Competition Law Online

  1. What is a court copy?

    A Court Copy is a paginated replica pdf file of the printed version. You can use them to print a hard copy or read them straight from your mobile device when required. The main advantage of the Court Copy is that they contain the exact page numbers that appeared when the document was originally published, allowing you to be precise when making reference to an article or judgment.

    We provide these for most Law Reports and some of our journal Articles. The Court Copy icon can be found below the case name or article title when viewing the document.

    For further help on Adobe Acrobat, refer to Adobe Acrobat help.

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  2. What is the difference between the court copy and creating a pdf on-the-fly?

    A Court Copy is a paginated replica pdf file of the printed version. The on-the-fly pdf file is a pdf of the content you are currently viewing on screen. Both versions feature exactly the same content but the styling applied is slightly different. If you are simply reading a judgment either the Court Copy or the on-the-fly pdf file could be used. However if you need to be precise when referring to a judgment then the Court Copy would be the best version to use.

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  3. I am reading a court copy, and I have closed the TOC to get more text onscreen. It hasn’t made any difference and also I can’t seem to get back to the main document or the TOC. What should I do?

    Closing the table of contents will not increase the size of the court copy font. To adjust the font size in a Court Copy document:

    • use “+” button to increase the font size,
    • use “―” button to decrease the font size or
    • insert the value of the “zoom” at which you would like to view the document.

    If you close the Table of Contents, please use one of the following options:

    • hit the “Refresh Button” in your internet browser, which will take you back to the document view
    • hit the “Back Button” in your internet browser, which will take you back to the document view
      For further help on Adobe Acrobat, refer to Adobe Acrobat help.
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  4. How do I read the footnotes?

    Some documents will feature footnotes to further supplement the content, for example with bibliographical references, case citations, comments, etc. Footnotes will be indicated with blue superscript numbers or footnote symbols. To read the footnotes click on the number of symbol and you will be taken to the correct footnote at the bottom of the page. To return to the place in the text, click on the corresponding number next to the footnote.

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  5. What is the best way to use the search tools?

    We offer 2 searches, the case search and the assisted search.

    The case search allows you to just search for Judgments. This search template was retained from the previous platform, but has been slightly improved: you can now use the citation field to find neutral citations as well as the publication’s page citation. The search is an exact match search and is great for locating cases for which you already know some of the pertinent details.

    Alternatively you can use the assisted search. Covering all the content in your selected practice area (including content that you may not subscribe to yet but might still be of use) this search can be used to locate relevant information. As with most search engines, the more search terms you put in the more specific your returned search results will be. Once you have performed your search, the search results navigation page will show you the number of results in each publication. This means that you can also use the assisted search to search our Law Reports.

    For further detail on the searches refer to the section of searching in the helpfile.

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  6. How do I find a case?

    This depends in what context you want the case.

    If you want to find the full judgment use the case search to find the case in our Law Reports series.

    If you want to find where the case is explored in one of our publications, journals or for any discussion of the case by our PSL use the assisted search.

    For further detail on the searches refer to the section of searching in the helpfile.

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  7. What is relevance ordering?

    Relevance ordering of search results is where the search engine attempts to deliver the best (most relevant) result as the first result on the results summary page. This is achieved by ranking documents using a mathematical algorithm. Relevance is a well established search engine concept which you will have experienced when using search engines like Google and Yahoo, even though you might not have heard of it. The search engine is designed to do the hard work for you.

    Our new platform uses a search engine called Lucene. This is a is a high-performance, full-featured text search engine library.
    From a technical perspective, Lucene scoring uses a combination of the Vector Space Model (VSM) of Information Retrieval and the Boolean model to determine how relevant a given Document is to a User's query. In general, the idea behind the VSM is the more times a query term appears in a document relative to the number of times the term appears in all the documents in the collection, the more relevant that document is to the query. It uses the Boolean model to first narrow down the documents that need to be scored based on the use of boolean logic in the Query specification.

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  8. I subscribe to content in more than one practice area. How do I get from one to another?

    Click on the practice area button at any time to switch practice areas. The practice area button is located in the bottom left hand corner of the screen.

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