Best Practices for TEI in Libraries

TEI in Libraries: Home

Introduction and History
The Text Encoding Initiative Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange (referred to as    the TEI Guidelines) were first published in 1994 and represent a tremendous achievement in electronic text standards by providing a highly sophisticated structure for encoding electronic text. Digital librarians have benefited greatly from the standardization provided by these guidelines, and the potential for interoperability and long-term preservation of digital collections facilitated by their wide adoption.

In 1998, the Digital Library Federation (DLF) sponsored the TEI and XML in Digital Libraries Workshop at the Library of Congress to discuss the use of the TEI Guidelines in libraries for electronic text, and to create a set of best practices for librarians implementing them. From this workshop, three working groups were formed the members of which represented some of the largest and most mature digital library programs in the U.S. Group 2 was charged with developing a set of recommendations for libraries using the TEI Guidelines in electronic text encoding. This group included the following representatives from six libraries:

 Perry Willett, Indiana University (chair) LeeEllen Friedland, Library of Congress

Nancy Kushigian, University of California, Davis Christina Powell, University of Michigan David Seaman, University of Virginia Natalia Smith, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 

At the ALA mid-winter (January 1999), the DLF task force revised a draft set of best practices, called TEI Text Encoding in Libraries: Guidelines for Best Practices (referred to as TEI in Libraries     Guidelines). The revised recommendations were circulated to the conference working group in May 1999 and presented at the joint annual meeting of the Association of Computers and the Humanities and Association of Literary and Linguistic Computing in June 1999. Version 1.0 was circulated for comments in    August 1999. These guidelines were endorsed by the DLF, and have been used by many digital libraries, including those of the task force members, as a model for their own local best practices. Libraries, museums and end-users have benefitted from a set of best practices for electronic text in a number of    ways, including better interoperability between electronic text collections, better documented practices among digital libraries, and a starting point for discussion of best practices with commercial publishers regarding electronic text creation.

Written in 1998, this first iteration of TEI in Libraries Guidelines made no mention of XML, XSLT, or any of the other powerful tools that have now become common parlance and practice in creating digital documents and collections. Based on these important changes in markup technology, it came to the attention of the DLF and members of the original Task Force that the TEI in Libraries Guidelines required substantial revision. In 2002, the TEI Consortium published a new edition of the complete TEI Guidelines that conformed to XML specifications. In order to remain useful, the TEI in     Libraries Guidelines</i> had to be updated to reflect these developments.

Furthermore, librarians need more guidance than the original TEI in Libraries Guidelines provided. There are many library-specific encoding issues which need to be addressed and documented to    ensure consistency. The intention of this document is to provide recommended paths of encoding for these issues.

In addition, these library guidelines have the potential to be much more useful if they can serve as a    training document from which librarians can learn about text encoding and addressing particular encoding challenges. To fulfill this role, the guidelines require more examples and detailed explanations, giving documentation of the use of TEI in a library context. Librarians also need a set of standards and best practices for vendors and publishers who create electronic text for digital libraries, so that these collections adhere to the same archival standards as locally-created electronic text collections. With detailed guidelines that could serve as an encoding specification, librarians might encourage vendors to follow the principles in these standards, to facilitate the long-term preservation of    commercially published electronic text collections, and more readily allow for cross-collection searching.

In order to facilitate the evolution of this document, another DLF-sponsored Task Force&mdash;some of the representatives of which were on the original Task Force&mdash;met on October 24-25, 2003 at    the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.:

 Richard Gartner, Oxford University Library</li> Matthew Gibson, University of Virginia Library</li> Kirk Hastings, California Digital Library</li> Christina Powell, University of Michigan</li> Merrilee Proffitt, RLG</li>

David Seaman, Digital Library Federation</li> Natalia Smith, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill</li> Perry Willett, Indiana University (chair)</li> </ul> These representatives met to revise the original TEI in Libraries Guidelines in order that they:

 reflect changes occuring within the text encoding world generally and within the TEI community specifically</li> further illuminate the different levels of encoding by offering clearer and more robust examples.</li> </ul>

After producing Version 2.0 of the Guidelines, this group (with some changes in membership) met again at the Cosmos Club on February 13-14, 2006. Those in attendance were:

 Syd Bauman, The TEI Consortium</li> Richard Gartner, Oxford University Library (by phone)</li> <li>Matthew Gibson, Virginia Foundation for the Humanities (chair)</li> <li>Merrilee Proffitt, RLG</li> <li>Chris Powell, The University of Michigan</li>

<li>David Seaman, Digital Library Federation</li> <li>Natasha Smith, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill</li> <li>Perry Willett, The University of Michigan</li> </ul>

This group of continues to meet and based upon their discussions and resolutions, the following guidelines will continue to be updated and enhanced.

