org/publicity.php.
Language and orthography
- The Magazine is a
bilingual publication. Articles can be submitted in either English or
French. Authors are asked to use the UK English orthography.
- A good linguistic
quality must be pursued by the authors. It is recommended that the final
text is proofread by a native speaker, in order to avoid delays if the
copy should be sent back for rewriting.
- Authors are asked
to mind the punctuation marks. For improving readability, it may also be
better to split one long sentence in two.
- Title, key words
and summary will be translated in the second language. In order to respect
the author's own accents, translation can best be done by the author
himself. If this is not possible, the PIANC General Secretariat will take
care of it. In addition, summaries will also be translated into German.
Text files
- All manuscripts
will be supplied as a MS Word-file.
- Equations must be
edited in appropriate MS software such as MathType
or Equation Editor.
- Pages should be
numbered and footnotes must be avoided.
- The length of a
manuscript in the Magazine may not exceed 4,000 words. In Special cases
more than 4,000 words must be discussed and approved by Mr. Louis Van Schel.
·
For
units, the International Standard Units System (SI) will be applied.
-
Temperatures
are given in the Celsius scale (C°).
-
Symbols
do not have an appended period/full stop (.).
-
Symbols
are written in upright type (m for metres, s for seconds), so as to
differentiate from the italic type used for variables (m for mass, s for
displacement).
-
The
SI rule is that symbols of units are not pluralised, for example ‘25 kg’,
not ‘25 kgs’.
-
A
space separates the number and the symbol; e.g., ‘2.21 kg’,
‘7.3×102 m2’, ‘22 K’. This rule explicitly includes the percent sign
(%). Exceptions are the symbols for plane angular degrees, minutes and seconds
(°, ′ and ″), which are placed immediately after the number with
no intervening space.
-
Commas
are used as a thousand separator (1,000,000) in order
to reduce confusion. For figures below 1,000, no commas are used (e.g. 500),
figures containing tenths are marked with a period (e.g. 50.36 ; 1,000.23)
-
Symbols
formed by division of two units are joined with a solidus (⁄), or given as a
negative exponent. For example, the ‘metre per second’ can be written ‘m⁄s’, ‘m s−1’, ‘m·s−1’. Only one solidus should be used;
e.g., ‘kg⁄(m·s2)’ or ‘kg·m−1·s−2’ are acceptable but
‘kg⁄m⁄s2’ is ambiguous and unacceptable.
-
The
official UK spellings are ‘deca’, ‘metre’, and
‘litre’.
-
Currency
units are either put behind the number and in official abbreviation (e.g.
1,000.23 EUR/USD/GBP) or in front of the number when using the symbol (e.g.
€/$/£ 1,000.23). However, authors are asked to use only 1 of these two systems
throughout the whole text.
- Tables, pictures
and illustrations must be provided as separate files, and not included as
part of the text.
- In the text file,
authors must indicate at what place they want pictures, tables and
illustrations to be included. They can do so, a.o.
by including an ‘Editor's note’ or by inserting editing remarks in another
colour.
- If a list of bibliographical
references is appended, the references should have the following format:
- Book with one author
Sabaton, M. (1980): “Stability of Rubble Mound Breakwaters”, Vol. II, in PIANC
Magazine ‘On Course’, Sydney: Pan Books, p. 3-5.
-
Book with two or more authors
Sabaton, M., Feuillet, J. and Averett,
D.E. (1980): “Stability of Rubble
Mound Breakwaters”, Vol. II, in PIANC Magazine On
Course, Sydney: Pan Books, p. 3-5.
-
Books with an anonymous or unknown
author
“The
University Encyclopedia” (1985), London: Roydon,
p. 3-5.
-
World Wide Web page
Sabaton, M. (1980): “Stability of Rubble Mound Breakwaters”, [Online], Available: http://www.pianc.org/publications.php [24 Aug 2010].
- Authors will respect the existing hierarchy of
titles and sub-titles, as they are presented in previous PIANC Magazines.
This hierarchy is as follows:
- Main title: 1. INTRODUCTION
- Second title: 1.1 Second title
- Third (sub)title: 1.1.1 Third (sub)title
- In addition to the article proper, every author
must provide:
- A recent ID-picture in one of the following
digital formats: PDF, tiff, jpeg or eps.
- Title, author(s)'s name, contact details
(address, telephone, fax, e-mail address)
- Five key words related to the article
- A summary which should not exceed 10% of the
article
Illustrations
- All pictures,
illustrations and tables must be provided as separate files. In clear:
PIANC will receive one text file (in MS Word) and one or more separate
graphic files. For reasons of quality, pictures may not be included in the
text-file.
- Full-colour
pictures must be of superior quality, meaning that the pictures should
have a minimal width and height of respectively 130 x 100 mm while having
a resolution of at least 300 dpi. Jpeg (maximum quality) formats are to be
preferred.
- Pictures can be
provided as a print (for scanning), or in one of the following digital
formats: tiff, jpeg or eps.
- Pictures that are
downloaded from a website are refused, for lack of quality.
- Digitalised
illustrations must be delivered to PIANC's quality specifications, i.e. in
a resolution of at least 300 dpi with a minimum width of 80 mm.
- Figures, pictures
and formulae must be numbered. These numbers will be referred to in the
text file.
- Every figure will
be accompanied by a short explanatory caption.
Layout
- PIANC will take
care of the layout.
- Authors may want to
suggest a layout of their own. They can do so by providing a low-res pdf-file, in which figures and illustrations are
already inserted. This has the advantage that PIANC editors may better
understand at what place authors want illustrations to be inserted, and
how they like the layout to look like. However, such a pdf-file can only be provided as an example. In any
case, an electronic text file (in MS Word) and separate graphic files are
mandatory.
·
For
the same reason, authors may want to send a printed version of their manuscript
(besides the compulsory electronic version). This print may, or may not include
the illustrations. Sending a print version is not a must. In any case, an
electronic text file (in MS Word) and separate graphic files are mandatory.
2.
Working Group reports
Please click here to find
PIANC’s Guidelines for Chairpersons of PIANC Working Groups.
-
Annex
1: ‘Overview of PIANC WG report Development Status
-
Annex
2: ‘Manual for setting up a WG Member Area
3. PIANC Editing Officer
·
Technical
articles can be submitted by e-mail. However, since a maximum size of 5 Mb is
frequently applied, it may be necessary to send large e-mail attachments in a
compressed format, using WINZIP, or to send files via YouSendIt
(https://www.yousendit.com). Even then, some graphic files may
still be too heavy. Therefore, it is recommended to send a CD-ROM containing
all text- and all graphic files and illustrations, through the post to the
PIANC postal address (see below).
·
Additional
information can be obtained from PIANC's Editing Officer at leen.weltens@pianc.org.
- Postal address for sending print material or
CD-ROM:
PIANC General Secretariat
c/o Editing Officer
Bld. du Roi Albert II, 20, B.3
B-1000 Brussels, Belgium.