What are the motivations for publishing new editions of an existing textbook, beyond new discoveries in a...












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In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?










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    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    18 hours ago
















16















In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?










share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    18 hours ago














16












16








16


2






In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?










share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?







books publishers






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user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 3





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    18 hours ago














  • 3





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    18 hours ago








3




3





Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

– user2768
18 hours ago





Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

– user2768
18 hours ago










7 Answers
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Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

    – Mazura
    21 hours ago






  • 5





    @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

    – Buffy
    20 hours ago






  • 9





    @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

    – Buffy
    20 hours ago






  • 3





    I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

    – barbecue
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

    – Chris Hayes
    5 hours ago



















6














There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:




  • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

  • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

  • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

  • Student feedback (as you mentioned)


Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






share|improve this answer
























  • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

    – Vladimir F
    21 hours ago











  • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

    – Allure
    20 hours ago













  • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

    – Solar Mike
    20 hours ago











  • @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

    – Vladimir F
    19 hours ago








  • 2





    @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

    – Allure
    19 hours ago





















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When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






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    4














    Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



    If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.




    • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


    • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


    • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


    • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


    • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning



    I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



    Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
    Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



    I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



    There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



    A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






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      2














      They can update a book for several reasons:



      1) new material,



      2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



      3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



      So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






      share|improve this answer





















      • 2





        Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

        – Brian Borchers
        yesterday











      • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

        – Solar Mike
        yesterday











      • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

        – Vladimir F
        21 hours ago






      • 1





        @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

        – Solar Mike
        21 hours ago











      • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

        – Ben Voigt
        3 hours ago



















      2















      • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

      • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.






      share|improve this answer































        2














        I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



        I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



        To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






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          7 Answers
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          7 Answers
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          Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



          It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2





            @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

            – Mazura
            21 hours ago






          • 5





            @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 9





            @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 3





            I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

            – barbecue
            6 hours ago






          • 1





            @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

            – Chris Hayes
            5 hours ago
















          40














          Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



          It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2





            @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

            – Mazura
            21 hours ago






          • 5





            @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 9





            @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 3





            I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

            – barbecue
            6 hours ago






          • 1





            @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

            – Chris Hayes
            5 hours ago














          40












          40








          40







          Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



          It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






          share|improve this answer













          Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



          It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered yesterday









          Brian BorchersBrian Borchers

          28.9k353106




          28.9k353106








          • 2





            @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

            – Mazura
            21 hours ago






          • 5





            @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 9





            @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 3





            I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

            – barbecue
            6 hours ago






          • 1





            @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

            – Chris Hayes
            5 hours ago














          • 2





            @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

            – Mazura
            21 hours ago






          • 5





            @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 9





            @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

            – Buffy
            20 hours ago






          • 3





            I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

            – barbecue
            6 hours ago






          • 1





            @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

            – Chris Hayes
            5 hours ago








          2




          2





          @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

          – Mazura
          21 hours ago





          @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

          – Mazura
          21 hours ago




          5




          5





          @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

          – Buffy
          20 hours ago





          @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

          – Buffy
          20 hours ago




          9




          9





          @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

          – Buffy
          20 hours ago





          @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

          – Buffy
          20 hours ago




          3




          3





          I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

          – barbecue
          6 hours ago





          I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

          – barbecue
          6 hours ago




          1




          1





          @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

          – Chris Hayes
          5 hours ago





          @VladimirF The most recent edition is going to be the most generally available one in almost every case. You can hardly require students to use an older edition which is probably out of print, and if students are using differing editions then it's difficult (though not impossible) to assign exercises and refer to the text consistently.

          – Chris Hayes
          5 hours ago











          6














          There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:




          • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

          • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

          • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

          • Student feedback (as you mentioned)


          Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






          share|improve this answer
























          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

            – Vladimir F
            21 hours ago











          • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

            – Allure
            20 hours ago













          • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

            – Solar Mike
            20 hours ago











          • @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

            – Vladimir F
            19 hours ago








          • 2





            @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

            – Allure
            19 hours ago


















          6














          There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:




          • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

          • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

          • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

          • Student feedback (as you mentioned)


          Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






          share|improve this answer
























          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

            – Vladimir F
            21 hours ago











          • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

            – Allure
            20 hours ago













          • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

            – Solar Mike
            20 hours ago











          • @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

            – Vladimir F
            19 hours ago








          • 2





            @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

            – Allure
            19 hours ago
















          6












          6








          6







          There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:




          • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

          • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

          • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

          • Student feedback (as you mentioned)


          Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






          share|improve this answer













          There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:




          • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

          • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

          • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

          • Student feedback (as you mentioned)


          Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered yesterday









          AllureAllure

          34.4k19103156




          34.4k19103156













          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

            – Vladimir F
            21 hours ago











          • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

            – Allure
            20 hours ago













          • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

            – Solar Mike
            20 hours ago











          • @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

            – Vladimir F
            19 hours ago








          • 2





            @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

            – Allure
            19 hours ago





















          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

            – Vladimir F
            21 hours ago











          • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

            – Allure
            20 hours ago













          • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

            – Solar Mike
            20 hours ago











          • @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

            – Vladimir F
            19 hours ago








          • 2





            @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

            – Allure
            19 hours ago



















          But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

          – Vladimir F
          21 hours ago





          But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

          – Vladimir F
          21 hours ago













          @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

          – Allure
          20 hours ago







          @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

          – Allure
          20 hours ago















          @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

          – Solar Mike
          20 hours ago





          @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

          – Solar Mike
          20 hours ago













          @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

          – Vladimir F
          19 hours ago







          @Allure Indeed I have. I do not think it is for the professot to answer. It is the question the OP literally has posted (at least O inderstand it so given the first sentence of the question). That is why I have put it under questions that did not address this point.