General Overview and Comments
These recommendations are for libraries using the XML version of the TEILite DTD (teixlite). There are many different library text digitization projects, for different purposes. With this in mind, the Task Force has attempted to make these recommendations as inclusive as possible by developing a    series of encoding levels. These levels are meant to allow for a range of practice, from wholly automated text creation and encoding, to encoding that requires expert content knowledge, analysis, and editing.

Recommendations for Levels 1-4 are intended for projects wishing to create encoded electronic text with structural markup, but minimal semantic or content markup. Also, the encoding levels are cumulative: encoding requirements at each level incorporate the requirements of lower levels. Levels 1-4 allow the conversion and encoding of texts to be performed without the assistance of deep content knowledge and can be enriched with more markup at any time. Level 5, in contrast, requires scholarly analysis.

These recommendations are concerned with the text portion of a TEI-encoded document. While there are modest requirements for including certain information about encoding level in the TEI header, a separate set of recommendations, now integrated into this document, was developed to address issues concerning TEI header contents to MARC-format bibliographic data (see the &lt;teiHeader> section).

General Recommendations
Note: all recommendations that follow are based on P4:2004.

<ul> <li>The encoding level (as described in this document) should be recorded in the &lt;editorialDecl&gt; in the TEI header, along with an explanation of any deviation from the recommendations.</li>

<li>Electronic text at all levels of encoding should begin with the transcription of the first word on     the first leaf of the original work. It may be impractical or undesirable to transcribe and encode certain features of the text, such as publisher's advertisements or indexes, but if at all possible, they should be included as links to page images. Any omissions of material found in the original work should be noted in the &lt;editorialDecl&gt; in the TEI header.</li> <li>File naming should follow ISO 9660 conventions: 8-character filenames, 3-character extensions, using A-Z, a-z, 0-9, underscores and hyphens. The rationale behind this suggestion is that when moving texts across different platforms (DOS for instance), some systems will truncate beyond the eighth character.</li> <li>We recommend the use of numbered divisions throughout the electronic text, always beginning with &lt;div1&gt; (we prefer that &lt;div0&gt; not be used since the TEI Guidelines does not     make it available in &lt;front&gt; or &lt;back&gt; matter). Numbered divisions present advantages to search and indexing software by explicitly communicating the hierarchical level of the section described. Texts at all levels should include at least one &lt;div1&gt;.</li>

<li>Page breaks should be encoded using the &lt;pb&gt; element, which should demark the top of a page (i.e. the text of page seven should immediately follow &lt;pb n="7"/&gt;), and should always be contained within a division.</li> </ul>

Introduction
At the TEI and XML in Digital Libraries Workshop that was held at the Library of Congress in July 1998, several working groups were formed to consider various aspects of the Text Encoding Initiative. Group 1 was charged to recommend some best practices for TEI header content and to review the relationship between the Text Encoding Initiative header and MARC. To this end, representatives of the University of Virginia Library and the University of Michigan Library gathered in Ann Arbor in early October 1998 to develop a recommended practice guide. This work was assisted by similar efforts that had taken place in the United Kingdom under the auspices of the Oxford Text Archive the previous year. The following document represents a draft of those recommended practices. It has been submitted to various constituencies for comment.

Working Assumptions
A TEI header can serve many publics. Headers can be created in a text center and reflect the center's standards, or they can serve as the basis for other types of metadata system records produced by other agencies. Headers can function in detached form as records in a catalog, as a title page inherent to the document, or as a source for index displays.

In addition, a header may describe a collection of documents, a single item, or a portion of an item. Variances in TEI header content can result from making different choices of what is being described.

A TEI header may not have a one to one correspondence with a MARC record. One TEI header may have multiple MARC analytic records, or one MARC record may be used to describe a collection of TEI documents with individual headers.

