Home: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
66 bytes removed ,  15:23, 10 July 2022
Line 25: Line 25:
<div style="text-align:justify">
<div style="text-align:justify">


An erratum and a corrigendum slightly differ from each other although their final goal is very similar, i.e. corrections in a manuscript. An erratum is provided by the publisher to correct possible production mistakes whereas the corrigendum is provided by the author(s) whenever they observe mistakes not fixed during the proofreading process. All these minor corrections can be easily provide to any reader through an erratum or corrigendum. However, here we merge both under the same database since the purpose is what matters to most.
An erratum and a corrigendum slightly differ from each other although their final goal is very similar, i.e. corrections in a manuscript. An erratum is a collection of minor corrections provided by the publisher, whereas a corrigendum is provided by the author(s). All these minor corrections can be easily accessed by any reader via WikiErratum or WikiCorrigendum. However, here we merge both under the same database, i,e, WikiErratum, because they suit the same purpose.


</div>
</div>

Navigation menu