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Project State: Proofreading Round 1: Available (The page-texts are the output of the OCR software and need to have the text carefully compared to the image.)
Title: *The Example
Author: Sinclair, May
Language: English
Genre: BEGINNERS ONLY
Difficulty: beginner
Project ID: 1234walkthrough
Project Manager: BEGIN
Credits line so far: M. Legeips and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Last edit of Project Info: Wednesday, October 24, 2018 at 06:47:39 PM
Last State Change: Friday, October 26, 2018 at 10:55:03 AM
Last Proofread: Saturday, October 27, 2018 at 02:32:28 PM (03:39:51 PM)
Word Lists: Good Words Link opens in a new window - Last modified: Sunday, June 5, 2010 at 10:56:25 AM Bad Words (empty)
Last Forum Post: Monday, October 29, 2018 at 02:32:47 PM
Forum: Discuss this project
Page Detail: Images, Pages Proofread, & Differences >>Just my pages<<
Welcome New Volunteers!!
This is a BEGINNERS ONLY/FEEDBACK project. We have set this book aside for our newest proofreaders. You are doing the first of three proofreading passes over these pages, making sure the words and punctuation in the text box match those in the scanned picture (or image) of the printed page. When the book has completed the first round of proofreading, more experienced proofreaders will do a second round. They will send you some friendly suggestions if you are making any obvious beginner mistakes. Please only do a few pages (5 or so) of this book, then move on to something else. It may be a week before feedback is sent to your DP inbox; so do work on another project that interests you while you're waiting!
Please note that the proofreaders who review your work see one page at a time; they may not have an overview of all the pages you proofread in this book. You might get similar comments from several proofreaders.
Following three proofreading rounds, these pages will move on to two rounds of Formatting, where other volunteers will fine-tune the look of the page. They will insert mark-up to represent font variations (such as italics, bold, and small caps), spacing, indentation, footnotes, and the like. In the final stages, a post-processor will transform the proofread and formatted text into a readable e-book. If you wish to be notified when this text is posted to PG, put a check in the "event subscription" box labeled "Project posted to Project Gutenberg." Event subscriptions are located below the project comments.
BASIC INSTRUCTIONS:
Here are a few basic instructions. Please consult the Proofreading Guidelines to go beyond these basics.
Make the text look like the page image except as per below! That means leaving in the breaks at the ends of the lines, leaving spelling "mistakes", etc. Mostly your job is to fix mistakes left by the Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. Compare the text carefully to the scanned image of the page, line words in ALL CAPS. Run WordCheck on your page, and make sure that any queried words and the highlighted punctuation do, in fact, match the words and punctuation in the scan. Please do NOT change the word in the text if it is a true match to the word in the scan. Refer to the Proofreading Guidelines for more information on handling printers' errors and misspellings.
Original Image:"I say, Graham, do you know what's hap-pened today? There'll be an awful row about it."Correct Image:"I say, Graham, do you know what's happenedtoday? There'll be an awful row about it."
Page Headers and Footers: Running headers/footers may include book title, author, chapter title, and/or page number. They will be at the very top or bottom of the page. Remove these, including the page numbers and any extra blank lines. See the Proofreading Guidelines for an example.
If a line ends in a hyphenated word, move the first part of the following line up to rejoin the word, then insert a line break at the end of the rejoined word. Remove the hyphen unless it is a compound word normally hyphenated. If you're not sure if the hyphen should be retained, or if the page ends with a hyphen, keep the hyphen and place an asterisk after it.
Original Image:
"I say, Graham, do you know what's hap-
pened today? There'll be an awful row about it."
Correct Image:
"I say, Graham, do you know what's happenedtoday? There'll be an awful row about it."
Make sure there is one blank line before each new paragraph, even if it starts at the top of a page. Do not add paragraph indentation. If a page starts in the middle of a paragraph, there should not be any blank lines at the top.
Original Image:THE ship moved slowly out of the harbour asTom Woodward slumped in his seat and breathed a sigh of relief.He turned to the package he had droppednext to him on the deck and examinedits label.
Correct Image:
THE ship moved slowly out of the harbour asTom Woodward slumped in his seat and breatheda sigh of relief.He turned to the package he had droppednext to him on the deck and examinedits label.
Remove extra space around punctuation. Make it look like common usage today.