A TEI header serves several purposes. It may contain an historical background on how the file has been treated. It can extend the information of a classic catalog record. The Text Center and/or cataloging agency can act as the gatekeeper for creators by providing standards for content.

Does the TEI header act as the electronic title page or as a catalog record? Is it integral to the document it describes or independent? Depending on the community being served, the TEI elements will reflect the interest of that community. Nonetheless, it is possible to describe a set of "best practices" that will produce compatible content while accommodating this variety of purposes. Compatibility of content encourages a more understandable set of results when information about assorted items is displayed as a set of search results, a contents list, or an index, and it allows for more reasonable conversion of content information from TEI elements to elements of other metadata sets when this action seems advisable.

It is a traditional practice of librarianship to agree upon where in a document and in what order of preference one should look to identify the title, author, etc., of that document. This permits a certain consistency in terminology and allows for a certain amount of authentication of content. We recommend the following preferences to those who create headers and to those who attempt to use headers to create traditional catalog records that are compliant with AACR2 and ISBD(ER) rules.

As a member of the academic community, the header creator/editor has a responsibility to verify, whenever humanly possible, the intellectual source for an electronic document that presents itself without any information regarding its source or authorship.

Chief Sources of Information for Several Types of Electronic Resources Are:
<ul>	<li>1. For an electronic document with a digitized title page (without a header), prefer <ul> <li>a) Chief source of information = information coded as title page</li>			<li>b) Use added information from an originating paper document if absolutely certain it is the source</li> </ul>

</li> <li>2. Electronic document with header (without a title page) <ul> <li>a) Chief source of information = supplied and verified header </li>

<li>b) Use information from paper document if absolutely certain it is the source</li>		</ul>	</li>

<li>3. Electronic document with header and title page <ul> <li>a) Chief source of information = supplied header (if verified) </li>			<li>b) If header is not verified, use title page as chief source</li> <li>c) Use information from paper document if absolutely certain it is the source</li>		</ul>

</li> <li>4. If neither header nor title page is present and there is no evidence of a source document, the header creator <ul> <li>a) May assign a title and author if appropriate</li>			<li>b) Enclose the information in brackets, using the standard English language convention for editorial interjections</li> </ul> </li> <li>5. If neither header nor title page is present but the header creator has satisfactory evidence of an originating source, that document should be used as the chief source of information for the title and author of the header. If the source cannot be fully verified as to edition, authorship, etc., this fact should be clearly indicated in a note in the &lt;fileDesc&gt;. </li>

</ul>

Minimal TEI Header Recommendation
&lt;teiHeader&gt; &lt;fileDesc&gt;

&lt;titleStmt&gt; &lt;title&gt;&lt;/title&gt; &lt;author&gt;&lt;/author&gt; &lt;/titleStmt&gt;

&lt;publicationStmt&gt; &lt;publisher&gt;&lt;/publisher&gt;

&lt;pubPlace&gt;&lt;/pubPlace&gt; &lt;idno&gt;&lt;/idno&gt; &lt;availability&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/availability&gt; &lt;date&gt;&lt;/date&gt;

&lt;/publicationStmt&gt;

&lt;sourceDesc&gt; &lt;biblFull&gt; &lt;titleStmt&gt; &lt;title&gt;&lt;/title&gt;

&lt;author&gt;&lt;/author&gt; &lt;/titleStmt&gt; &lt;publicationStmt&gt; &lt;publisher&gt;&lt;/publisher&gt; &lt;pubPlace&gt;&lt;/pubPlace&gt;

&lt;date&gt;&lt;/date&gt; &lt;/publicationStmt&gt; &lt;/biblFull&gt; &lt;/sourceDesc&gt; &lt;/fileDesc&gt;

&lt;/teiHeader&gt;

Repeat the &lt;biblFull&gt; field, as appropriate, if there is more than one source for the electronic item. See some examples in context …

Recommended Additions to the teixlite DTD
<ul> <li>Add elements under &lt;name&gt; to allow for the variable ordering and alphabetization of names: &lt;forename&gt;, &lt;surname&gt;, &lt;birthdate&gt;, &lt;deathdate&gt;, &lt;title&gt;, etc.</li>

<li>In order to effectively represent the source(s) when many documents are represented by the TEI header, we see the need for structured elements that, minimally, allow us to identify parent-child and component relationships.</li> </ul>

Acknowledgments and Bibliography
<ul> <li> This guide was prepared by Judy Ahronheim, Thomas Champagne, Lynn Marko, Kelly Webster, and Chris Wilcox of the University of Michigan Library and Jackie Shieh of the University of Virginia Library in October 1998. The source documents were the cataloging guides prepared by those two institutions (Virginia and Michigan). In addition, documentation from the Oxford Text Archive, Arts and Humanities Data Service of the United Kingdom also was made available to assist in this effort.

