Difference between revisions of "Manual of Style"
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The '''Manual of Style''' (abbreviated as '''DCMoS''', '''DCMOS''' or '''MoS''') is the style manual for all Design Computation articles. This primary page of the guideline covers certain topics (e.g. punctuation) in detail and summarizes the key points of other topics. The detail pages, which are cross-referenced here and linked by this page's menu, provide specific guidance on those topics. If any contradiction arises, this page has precedence over all detail pages of the guideline. | The '''Manual of Style''' (abbreviated as '''DCMoS''', '''DCMOS''' or '''MoS''') is the style manual for all Design Computation articles. This primary page of the guideline covers certain topics (e.g. punctuation) in detail and summarizes the key points of other topics. The detail pages, which are cross-referenced here and linked by this page's menu, provide specific guidance on those topics. If any contradiction arises, this page has precedence over all detail pages of the guideline. | ||
− | = | + | =Guidelines to categorize pages= |
Design Computation wiki generates a page collating all categorizations applied in the database. | Design Computation wiki generates a page collating all categorizations applied in the database. | ||
Revision as of 16:04, 26 August 2016
The Manual of Style (abbreviated as DCMoS, DCMOS or MoS) is the style manual for all Design Computation articles. This primary page of the guideline covers certain topics (e.g. punctuation) in detail and summarizes the key points of other topics. The detail pages, which are cross-referenced here and linked by this page's menu, provide specific guidance on those topics. If any contradiction arises, this page has precedence over all detail pages of the guideline.
Contents
Guidelines to categorize pages
Design Computation wiki generates a page collating all categorizations applied in the database.
History Content Pages
History and theory pages uses similar style to Wikipedia but are somehow shorter and focus only on computational design taxonomies, cultures and ontologies.
Methods and Application Pages
Design Computation Application pages refer to material and methods shared by contributors for the resolution of design issues. This is often associated to live projects in the industry.
Tutorial Pages
Tutorial pages contains a Title, with the abstract (no heading) following, the Principleexplaining in detail the underpinning mathematical rationale of the principle being applied, the Steps explaining different codes and finally, whenever possible the Download for tutorial files.
Title
Abstract
Principle
Precision
Generality
Implementation
Step 1:
Step 2:
Step 3:
Remarks:
More
Links for the many design development platform available listed in alphabetical order. For each platform, one might find internal and external links.
C#
Catia
DynamoBIM
Grasshopper
Java
JavaScript
OpenFrameworks
Processing
Python
References
Classic referencing for the tutorial.
Bibliography
Relevant literature related to tutorial.