          – Vladimir F
          19 hours ago






          2




          2





          @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

          – Allure
          19 hours ago







          @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

          – Allure
          19 hours ago













          5














          When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



          Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



          I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



          In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






          share|improve this answer




























            5














            When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



            Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



            I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



            In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






            share|improve this answer


























              5












              5








              5







              When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



              Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



              I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



              In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






              share|improve this answer













              When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



              Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



              I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



              In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 19 hours ago









              BuffyBuffy

              56.9k17179275




              56.9k17179275























                  4














                  Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                  If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.




                  • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                  • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                  • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                  • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                  • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning



                  I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                  Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                  Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                  I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                  There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                  A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






                  share|improve this answer






























                    4














                    Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                    If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.




                    • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                    • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                    • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                    • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                    • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning



                    I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                    Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                    Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                    I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                    There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                    A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






                    share|improve this answer




























                      4












                      4








                      4







                      Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                      If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.




                      • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                      • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                      • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                      • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                      • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning



                      I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                      Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                      Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                      I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                      There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                      A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






                      share|improve this answer















                      Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                      If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.




                      • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                      • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                      • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                      • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                      • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning



                      I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                      Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                      Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                      I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                      There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                      A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited 18 hours ago

























                      answered 18 hours ago









                      rumtschorumtscho

                      3,2541833




                      3,2541833























                          2














                          They can update a book for several reasons:



                          1) new material,



                          2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                          3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                          So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






                          share|improve this answer





















                          • 2





                            Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                            – Brian Borchers
                            yesterday











                          • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                            – Solar Mike
                            yesterday











                          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                            – Vladimir F
                            21 hours ago






                          • 1





                            @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                            – Solar Mike
                            21 hours ago











                          • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                            – Ben Voigt
                            3 hours ago
















                          2














                          They can update a book for several reasons:



                          1) new material,



                          2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                          3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                          So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






                          share|improve this answer





















                          • 2





                            Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                            – Brian Borchers
                            yesterday











                          • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                            – Solar Mike
                            yesterday











                          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                            – Vladimir F
                            21 hours ago






                          • 1





                            @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                            – Solar Mike
                            21 hours ago











                          • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                            – Ben Voigt
                            3 hours ago














                          2












                          2








                          2







                          They can update a book for several reasons:



                          1) new material,



                          2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                          3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                          So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






                          share|improve this answer















                          They can update a book for several reasons:



                          1) new material,



                          2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                          3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                          So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...







                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited yesterday

























                          answered yesterday









                          Solar MikeSolar Mike

                          14.9k52654




                          14.9k52654








                          • 2





                            Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                            – Brian Borchers
                            yesterday











                          • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                            – Solar Mike
                            yesterday











                          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                            – Vladimir F
                            21 hours ago






                          • 1





                            @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                            – Solar Mike
                            21 hours ago











                          • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                            – Ben Voigt
                            3 hours ago














                          • 2





                            Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                            – Brian Borchers
                            yesterday











                          • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                            – Solar Mike
                            yesterday











                          • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                            – Vladimir F
                            21 hours ago






                          • 1





                            @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                            – Solar Mike
                            21 hours ago











                          • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                            – Ben Voigt
                            3 hours ago








                          2




                          2





                          Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                          – Brian Borchers
                          yesterday





                          Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                          – Brian Borchers
                          yesterday













                          @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                          – Solar Mike
                          yesterday





                          @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                          – Solar Mike
                          yesterday













                          But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                          – Vladimir F
                          21 hours ago





                          But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                          – Vladimir F
                          21 hours ago




                          1




                          1





                          @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                          – Solar Mike
                          21 hours ago





                          @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                          – Solar Mike
                          21 hours ago













                          @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                          – Ben Voigt
                          3 hours ago





                          @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                          – Ben Voigt
                          3 hours ago











                          2















                          • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                          • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.






                          share|improve this answer




























                            2















                            • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                            • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.






                            share|improve this answer


























                              2












                              2








                              2








                              • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                              • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.






                              share|improve this answer














                              • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                              • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered 22 hours ago









                              o.m.o.m.

                              58434




                              58434























                                  2














                                  I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



                                  I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



                                  To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






                                  share|improve this answer




























                                    2














                                    I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



                                    I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



                                    To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






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                                      2












                                      2








                                      2







                                      I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



                                      I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



                                      To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



                                      I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



                                      To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered 5 hours ago









                                      Ethan BolkerEthan Bolker

                                      4,0521120




                                      4,0521120






















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