Starting Text:
The girl looked at him with tears in her eyes ; she beganto cry. " I'm so unhappy ! "
Corrected Example:The girl looked at him with tears in her eyes; she beganto cry. "I'm so unhappy!"
Remove spaces in words like contractions like "don't" and "isn't"
Original Image:"Do n't!" he cried. "You 'll ruin the whole thing!"
Correct Example:"Don't!" he cried. "You'll ruin the whole thing!"
Fix dashes by inserting addition hyphen character(s) if needed. Proofread these as two hyphens if the dash is as long as 2-3 letters (an em-dash) and four hyphens if the dash is as long as 4-5 letters (a long dash). Em-dashes are far more common than long dashes. If a line ends with a dash, move the first word of the following line up to, "clothe the naked dash", then insert a line break follow the word you just moved. See the Proofreading Guidelines for more detail.
Orginal Image:He walked over to the window-a strange look on his face-and tapped on the glass. "Susan!--Over here!"
Correct Example:He walked over to the window--a strange look on his face--andtapped on the glass. "Susan!----Over here!"
If you have a page with a poem on it, read the Proofreading Guidelines, to see how to handle it. Set it off from surround text by making sure there is one blank line before and one blank life after the poem; do not indent the lines or try to center them.
Footnotes? Read the Proofreading Guidelines! Leave the note where it falls in the text box, and surround the footnote marker in the main body of the text with square brackets, i.e., [1] or [*].
Illustrations or Blank Pages? For illustrations, read the Proofreading Guidelines! Proofread the text of the captions, leaving the caption where it falls in the text box. If the caption text was ommitted from the OCR'ed, please type it in. If the illustration is captionless, add nothing. Blank Pages occur in most books. If the scanned image is blank AND the text box is empty or says only [Blank Page], do not mark the page bad; just save the page as done.
Italics? , SMALL CAPS? or Bold? Just proofread the characters, and ignore the font variations? Do not mark or note them in the text; two rounds of formatting will follow the proofreading rounds, and formatters will insert the inline (and other) formatting mark-up.
Move of all--Have fun!
SHARING INFORMATION, ASKING QUESTIONS, REPORTING PROBLEMS:
This site has an internal message system. The number of unread private messages in your inbox is displayed on the dark green navbar found at the top of most pages. Please go to the forums and login to read your private messages from round 2 proofreaders. If you have questions that need a more immediate answer, please click on the "discuss this project" link in the project comments above. That will take you to a forum thread that is specific to this project where you can see what other new people have asked and can get reasonably quick responses from experienced proofreaders. There are also other forums that you may use to ask questions or make comments that are not project-specific, and still others designed for amusement.
This book scanned and OCR'ed pretty cleanly, but if you notice recurring OCR errors, please post a message in the discussion forum (as described above). That way, we will be alert for them in post-processing.
Thank you for volunteering for DP, and for your work on this book!
This is a made-up example.
Event Subscriptions
Here you can sign-up to be notified when certain events happen to this project. Notifications will be sent to our email address, which is currently <example@walk.through>. (If this is not correct, please visit your profile.) Your current subscriptions are shown below with a shaded background.
Event Subscribed? Users Subscribed
Project becomes available in a round 1
Project finishes a round 1
Project enters PP stage 1
Project become available for smooth-reading 1
Project enters PPV stage 1
Project posted to Project Gutenberg 4
Concatenated Text Files
• Download Concatenated Text
OCR P1
For each page, use:
the text (if any) saved in the selected round; or
the latest text saved in any round up to and including the selected round.
(If every page has been saved in the selected round, then the two choices are equivalent.)
Project Holds
Each hold is characterized by a project state, and prevents the project from undergoing an automatic state transition from that state:
- a hold in a round's Waiting state prevents the project from auto-transitioning to that round's Available state (i.e., prevents it from being auto-released from proofreaders in that round).
- a hold in round's Available state prevents the project from advancing to the next round or pool.
The project's current holds are shown below with a shaded background.
hold in Waiting hold in Available
P1
P2
P3
F1
F2
Project History
Images
• View Images Online
Page Summary
184 in P1.page_avail
1 in P1.page_out
1 in P1.page_temp
71 in P1.page_saved
__________________
257 Pages Total
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