diff --git a/appd.adoc b/appd.adoc index d68bbc33..66c0ddc1 100644 --- a/appd.adoc +++ b/appd.adoc @@ -434,7 +434,7 @@ No `standard_name` has been defined for `z1`, `z2`, `a`, `href` or `k_c`. .Consistent sets of values for the standard_names of formula terms and the computed_standard_name needed in defining the ocean sigma coordinate, the ocean s-coordinate, the ocean_sigma over z coordinate, and the ocean double sigma coordinate. image::NFFFFFF-1.0.png[caption=""] -[options="header",cols="1,3,2,3",caption="Table D.1."] +[options="header",cols="1,3,2,3",caption="Table D.1. "] |=============== | option | standard_name of computed dimensional coordinate | formula term name | diff --git a/appi.adoc b/appi.adoc index 9c8c697f..bf4f4148 100644 --- a/appi.adoc +++ b/appi.adoc @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ The CF data model has been derived from these CF-netCDF elements and relationshi [[table-cf-concepts]] .The elements of the CF-netCDF conventions. The relationships to netCDF elements are shown in <>. -[options="header",cols="2",caption=""] +[options="header",cols="2",caption="Table I.1. "] |=============== |{set:cellbgcolor!} CF-netCDF element @@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ The constructs, listed in <>, are related to CF- [[table-cf-constructs]] .The constructs of the CF data model. The relationships between the constructs and CF-netCDF elements are shown in in <>, <> and <>. -[options="header",cols="2",caption=""] +[options="header",cols="2",caption="Table I.2. "] |=============== |{set:cellbgcolor!} CF construct @@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ For example, in a coordinate conversion for converting between ocean sigma and h In the case of a named term being a type of coordinate variable, that variable will correspond to an independent domain ancillary construct in addition to the coordinate construct; that is, a single CF-netCDF variable is translated into two constructs (see <>). [[cdl-domain-anc-coordinate]] -[caption=""] +[caption="Example I.1. "] .A single CF-netCDF variable corresponding to two data model constructs. ==== ---- diff --git a/ch02.adoc b/ch02.adoc index b3299f30..eab1368d 100644 --- a/ch02.adoc +++ b/ch02.adoc @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ If the atomic string option is chosen, each element of the variable can be assig The CDL example below shows one variable of each type. [[char-and-string-variables-ex]] -[caption="Example 1.1. "] +[caption="Example 2.1. "] .String Variable Representations ==== ---- diff --git a/ch03.adoc b/ch03.adoc index 2a14bebb..5a85f01f 100644 --- a/ch03.adoc +++ b/ch03.adoc @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ Several examples are listed below: The following example illustrates the use of three of these flags to represent two independent quality control tests and an aggregate flag that combines the results of the two tests. [[quality-flag-ex]] -[caption="Example 3.3 "] +[caption="Example 3.3. "] .Ancillary quality flag data ==== diff --git a/history.adoc b/history.adoc index aeae26de..4cf48c5c 100644 --- a/history.adoc +++ b/history.adoc @@ -13,7 +13,8 @@ * {pull-requests}408[Pull request #408]: Deleted a sentence on "rotated Mercator" under `Oblique Mercator` grid mapping in Appendix F * {issues}260[Issue #260]: Clarify use of dimensionless units * {issues}410[Issue #410]: Delete "on a spherical Earth" from the definition of the `latitude_longitude` grid mapping in Appendix F -* {issues}286[Issue #286]: Some labels of examples contain "Example" so that their label in the list of examples contains "Example" (affects four examples) +* {issues}286[Issue #286]: Some labels of examples contain "Example" so that their label in the list of examples contains "Example" (affects four examples); corrected captions of three tables and five examples +* {issues}418[Issue #418]: Add missing examples to TOE (table of examples); corrected captions of three tables and three examples === Version 1.10 (31 August 2022) diff --git a/toc-extra.adoc b/toc-extra.adoc index a3bd7516..e2e785eb 100644 --- a/toc-extra.adoc +++ b/toc-extra.adoc @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@ I.2. <> **List of Examples** [%hardbreaks] +2.1. <> 3.1. <> 3.2. <> 3.3. <> @@ -38,7 +39,14 @@ I.2. <> 5.10. <> 5.11. <> 5.12. <> -5.13. <> +5.13. <> +5.14. <> +5.15. <> +5.16. <> +5.17. <> +5.18. <> +5.19. <> +5.20. <> 6.1. <> 6.1.2. <> 6.2. <>