</li> <li> For a description of TEI header elements and correstponding USMARC fields, see Appendix A at http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/tei/tei-usmarc.html. </li> </ul>

LEVEL 1: Fully Automated Conversion and Encoding
Purpose: To create electronic text with the primary purpose of keyword searching and linking to page images. The primary advantage in using the teixlite DTD at this level is that a TEI header is attached to the text file.

Rationale: The text is subordinate to the page image, and is not intended to     stand alone as an electronic text (without page images).

Texts at Level 1 can be created and encoded by fully automated means, using uncorrected OCR of page images ("dirty OCR"), exporting from existing electronic text files, or actually not including any text at all. Only those elements that are necessary to divide the text from the header and facilitate linking to     page images are used. Encoding is performed automatically based on artifacts of the OCR or other document creation process (page breaks, for example) and metadata collected during the imaging or     preparation process. This encoding is both minimal and reliable, and does not typically require extensive review of each page of each text.

Level 1 texts are not intended to be adequate for textual analysis; they are more likely to be suited to the goals of a preservation unit or mass digitization initiative. Though their encoding is minimal, Level 1 texts are fully valid XML texts. In addition to taking advantage of the TEI header, using the teixlite DTD--with the consistency suggested by these guidelines--allows Level 1 texts to be compatible with more richly encoded teixlite texts (that also follow these guidelines) for searching, for example. Further encoding based on document structures or content analysis can be added to a Level 1 text at any time.

Level 1 is most suitable for projects with the following characteristics:

<ul> <li>a large volume of material is to be made available online quickly</li> <li>a digital image of each page is desired</li> <li>no manual intervention will be performed in the text creation process</li> <li>the material is of interest to a large community of users who wish to read texts that allow keyword searching</li> <li>sophisticated search and display capabilities based on the structure of the text are not necessary</li>

<li>extensibility is desired; that is, one desires to keep open the option for a higher level of      encoding to be added at a later date</li> </ul>

Basic Structural Example:
<TEI.2 id="someid"> <teiHeader> [Source and processing information goes here] </teiHeader> <pb id="p00000001" n="1"/> [main body of the unmarked up plain text begins here] <pb id="p00000002" n="2"/> [more plain text goes here with appropriate page breaks interspersed] ... <pb id="p00000145" n="145"/> [more plain text] <pb id="p00000146" n="146"/> [text ends here] </TEI.2>

See an example in context…

LEVEL 2: Minimal Encoding
Purpose: To create electronic text for full-text searching, linking to page images, and identifying simple structural hierarchy to improve navigation.

Rationale: The text is subordinate to the page image, though navigational markers (textual divisions, headings) are captured. The text could stand alone as electronic text (without page images) if the accuracy of its contents is suitable to its intended use and it is not necessary to display low-level typographic or structural information. Level 2 requires a set of elements more granular than those of Level 1, including bibliographic or structural information below the monographic or volume level.

Though texts at Level 2 can be created and encoded by automated means, based on the typographic elements in the electronic file (for example, bold centered text at the top of the page surrounded by whitespace indicates a new chapter heading, and thus a new division), it is not likely to be absolutely reliable across a large body of material. Level 2 encoding requires some human intervention to identify each textual division and heading. Level 2 texts do not require any special knowledge or manual intervention below the section level.

Level 2 texts are not intended to be displayed separately from their page images. Level 2 encoding of sections and headings provides greater navigational possibilities than Level 1 encoding, and enables searching to be restricted within particular textual divisions (for example, searching for two phrases within the same chapter).

