MIL-STD-962D
appendix letter, the Roman numeral and a period, centered above the table. For example, the second table in Appendix B would be numbered "TABLE B-II."
5.14.6 Figure numbering. All figure shall be numbered consecutively throughout an appendix. The word "FIGURE" shall be in full capitalization, followed by the applicable appendix letter, the Arabic numeral and a period, centered below the figure. For example, the fourth figure in Appendix C would be numbered "FIGURE C-4."
5.14.7 Page numbering. Page numbers shall be numbered consecutively following the last page of the standard.
5.14.8 Scope. An appendix shall have a statement of scope as its first paragraph to indicate the coverage and limitations of the appendix to ensure its proper application and use. The following shall be included: "This Appendix (is or is not) a mandatory part of the standard. The information contained herein is intended for (compliance or guidance only)."
5.14.9 References. References that are required and relate only to the appendix shall be listed in the appendix under the section heading "APPLICABLE DOCUMENTS" and shall not be referenced in section 2 of the standard. The references shall be listed as specified in 5.8. This section shall be omitted from the appendix if not applicable.
5.14.10 Definitions. Definitions that relate only to the appendix shall be listed in the appendix under the section heading "DEFINITIONS." Definitions already appearing in section
3 of the standard shall not be repeated. This section shall be omitted from the appendix if not applicable.
5.15 Index. An alphabetical index may be placed at the end of a standard to permit ready reference to contents. Its use shall be limited to lengthy documents. If used, an index follows
the basic document and any appendix. The pages are numbered continuously following the last page of the basic document or appendix, as applicable. The document identifier shall appear in the upper center of each page.
5.16 Standards issued in parts. When there is a family of related, processes, practices, methods, or other criteria, it may be useful to have separate standards that all bear the same basic number, but are divided into parts. Each part shall be a complete six-section standard. When there are definitions, requirements, or other information that are common across all of the part standards, it may be beneficial to issue a general standard that contains all of common information, and refer back to general standard in the individual part standards. Part standards shall be identified by the same document identifier followed by a dash and sequential number.
Example: MIL-STD-176-1
MIL-STD-176-2
MIL-STD-176-3
Using the above example, should a general standard containing common requirements be necessary, it would be designated as MIL-STD-176.
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