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2) whether there are among the different degrees of heading headings of the
same importance.
To achieve clarity in constructing rubrics, the editor has:
1) to compare among themselves the content of a heading of one degree,
then the second, etc .;
2) to correlate the content of the heading subordinate to that which submits it
to itself;
3) to correlate the headings with the contents of the sections to which they
belong;
4) to correlate the heading with the content of the text as a whole.
Each type of headings has clear requirements for its design. The editor
should monitor compliance with these requirements. The most complete
classification of types of headings gives A. E. Milchin the following types of
headings:
1. Systems (headings of the work) / non-systematic (headings of the
elements of the publication: introductory articles, prepositions, non-textual notes,
applications, auxiliary pointers, bibliographic lists, etc.).
2. Thematic (those that allocate the heading with words, headings of
sections, divisions, paragraphs, etc.) / dummy (sections of one heading from
another using graphic means (spaces, stars, lines, dashes, ornamental reports,
numbers) , letters).
3. Headings that break the text (headings in shortcuts, header, heading in the
trigger / headings in the text (apartment, flashlight, hidden headings). The choice
of a particular heading depends on the tasks we set ourselves. For example, the
section on shortcuts is used to sharply separate one part of the work from another.
This type of headings is used mainly for the allocation of large volumes of parts of
the work. Apartments are most often encountered in editions of educational
literature, where it is necessary to structure the material into small pieces of text in
order to create a support for its memorization, to facilitate the search for the right
question, concept, etc. Hidden headings are used in the event that all resources of