HOW DO YOU PRINT AN ARTICLE?
HOW CAN I SEE AN ARTICLE FULL SCREEN?
HOW CAN I SEARCH FOR TEXT WITHIN AN ARTICLE?
WHY DOES A SEARCH ONLY RETURN THE "NOFRAMES" VERSION OF AN ARTICLE?
HOW DO YOU PRINT AN ARTICLE?
You have three options. First, you may download this article as a
WordPerfect file. This will download/save the article to your computer as a WordPerfect document.
You can then open the saved article using your wordprocessor, and print from your
wordprocessor. Second, you may open the document as a PDF file and print directly from Acrobat Reader.
Third, you may view the article in the "No Frames" format, and then choose
File | Print from your browser's menu. This will print the article and its footnotes
together, without having to download the article to your computer. An article printed
in this manner will not, however, be as nicely formated as an article which is
downloaded and printed from Acrobat Reader or your wordprocessor.
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HOW CAN I SEE AN ARTICLE FULL SCREEN?
Select "No Frames" from the navigation bar on the left-hand side of
the screen.
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HOW CAN I SEARCH FOR TEXT WITHIN AN ARTICLE?
In a framed document, you must first click on the frame in which you want to search.
For example, if you want to search the footnotes of an article, you must first click
on the footnotes frame. If you are viewing a "no frames" document, you do not need to
first click on any portion of the article. To search for text, choose Edit | Find
from your browser's menu. Type in the text you want to find and press enter.
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WHY DOES A SEARCH ONLY RETURN THE "NOFRAMES" VERSION OF AN ARTICLE?
A framed article consists of three separate files/frames -- the navigation
bar in the left frame, the main body of the article in the center frame, and the footnotes
in the bottom frame. A "noframes" article puts the main body, footnotes and
navigation bar all in one frame/file. If the framed articles were used with the
search engine, the search engine
could return three separate files for the same article. To prevent this,
we have chosen to return only the "noframes" version of an article during a search.
You can easily see the framed version of the article by selecting the "frames" link at
the top of all of our "noframes" articles.
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