Most pages of thefactZ follow a standard method for allowing navigation by hyperlinks: titles of a section which are hyperlinked will link back to their parent section and top sections link back to the top of the page (where there is usually a contents section).
Usually when you see somthing enclosed in square brackets, for example [1] or [someone] or [someone_1992] this is a reference. If it is a number then this number will refer to the numbered references usually found under the reference section of that page. Alternatively the reference will refer to an entry in the documents page of that section of the website (e.g. WTO documents page for the WTO section). If you have a number prefixed by an L, for example [L1] this will usually be a reference to a Link in the link section of that page (or in the case of the Microsoft Files section a reference to a link in the link section of the Microsoft Files documents page).
References can be more specific than referring to a particular work or website. Compound references (still enclosed in [ ] ) consist of several pieces seperated by colons ( : ). For example [someone : 10] will be page 10 of the work referenced by [someone]. [1 : para 10] will be paragraph 10 of the work referenced by [1].
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Last Updated: 2003-Feb-02
Created: 2003-Feb-02
Copyright R Pollock