Standard schematic note: components are valued in their natural unit. Resistors in ohms, capacitors in farads, inductors in henries (duh!). Components are further valued by their most common multipliers: polarized capacitors in uF, nonpolarized in pF. Decimals are assumed uF as well. (Probably inductors in uH as well, but if they don't use many in the circuit, they might not bother.)
"100/16NP" sounds like 100uF 16V nonpolarized (a particular variety of electrolytic). "0.01" might be applied to a ceramic or film capacitor, also with an assumed voltage rating, perhaps 50V. (And resistors are usually 1/4 or 1/2W by default.)
All of this is "unless specified otherwise", of course.
You might be able to look around and find a legend or note that describes this. Or it might be in the text. Or, it might be something they took for granted... in which case, you wouldn't know unless you asked.
Tim