Thanks for the clarification, Judy! I know when you strip small cap styling it
makes it lower case, so I always added it back. Sounds like the Bookshare tool
functions like Office.
Valerie
On May 19, 2021, at 7:29 PM, Judy <cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Valerie,
If it's in small caps it needs to be made all caps. The Bookshare conversion
software converts small caps to lower case for who knows what reason. I've
run into this many times on books I've proofread.
Judy
On May 19, 2021 7:13:13 PM CDT, Valerie Maples <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
I never thought about it, Judy, but does that include “small caps?” I know
words mixed should be one or the other. I used to get a lot of old books
where the first line of a new paragraph was small caps and I left them as
caps.
Thanks!
Valerie
On May 19, 2021, at 6:49 PM, Judy <cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
If the original printed book has them in all caps leave them in all caps.
It's just like italics. If a word is in italics in the printed book, you
leave it in italics.
Judy s.
On May 19, 2021 6:21:40 PM CDT, Larry Lumpkin <llumpkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:llumpkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Susan has proofed a book that had many words in all caps. Are we to change
these? If so, how can I find instances of words that are in all caps in word
office 365?