Level 2 is most suitable for projects with the following characteristics:


 * a large volume of material is to be made available online quickly
 * a digital image of each page is desired
 * the material is of interest to a large community of users who wish to read texts that allow keyword searching
 * rudimentary search and display capabilities based on the large structures of the text are desired
 * each text will be checked to ensure that divisions and headers are properly identified
 * extensibility is desired; that is, one desires to keep open the option for a higher level of encoding to be added at a later date

All elements specified in Level 1 plus the following:

Basic Structural Example:
<TEI.2 id="someid"> <teiHeader> [Source and processing information goes here] </teiHeader> [titlepage information, table of contents, prefaces, etc.] <div1 type="chapter" n="1"> Chapter 1 [text of Chapter 1 goes here interspersed with <pb/> elements pointing to page images] <div1 type="chapter" n="2"> Chapter 2 [text of Chapter 2 goes here interspersed with <pb/> elements pointing to page images] <div1 type="chapter" n="3"> Chapter 3 [text of Chapter 3 goes here interspersed with <pb/> elements pointing to page images] <div1 type="chapter" n="4"> Chapter 4 [text of Chapter 4 goes here interspersed with <pb/> elements pointing to page images] [optional text of backmatter, appendices, etc.] </TEI.2>

See an example in context…

LEVEL 3: Simple Analysis
Purpose: To create text that can stand alone as electronic text and identifies hierarchy and typography without content analysis being of primary importance.

Rationale: Level 3 texts can be created from scratch or by the relatively easy conversion of existing HTML or word-processing documents. Encoding offers the advantage of the TEI header, interoperability with other TEI collections, and extensibility to higher levels of encoding. Level 3 generally requires some human editing, but the features to be encoded are determined by the appearance of the text and not specialized content analysis.

Level 3 texts identify front and back matter, and all paragraph breaks. The finer granularity of     encoding these features, as well as figures, notes, and all changes of typography, allows a range of      options for display, delivery, and searching. For example, one has the option of identifying and, therefore, specifying the display charactersitics of different typographic styles, and regularizing the display and placement of note text.

Level 3 texts can stand alone as text without page images and, therefore, can be uploaded, downloaded and delivered quickly, and require less storage space than digital collections with page images. However, the simple level of structural anaylsis and absence of specialized content analysis reflected in Level 3 encoding may make it desirable for some, depending on project priorities, to include page images in order to provide users with a fuller set of resources.

Level 3 is most suitable for projects with the following characteristics:

<ul> <li>the material is of interest to a large community of users who wish to read texts that allow keyword searching</li> <li>some sophistication of display, delivery, and searching based on structure of the text is desired</li> <li>each text will be checked to ensure that encoding decisions have been made appropriately</li> <li>the users of the texts may have limited storage or display capabilities</li> <li>the creator of the texts has limited or no ability to provide content expertise to analyze, tag, or review texts</li>

<li>extensibility is desired; that is, one desires to keep open the option for a higher level of      encoding to be added at a later date</li> </ul>

All elements specified in Levels 1 and 2, plus the following:

NOTE ON &lt;note&gt;:

It may be desirable to move footnotes from their original location in the text. If left at the bottom of a page, a note may become included in another paragraph or section of the encoded text, and thus separated from its reference. There are options for placement of footnotes if they are moved:

<ul> <li>Inline. The note is inserted at the point of reference. An n attribute records the value of the note reference if there is one.</li> <li>End-of-Division. Notes moved to the end of the division</li> </ul>

Basic Structural Example forthcoming ...

LEVEL 4: Basic Content Analysis
Purpose: To create text that can stand alone as electronic text, identifies hierarchy and typography, specifies function of textual and structural elements, and describes the nature of the content and not merely its appearance. This level is not meant to encode or identify all structural, semantic or bibliographic features of the text.

Rationale: Greater description of function and content allows for:

<ul> <li>flexibility of display and delivery</li> <li>sophisticated searching within specified textual and structural elements</li> <li>combining the broadest range of uses and audiences</li>

</ul>

Texts encoded at Level 4 are able to stand alone as part of a library collection, and do not require page images in order for them to be read by students, scholars and general readers. This level of TEI encoding allows them to be displayed or printed in a variety of ways suitable for classroom or scholarly use.

Level 4 texts contain elements and attributes that describe content. For example, lines of verse are tagged with &lt;l&gt;; the &lt;p&gt; element is reserved for true paragraphs. Features of     the text that may contribute to meaning, such as indentation of verse lines and typographic change, are preserved. These are textual features that are not encoded at lower levels and that allow the text to be     used and understood fully independent of images.

