The entire text of a work. A full-text journal database contains, in addition to citations, the complete text of a significant proportion of the articles indexed. A full-text journal, magazine, or newspaper article which was originally published in a paper version may have been reformatted from the original and may not include graphics, charts, or maps in their original format.
This term signifies that the complete article is available in a database for immediate reading articles, research reports, curriculum and teaching guides, conference papers, and books. and printing. A full-text article may not always include all of the graphic materials printed with the original print article. Return to tour
refers to the entire article located in a database that may be printed or downloaded to a disk.
means 'entire article', or 'entire text'. Some databases provide access to the 'full-text' of articles, while others only provide citations.
Usually refers to a database or document collection where the complete document (article, report, etc.) can be read using a computer.
The complete texts of journal articles, books, or newspapers available in machine-readable form.
when the entire content of an item, such as an article, book, or encyclopedia, is available in electronic format. A large number of full-text electronic books are available through netLibrary on Amberton's website. The periodical databases include some full-text articles.
When the entire content of an article, chapter, book, or other item is provided online, it is referred to as full-text. This term is sometimes used for the print format as well.
Articles that are available online in their entirety, either in an online database or on the web are called "full-text articles." Usually, the content in a full-text article is the same as the content in the printed version of that article, if a printed version exists. A "full-text database" is one in which some or all of the articles indexed are available in full-text. [| Up to F| Down to H | Bottom
Electronic, online version of text usually found in a periodical or book.
Some electronic databases provide the text of articles they along with the citation and abstract. Full-text articles usually do not include any pictures or tables that accompanied the original article, unless they are saved as an Adobe Acrobat File. There is a list of the periodicals that are available full-text.
The entire text of an article or book (etc.) available online.
Where the complete text of a document or record is provided.
Includes all of the text of a piece of information (i.e., article, definition, explanation) in an electronic database. (Unit 4 A Primer on Databases and Catalogs; Unit 5 The Great GALILEO)
A document that contains all the words of the original article or book.
The complete electronic text of an article is called the full-text. Some databases provide entire articles online (though not always with images). What if there are photos or graphs with the article that you want to see? To find images originally published with the article, you may need to get the print copy from the library. Some databases provide full content. Full content is the electronic version of the entire article including graphs, charts, pictures and text. Often the database will distinguish what it is providing by labeling it as text or text with graphics.
A complete document held on a database. Graphics may or may not be included.
describes journals whose entire contents may be accessed online.
The words from the article, but not the tables, pictures, or graphs.
The entire text of an article which has been entered or scanned into a database.
as distinguished from a citation which merely describes a periodical article or book; full-text is the actual journal article, text of the book, encyclopedia entry, etc.
A database option in which the entire text of the article is available online. Graphics, charts, photographs, etc. are not available.
The entire text of a published article is made available on-screen.
a complete article or book. As opposed to a reference. Most full-text sources are on paper but increasingly you can find full-text on the World Wide Web.
(also 'full text' or 'fulltext') An article or book that is available electronically in its entirety. A computerized abstract (definition 1) is not the full text of an article or book.
Entire text of an article or work available in electronic format, photos and other images are usually omitted. Full-text articles are often available to print, save, or email.
An electronic resource that provides the entire text of a single work or article, in addition to the citation and (in most cases) an abstract of each work. Also spelled fulltext.
Articles, books, documents, pamphlets and texts that can be displayed in their entirety on a computer screen. In most instances, full graphical display is included as well.
The complete word content of a document.
When a document is available as full-text, it means that the document in its entirety is online and can usually be downloaded, e-mailed, and/or printed. Databases often give access to full-text.