Endnoting Printed Web Pages
[Archived in Entry]
[ClioWeb] In “Improving Link Display for Print,” Aaron Gustafson provides a good way to make hyperlinks in a web page’s text appear as endnotes when the page is printed. The endnote shows the entire URL for the webpage.
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
Huh? :: Main Page: If thisLink is found (j is “true”), we make the superscript j+1 (as array indexing starts at 0 and ordered lists start at 1) and we’re done. If thisLink is not found (j is “false”), we need to create the list item for the reference, append it to the <ol>, push thisLink to myArr, and create our superscript reference (incrementing num afterwards). (via Cosmos)
ChipCuccio.US: Hyperlinked text(s) will be footnoted, and the corresponding URIs will appear as referenced links at the end of the document. (via Cosmos)
Matt Heerema : Web Design: One never-quite-perfect aspect of print style sheets has been displaying link URLs in the print version. The current method is to use a little CSS/DOM trickery to place the URL after the linked text within the document. (via Cosmos)
[Windley.com] Windley's Enterprise Computing Weblog: Windley's Enterprise Computing Weblog http://www.windley.com .this :: Email this :: Blog this :: Print this :: Technorati .
[Greenflame.org] Greenflame: Web/Blog Tools Archives: Barclay Barrios of Rutgers University, New Brunswick has put together a nice site called The Year of the Blog: Weblogs in the Writing Classroom. It's got an overview of 2003 with respect to blogging, blogging resources, blogs as writing practice, blogs in the classroom and some other stuff.
[216.119.70.145] Blogs Are The Powerpoint of the Web @ e-Church.com (print): recursive (think I'm using this word right) hyperlinks because many times I use an endnote instead of .that blogs are the Powerpoint of the web because to .
[Ntgateway.com] NT Gateway Weblog: Mark Goodacre's Academic New Testament Blog: As an element in the discussion, Stephen usefully provides two alternative versions of his article on "Clement of Alexandria on the 'Order' of the Gospels", one with hyperlinked endnotes and one with hyperlinked sidenotes. I agree with Rubén in preferring the sidenotes version -- it helps with the problem that the standard monitors are too wide for representing continuous text -- the reader simply does not find it helpful to read across the long lines that were typical of the early days of the web.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Printing, Home Office Printers
Posted at September 25, 2005 06:32 PM