It's easiest for the publisher if you sum the numbers and divide to
find the relative proportions, because this is how the data comes
through in converting from desktop publishing formats. For example,
in converting a set of books published in FrameMaker you might get a
few hundred tables in which some of the column widths are specified
as, e.g., 12, 6, 3, 18 (where the author set the widths in picas),
some others are specified as, e.g., 144, 72, 36, 192 (where the author
set the widths in points), and yet others are specified as, e.g., 2.0,
1.0, 0.5, 1.5 (where the author set the widths in inches). Obviously,
a number of other units are possible. Summing and dividing covers all
of these cases, including the case where the widths have been set as
percentages or unit fractions.
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Jon Bosak, Novell Corporate Publishing Services [email protected]
2180 Fortune Drive, San Jose, CA 95131 Fax: 408 577 5020
A sponsor of the Davenport Group (ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/davenport/)
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The Library is a sphere whose consummate center is any hexagon, and
whose circumference is inaccessible. -- Jorge Luis Borges
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