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Editorial
Danwei style guidePosted by Jeremy Goldkorn, April 11, 2005 8:28 PM
![]() This style guide is for submissions to Danwei. All Danwei articles should follow these guidelines, but they are general rules of thumb which should be broken if necessary. This style guide is updated from time to time. 1. The Golden Rule
Scans of publication front pages are exempted from these restriction and can be up to 200px high. Image files should be as small as possible to make the site load as quickly as possible. If larger images are needed, they should be saved as popups, with standards size image appearing on the front page. - Image HTML code <div class="imgleft">IMG TAG COMES HERE<br /><div class="CaptionStyle" style="width: 160px;">CAPTION COMES HERE </div></div> Use this code for images without captions: 5. Links and sources formattting and code Use this code and formatting: |
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+ Trend-spotting in online fiction (2007.06): An interview with Daniel Dan Fei (丹飞), publisher of Notes on Graverobbing (盗墓笔记), Rear Palace (后宫), and Those Ming Dynasty Things (明朝那些事). + Yu Dan: defender of traditional culture, force for harmony (2007.05): Yu Dan (于丹) gets criticized by 'real scholars'. He Dong (何东) writes in her defense, saying that TV program hosts are the ones who ought to be upset. Zhao Yong in Southern Metropolis Daily writes that she upholds the mainstream government line. + When corruption investigations were all the rage (2006.12): An essay inspired by the Gao Qinrong (高勤荣) case looks back at the anti-corruption campaigns of the early 1950s. Also, details about the Huang Yifeng Affair (黄逸峰事件) and a review of party regulations encouraging a critical press....in 1950.
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