\section{General principles} The main goal is for a paper to be clear. It should be as brief as possible, without sacrificing clarity. For all public documents, special consideration should be given to the fact that the reader will be less familiar with \lhcb than the author. Here follow a list of general principles that should be adhered to: \begin{enumerate} \item Choices that are made concerning layout and typography should be consistently applied throughout the document. \item Standard English should be used (British rather than American) for LHCb notes and preprints. Examples: colour, flavour, centre, metre, modelled and aluminium. Words ending on -ise or -isation (polarise, hadronisation) can be written with -ize or -ization ending but should be consistent. The punctuation normally follows the closing quote mark of quoted text, rather than being included before the closing quote. Footnotes come after punctuation. Papers to be submitted to an American journal can be written in American English instead. Under no circumstance should the two be mixed. \item Use of jargon should be avoided where possible. ``Systematics'' are ``systematic uncertainties'', ``L0'' is ``hardware trigger'', Monte-Carlo'' is ``simulation'', ``penguin'' diagrams are best introduced with an expression like ``electroweak loop (penguin) diagrams'', ``cuts'' are ``selection requirements''. The word ``error'' is ambiguous as it can mean the difference between the true and measured values or your estimate thereof. The same applies to event, that we usually take to mean the whole $pp$ collision; candidate or decay can be used instead.'' \item It would be good to avoid using quantities that are internal jargon and/or are impossible to reproduce without the full simulation, \ie\ instead of ``It is required that $\chisqvtx<3$'', to say ``A good quality vertex is required''; instead of ``It is required that $\chisqip>16$'', to say ``The track is inconsistent with originating from a PV''; instead of ``A DLL greater than 20 is required'' say to ``Tracks are required to be identified as kaons''. However, experience shows that some journal referees ask for exactly this kind of information, and to safeguard against this, one may consider given some of it in the paper, since even if the exact meaning may be LHCb-specific, it still conveys some qualitative feeling for the significance levels required in the varies steps of the analysis. \item \latex should be used for typesetting. Line numbering should be switched on for drafts that are circulated for comments. \item The abstract should be concise, and not include citations or numbered equations, and should give the key results from the paper. \item Apart from descriptions of the detector, the trigger and the simulation, the text should not be cut-and-pasted from other sources that have previously been published. \item References should usually be made only to publicly accessible documents. References to LHCb conference reports and public notes should be avoided in journal publications, instead including the relevant material in the paper itself. \item The use of tenses should be consistent. It is recommended to mainly stay in the present tense, for the abstract, the description of the analysis, \etc; the past tense is then used where necessary, for example when describing the data taking conditions. \item It is recommended to use the passive rather than active voice: ``the mass is measured'', rather than ``we measure the mass''. Limited use of the active voice is acceptable, in situations where re-writing in the passive form would be cumbersome, such as for the acknowledgements. Some leeway is permitted to accommodate different author's styles, but ``we'' should not appear excessively in the abstract or the first lines of introduction or conclusion. \item A sentence should not start with a variable, a particle or an acronym. A title or caption should not start with an article. \item Incorrect punctuation around conjunctive adverbs and the use of dangling modifiers are the two most common mistakes of English grammar in LHCb draft papers. If in doubt, read the wikipedia articles on conjunctive adverb and dangling modifier. \item When using natural units, at the first occurrence of an energy unit that refers to momentum or a radius, add a footnote: ``Natural units with $\hbar=c=1$ are used throughout.'' Do this even when somewhere a length is reported in units of mm. It's not 100\% consistent, but most likely nobody will notice. The problem can be trivially avoided when no lengths scales in natural units occur, by omitting the $\hbar$ from the footnote text. \item Papers dealing with amplitude analyses and/or resonance parameters, other than masses and lifetimes, should use natural units, since in these kind of measurements widths are traditionally expressed in MeV and radii in GeV$^{-1}$. It's also the convention used by the PDG. \item Papers quoting upper limits should give the both the 90\% and 95\% confidence level values in the text. Only one of these needs to be quoted in the abstract and summary. \end{enumerate}