A resolution consists of a long sentence divided into clauses and sub-clauses. It has to be typed according to the official format with each line numbered. It is divided into two parts: preambulatory and operative clauses.
Preambulatory Clauses
refer to background information, arguments, justifications and aims of the action. They
begin with a present or past participle (Acknowledging/ Alarmed by)
are separated by commas
Operative Clauses
are numbered
say which kind of action you want to take (Attention: each operative clause must contain only one clear statement!)
are arranged in logical order
begin with a verb in 3rd person singular of the Present Tense (Proposes/Hopes)
are separated by semicolon
A resolution should stimulate negotiation and compromise for the greater good and rarely be condemnatory in nature to avoid alienation and to promote peaceful solutions to world problems.
For digital raster-images, the convention is to describe the imageresolution with the set of two positive integer-numbers, where the first number is the number of pixel-columns (width) and the second is the number of pixel-rows (height).
The spatial resolution may be described by the number of resels (resolution elements).
Resolution is measured in the number of lines of pixels running from the top of the image to the bottom.