Preface, Long title, and Preamble
Marking up content before the body of a work.
The Preface and Preamble are optional components that come at the start of a piece of legislation, before the main body.
The Preface, if present, always comes before the Preamble.
How to add a Preface
Enter Edit mode.
Put the keyword
PREFACE
on a line on its own, before anything else.Place the content of the Preface after the keyword.
If there is a Long title, include it in the Preface using the keyword
LONGTITLE
.
The Preface will appear in the Table of Contents on the left, but it won't have a heading in the document itself.
Example
How to add a Preamble
Enter Edit mode.
Put the keyword
PREAMBLE
on a line on its own, beforeBODY
(and after the end of the Preface, if there is one).Place the content of the Preamble after the keyword.
The Preamble will appear in the Table of Contents on the left. In some countries, it will also show up as a heading in the document.
Example
The enactment clause
The enactment clause usually starts with the phrase "Be it enacted . . . "
If there is a Preamble, this clause will be at the end of the Preamble before the Body.
If there is no Preamble, this clause will be at the end of the Preface after the Longtitle.
Exercise
Copy and paste the text below into a blank document in your editor.
Click Update. Note that the text is correct, but the Table of contents on the left-hand side does not include a Preface or a Preamble, and the Long title is not bold.
Click Edit and fix the ordering and the markup so that the Preface comes first, including the Long title, then the Preamble, and then the main body, as in the screenshots below.
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