Difference between revisions of "Scenario"

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Scenario is a technical term in many fields but also occurs as (or in) the titles of a large number of publications.  
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[[Scenario]] is a technical term used in many fields of endeavour,  but it also occurs as (or in) the titles of a large number of publications (e.g. ''Scenario Magazine - Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies'', ''Scenario: The Magazine of the Screenwriting Art'', etc.)
  
 
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''[[Scenario]]'' is on occasion '''wrongly''' used as the title for the South African the arts and culture magazine called '''''[[Scenaria]]''''' (1977-1998).  
''[[Scenario]]'' is on occasion '''wrongly''' used as the title for the South African the arts and culture magazine '''''[[Scenaria]]''''', which was founded by [[Julius Eichbaum]] in 1977 and edited by him for 22 years.  
 
  
 
For the use of "[[Scenario]]" as a '''technical term''' see for example the web pages https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scenario and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scenario_(disambiguation)
 
For the use of "[[Scenario]]" as a '''technical term''' see for example the web pages https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scenario and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scenario_(disambiguation)

Latest revision as of 10:21, 30 April 2021

Scenario is a technical term used in many fields of endeavour, but it also occurs as (or in) the titles of a large number of publications (e.g. Scenario Magazine - Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies, Scenario: The Magazine of the Screenwriting Art, etc.)

Scenario is on occasion wrongly used as the title for the South African the arts and culture magazine called Scenaria (1977-1998).

For the use of "Scenario" as a technical term see for example the web pages https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scenario and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scenario_(disambiguation)