English edit

Noun edit

ToC (plural ToCs)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of TOC (table of contents).
    • 2010, Hervé Déjean, Jean-Luc Meunier, “XRCE Participation to the 2009 Book Structure Task”, in Shlomo Geva, Jaap Kamps, Andrew Trotman, editors, Focused Retrieval and Evaluation: 8th International Workshop of the Initiative for the Evaluation of XML Retrieval, INEX 2009, Brisbane, Australia, December 7-9, 2009, Revised and Selected Papers, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, →ISBN, page 161:
      The first method aims at parsing the ToC page so as to segment it into entries, each entry being formed by a label and a reference to a page number.
    • 2012, Xueming Qian, “Semantic Based Sport Video Browsing”, in Muhammad Tanvir Afzal, editor, Semantics in Action: Applications and Scenarios, InTech, →ISBN, page 155:
      Fig.11 shows the ToC structure of a book which can be departed into following seven layers: (1) book title (BT); (2) chapter (CH); (3) subchapter (SC); (4) paragraph (PH); (5) page (PG); (6) sentence (ST); and (7) words (WD).
    • 2017, Ashwin Pajankar, Python Unit Test Automation: Practical Techniques for Python Developers and Testers, Apress, →ISBN, page xix:
      The complete ToC can complement the syllabus of “Software Testing,” if students were introduced to programming their freshman year with the help of Python.
    • 2018, Antoine Doucet, “Logical Structure Extraction from Digitized Books”, in Volker Margner, Umapada Pal, Apostolos Antonacopoulos, editors, Document Analysis and Text Recognition: Benchmarking State-of-the-Art Systems (Series in Machine Perception and Artificial Intelligence; volume 82), World Scientific, →ISBN, page 12:
      The process of manually building the ToC of a book is very time-consuming.