Papers regarding infra-office and human resources matters often require that you consult with a company's employee manuals. Uniform citation guidelines help ensure that you properly reference books and literature when drafting your research paper's bibliography. The American Psychological Association (APA) does not. May 10, 2011 A user manual is a formal writing piece with a specific structure, and should be written by someone who is intimately familiar with the product such as a technical writer or the product designer. Writing an effective user manual requires knowing who is going to be using the product, then writing it with these users in mind. Jun 04, 2007 Many users never actually get as far as the user manual. It is often tossed aside as being either secondary, or just too difficult to deal with. When this happens, the user, the product and the writing team all suffer in some way. In order to get past this point the user manual must make a strong.
Annotation | A short review or description of what you are citing. |
Date Accessed | When an online work was viewed. |
Electronically Published | When content was published online or electronically. This date is not always present on a webpage. |
Place of Publication | Location of the publisher. Depending on the source or style, you may or may not need to know the city, state, or country. |
Publisher/Sponsor | Company, individual, or entity that helped get a work published or distributed. |
Suffix | Letters/Abbreviations at the end of a name that tells us more about an individual. For example, Jr. (junior), III (third in family with a name), Esq. (esquire), etc. |
Title | Name given to a source that identifies it. |
URL | Link or address of a webpage. One example is http://www.citationmachine.net/. |
Medium | How a source or content piece was distributed or presented. Here is one example: E-book: Other - PDF, CSV, Word Doc, etc. |
Contributor | Someone or an organization that helped produce a certain work. For example, a film director, dance choreographer, orchestra conductor, etc. |
Author | Creator (often writer) of a piece such as a book, script, play, article, podcast, comic, etc. |
Annotation | A short review or description of what you are citing. |
Date Accessed | When an online work was viewed. |
Electronically Published | When content was published online or electronically. This date is not always present on a webpage. |
Place of Publication | Location of the publisher. Depending on the source or style, you may or may not need to know the city, state, or country. |
Publisher/Sponsor | Company, individual, or entity that helped get a work published or distributed. |
Suffix | Letters/Abbreviations at the end of a name that tells us more about an individual. For example, Jr. (junior), III (third in family with a name), Esq. (esquire), etc. |
Title | Name given to a source that identifies it. |
URL | Link or address of a webpage. One example is http://www.citationmachine.net/. |
Medium | How a source or content piece was distributed or presented. Here is one example: E-book: Other - PDF, CSV, Word Doc, etc. |
Contributor | Someone or an organization that helped produce a certain work. For example, a film director, dance choreographer, orchestra conductor, etc. |
Author | Creator (often writer) of a piece such as a book, script, play, article, podcast, comic, etc. |