The ability to stand alone as text means that Level 4 texts are more nimble and robust for exercises such as format repurposing and textual analysis.

Finally, functionally accurate encoding in Level 4 texts allows them to be searched or displayed in     sophisticated ways. For example, a searcher could limit his or her search in a dramatic text to stage directions or to the speeches of a particular character. In a volume of poetry published by     subscription, a search could be confined to names that appear in lists, thus limiting a search to names of people who subscribed to a particular volume. This ability to limit searches becomes more significant as textbases become larger, and thus is of great importance to the library community as it attempts to     build into the initial design and implementation of textbases features needed to enhance interoperability.

Level 4 is most suitable for projects with the following characteristics:

<ul> <li>sophisticated search and retrieval capabilities are desired</li>

<li>the texts will be used for textual analysis</li> <li>extensibility is desired; that is, one desires to keep open the option for a higher level of      encoding to be added by the scholarly community at a later date</li> <li>the users of the texts may have limited storage or display capabilities</li> </ul>

General Level 4 Recommendations
<ul> <li>Typographically distinct text should be encoded as &lt;foreign&gt;, &lt;title&gt;, or &lt;emph&gt; as appropriate. Any ambiguous emphasized text should be       encoded as &lt;hi&gt; (e.g. &lt;hi rend="bold"&gt;).</li> <li>It is recommended that the &lt;sic&gt; element be used to indicate typographic errors, with corrections noted as the value of the corr attribute.</li>

<li>&lt;titlePage&gt; should include the verso if present, divided by &lt;pb n="verso"/&gt;. Tables of contents, errata, subscription lists, "other titles by the same author" should be included in a separate numbered division, as a &lt;list&gt; with &lt;item&gt;s. Frontispieces should be encoded as a &lt;figure&gt;, within a separate numbered division and &lt;p&gt;.</li> </ul>

See some examples in context…

Level 4 Prose
<ul> <li>Letters that occur within the text body provide some challenges. It is recommended that quoted letters that occur as part of a text (and not collections of letters themselves) be encoded within &lt;q&gt;&lt;text&gt;&lt;body&gt;&lt;div1 type="letter"&gt;, with &lt;opener&gt;, &lt;dateline&gt;, &lt;salute&gt;, &lt;signed&gt;, &lt;closer&gt; included as appropriate.</li>

<li>Quotations that do not occur inline, but are set off typographically in some way, should be       encoded as &lt;q&gt;.</li> <li>Notes are to be encoded as described in Level 3.</li> <li>&lt;argument&gt;, &lt;opener&gt;, &lt;epigraph&gt;, &lt;closer&gt;, &lt;trailer&gt;, &lt;add&gt;, &lt;del&gt;, &lt;unclear&gt; as appropriate.</li>

</ul>

See some examples in context…

Level 4 Drama
<ul> <li>Cast lists should be encoded as &lt;list&gt;s, with &lt;item&gt;s.</li>

<li>Speeches are encoded as &lt;sp&gt;, with speakers identified within &lt;speaker&gt; elements; stage directions are encoded as &lt;stage&gt; and enclose block level content describing scenery, etc.</li> </ul>

See some examples in context…

Level 4 Oral History
<ul> <li>Speakers in interviews can be identified in the &lt;teiHeader&gt; in several ways. <ul> <li>In the &lt;profileDesc&gt;, in the &lt;particDesc&gt; in a &lt;list&gt;, with &lt;name&gt; inside of &lt;item&gt;s.</li>

<li>As a list of author &lt;name&gt;s within &lt;fileDesc&gt;&lt;titleStmt&gt;</li> </ul> </li> <li>In either method, use an id= on the &lt;name&gt; element to uniquely identify the individual participant</li>

<li>Questions and answers from interviewees and interviewers are encoded as &lt;sp&gt;, with speakers identified within &lt;speaker&gt; elements with a who= attribute the value of which corresponds to the id= in the list of interview participants.</li> </ul>

See some examples in context…

Level 4 Verse
<ul> <li>All verse, even poems without separate stanzas or verse paragraphs, should be contained within a       line group element &lt;lg&gt;. This will assist with automated processing and retrieval.</li> <li>It is common to see informal divisions within poems, noted by a string of asterisks or periods. These should be encoded as &lt;milestone/&gt;s with attribute values of unit="typography" and n="" indicating the character used and its occurrence, &lt;milestone unit="typography" n="******"/&gt;.</li>

