Dear, scholars, I wanted to ask what the difference is between post-print and publisher's version of the article? You will facilitate my ability to share articles which are still under the strict policies of the journal.
I think that what you mean is a "pre-press version." Every journal has different rules, but many allow you to distribute a pre-publication version of your paper that is based on the word processor file that you submitted to them, but that is NOT their actual published version. At the link below, you can see how I handle this.
But not all journals allow this, so be sure to check their copyright policy in their information for authors.
Article Environmental factors affecting Computer Assisted Language L...
No, I mean post-print. Copyright policy we can check here: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/search.php as I did.
And also I think that I have find out about the difference: http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/information-culture/understanding-your-rights-pre-prints-post-prints-and-publisher-versions/
"A post-print is a document that has been through the peer review process and incorporated reviewers comments. It is the final version of the paper before it is sent off the the journal for publication. It may be missing a final copyedit (if the journal still does that) and won't be formatted to look like the journal. It still looks like the double spaced .doc file."
So, unfortunately, I can't to archive the final version of publications here in RG.
Pre-Prints – The author's copy of article before it’s been reviewed by the publisher, or pre-reviewed
Post-Prints – The author's copy of article after it’s been reviewed and corrected, but before the publisher has formatted it for publication, or post-reviewed.
Publisher’s Version – The version that is formatted and appears in print or online.