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In order to achieve this goal, as it is noted by A. E. Milchin, to carry out the
following operations, which are components of editorial analysis:
1) to profoundly master the meaning of what the author writes;
2) to understand what means of the form was used by the author to
implement the content;
3) to establish, based on the content and form of the work, the type of reader
to whom this work is addressed;
4) imagine how the potential reader will understand the text;
5) to find out what the text is directed to;
6) to determine the special features of a work;
7) to form the intention of the author;
8) to predict how the destination will change under the influence of the read,
heard, seen;
9) to find rational means to eliminate the causes of imperfection of the text;
10) to change the text with these means [25, p. 89].
Since the text is an extremely complex structure, which includes units or
elements of a different plan: language, logical, composite, heading, then the
following types of analysis are distinguished in units of text:
1. Analysis of linguistic means (words, phrases, sentences, phrases).
2. Logical analysis (analysis of logical units: concepts (names), judgments
(statements), inferences and their systems - evidence, refutations).
3. Compositional analysis.
4. Analysis of rubricational-graphic design (indent, section, paragraph, parts,
themes, sub-themes and other structural elements of the text).
By the nature of analytical actions in assessing the manuscript, there are the
following types of analysis:
1. The analysis is aimed at understanding the text.
2. The analysis is aimed at verifying the accuracy and depth of
understanding of the text.