<li>&lt;l&gt; It is recommended that indentation be recorded and that the rend attribute be       used to do this.</li> </ul>

See some examples in context…

Level 4 Front and Back Matter
<ul> <li>It is recommended that all prefaces, tables of contents, afterwords, appendices, endnotes and apparatus be encoded. For publisher's advertisements, indexes, and glossaries or other front or back matter that isn't considered of primary importance to the text, there are three options:<ul> <li>Fully transcribe and encode</li> <li>Link to page images (may include an unencoded transcription)</li> <li>Omit, noted in &lt;editorialDesc&gt;</li> </ul>

</li> </ul>

See some examples in context…

LEVEL 5: Scholarly Encoding Projects
Level 5 texts are those that require subject knowledge, and encode semantic, linguistic, prosodic or     other elements beyond a basic structural level.

General Guidelines for Attribute Usage
Like divisional markers, attributes should be specified in a hierarchy of order. The rationale for this hierarchy of order is that if you are using procedural scripting languages to transform or manipulate text, it is much easier to have consitent and predictable attribute sequences than not. The basic rule is    that broader and more global information be defined before those attributes that further qualify or     constrict that information: <ul>

<li>Attributes should always be specified in the following order, when present: type=, id=, target=, n=, followed by      all other attributes in alphabetical order, except that rend= is always last.</li> <li>"type": If you are in a situation that requires you to define the "type" of structure you are using, the "type" attribute must always be specified first. The logic behind this follows some basic and yet existential thinking such that a thing cannot really be given an age or individual identity without our first knowing what kind of thing we're talking about. Constructing a list of acceptable attribute values for type that could find wide agreement is impossible. Instead, it is recommended that projects describe the type attribute values used in their texts in the project documentation and that this list be made available to people using the texts. See ABC for Book Collectors by John Carter (7th edition, New Castle, DE:Oak Knoll Books, 1995) for a list of standard names and definitions of      bibliographic features of printed books. For those elements where type is not required, such as      &lt;head&gt; and &lt;title&gt;, use the attribute values for subtitles and additional titles, but not main titles. Example: &lt;div1 type="volume"&gt;</li>

<li>"n": Sometimes a "n" (number) attribute can be used by itself. For instance in the case of      pagebreaks: Example: &lt;pb n="456"&gt;</li> <li>"id": If you are in a situation that requires you to uniquely identify an element that will be used to      reference another specific location in one or more texts Example: &lt;note id="n5" n="5"&gt;</li>

<li>"target": follows the same rules and dictates as the "id" attribute descriptor. In fact, "target" and "id" are often used in conjunction with one another as in the case of footnotes where the &lt;note target="n5" n="5"&gt; points from a specific place in the text to the &lt;note id="n5" n="5"&gt; which contains the actual information of the footnote itself.</li>

<li>"entity": The "entity" attribute is simply the way a figure points or refers to its target name

Example: &lt;figure entity="TwaFifrn"&gt; points to an image with a name and format such as TwaFifrn.jpg.</li>

<li>"rend": While rend is mostly used by itself to describe typographical rendering, there are some cases where it can be listed with other attribute descriptors. And in those cases, "rend" will be      listed last in hierarchic order. Difficulty using rend attributes occurs when it is desirable to record more than one rendition feature. With this in mind, it is recommended that projects employ the following adaptation of "rendition ladders", a concept developed at the Brown University Women Writers Project. This system allows for sets of multiple renditional features to be included in one rend= value. Rendition ladders consist of categories of      renditional features with values of each of those features enclosed in parentheses. rend should only be used to override a default value. For instance, if all text encoded as &lt;hi&gt; is defined as being rendered in italics, there is no reason to encode text as &lt;hi rend="font(italics)"&gt; Combining renditional features would result in an element with attributes such as &lt;l rend="font(italics)align(right)"&gt; </li> <li>font italics, bold, fsc (full and smallcaps), smallcap, underlined, gothic</li> <li>align right, left, center, block</li> <li>indent Values in parentheses should indicate the number of tabstops to be indented, e.g., &lt;l rend="indent(1)"&gt;</li>

<li>lang Use ISO639-2 three-character language codes.</li> </ul> References: