Pagination
Pagination is the system by which the information on a newspaper, bookpage, manuscript, or otherwise handwritten or printed document are laid out.
In a strict sense of the word, it can mean the consecutive numbering to indicate the proper order of the pages, which was rarely found in documents pre-dating 1500, and only became common practice circa 1550, when it replaced foliation, which numbered only the front sides of folios.
Pagination can also refer to the process of organizing information onto webpages. For instance, threads on a bulletin board might be paginated such that 20 appear on each page.
See also
Joe Toth's article[1] on Pagination in the Google Web Toolkit - Widget Library
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Page | Pagination · Recto and verso · Margin · Column · Canons of page construction | |
Paragraph | Widows and orphans · Leading · River · Baseline · Median · Alignment · Justification | |
Character | Ligature · Letter-spacing · Kerning · Majuscule · Minuscule · Initial · x-height · Ascender · Descender · Diacritics · Counter · Subscript and superscript | |
Style | Serif · Italic · Slab serif · Sans-serif · Blackletter · Script · Dingbat | |
Punctuation | Hanging punctuation · Hyphenation · Curly quotes · En dash · Em dash | |
Typesetting | Type design · Type foundry · Movable type · Calligraphy · Phototypesetting · Letterpress · Typeface · Font · Computer font · Point · Pica · Cicero · Em · En · Lorem ipsum · Hamburgefonts · Punchcutting | |
Digital typography | Font formats · Typesetting software · Character encoding · Rasterization · Hinting |