- Floating block
A floating block, also called a figure, in
writing andpublishing is any graphic, text, table or other representation that is unaligned from the main flow of text. Use of floating blocks to present pictures and tables is a typical feature ofacademic writing , including scientific and articles and books. Floating blocks are normally labeled with a caption or title that describes its contents and a number that is used to refer to the figure from the main text. A common system divides floating block into two separately numbered series, labeled "figure" (for pictures, diagrams,plots , etc.) and "table".Floating blocks are are said to be "floating" because they are not fixed in position on the page at the place, but rather drift to the side of the page. An alternative name for figure is image or graphic. By placing pictures or other large items on the sides of pages rather than embedding them in the middle of the main flow of text,
typesetting is more flexible and interruption to the flow of the narrative is avoided.For example, an article on
geography might have "Figure 1. Map of the world", "Figure 2. Map of Europe", "Table 1. Population of continents", "Table 2. Population of European countries", etc. Some books will have a table of figures—in addition to thetable of contents —that lists centrally all the figures appearing in the work.Other kinds of floating blocks may be differentiated as well, for example:
: Sidebar : For digressions from the main narrative. For example, a technical manual on usage of a product might include examples of how various people have employed the product in their work in sidebars.: Program : Articles and books on
computer programming often place code andalgorithms in a figure.: Equation : Writing onmathematics may place large blocks of mathematical notation in numbered blocks set apart from the main text.
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