TY - JOUR AB - to the periodicals of the LONDO N MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY 1. Papers should be typewritten on one side of the paper, double spaced and with generous margins all round. Our printers need the original typescript or a clear copy of it. Carbon copies and faint or blurred photocopies or duplicated copies make unreasonable demands on copy-editors and type-setters. 2. Use a style that you might expect to be understood by a mathematician whose specialism is different from your own. Please check your work very carefully and perhaps even ask a colleague to read it critically. Responsibility for the accuracy of your results and for the quality of your exposition rests with you, not with the editors or the referee. Ideally, it should be a pleasure for the referee who reads your work. 3. Choose the title with great care. Any mathematician should be able to see at a glance what area of mathematics is discussed in the paper, and the expert in that general area should be attracted to investigate its content further. Do not include formulae in titles: the type-fount used for headings does not normally cope well with mathematical formulae; technical symbols make for bibliographical difficulties; also, a TI - Notes for Contributors JF - Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society DO - 10.1112/blms/14.6.573 DA - 1982-11-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/wiley/notes-for-contributors-RmEf3iAp8M SP - 573 EP - 576 VL - 14 IS - 6 DP - DeepDyve ER -