Supplement
A supplementary sheet is a single sheet that is enclosed with a bound work . With attribute is meant in this case that the sheet is placed not involved, but before sending or archiving of the work between any two pages loose.
If several sheets of paper are enclosed, this is referred to as a "booklet".
A sheet or booklet can be removed at any time. This has both advantages and disadvantages.
The advantages of a supplementary sheet or booklet are that
- it can be used without the bound work if used frequently.
- you can put it next to the work so that you can look at any page of the work and the supplement or any page of the booklet at the same time.
- printing errors that only became known after the work was bound can be corrected in a supplementary sheet without the work having to be taken apart again.
- new regulations can be dealt with that were not yet available when a work went to press.
- Content from other authors can be added to a work without them having to become co-authors of the work.
The disadvantage is that a supplementary sheet can easily be lost and the contents of the bound work may then no longer be understandable, at least in part.
Supplement to supplement a standard
In a broader sense, the term 'supplementary sheet' is used by DIN for some of its publications, for more details see DIN standard # standard levels .
Supplement when using public transport
In addition to the severely handicapped ID , the valid supplementary sheet is part of the ticket for every free transport .
Individual evidence
- ↑ To use the term "bound work" z. B. on "bussgeldkataloge.net" . Retrieved November 3, 2009.
- ↑ Florian Fuchs: Semantic Modeling and Reasoning for Context Information in Infrastructure Networks. Cuvillier, Göttingen 2008, ISBN 978-3-86727-798-3 , p. 60.