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Bryan, John – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1995
Suggests that new computer software enables writers and technicians to compose graphs that rival those made by professionals. Suggests that professional and novice users of such software either intend to distort data and manipulate readers or do so out of ignorance. Describes and illuminates seven types of distortion in graphs. (PA)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Desktop Publishing, Graphs, Nonprint Media
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Gray, Evie; Ingram, William; Bodson, Dennis – Technical Communication: Journal of the Society for Technical Communication, 1998
Explains format, style rules, and lexicographic conventions that improve clarity and precision in a technical glossary. Discusses general rules, rules of style, rules of grammar and syntax, and rules for figures. Describes the computer display techniques and file management system used to develop such a glossary. (SR)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Computers, Glossaries, Grammar
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brasseur, Lee – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2001
Argues that current approaches to computer graphing practices are ill suited to meet the complex needs of real users. Offers an overview of work in two major areas of graphing theory and research: the sociology of science and the educational research of mathematics and scientific students. Suggests what technical communicators can do to improve…
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Computer Software, Computer Software Development, Graphs
Soderston, Candace; German, Carol – 1984
Over the past several years, technical communicators have been struggling to change some of the stylistic traditions inherited from scientific discourse. Rhetoricians, writing teachers, and psychologists all agree that the use of analogy and first- or second-person sentence construction make for more effective communication than the absence of…
Descriptors: Analogy, Attitude Measures, Communication Research, Computer Software