Difference between revisions of "TEI Journal Encoding Package"

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(Created page with " == What is this? == == Who is it for? == == How do I use it? == == Who do I complain to? ==")
 
(What is this?)
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== What is this? ==
 
== What is this? ==
  
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Since the beginning of the Journal of the Text Encoding Initiative, article submissions have been accepted in TEI XML. However, since everyone's notion of how journal articles should be encoded in TEI is completely different, and the TEI Guidelines provide many different ways of encoding similar textual features, no two submissions have ever really resembled each other much, and every XML submission has needed substantial initial work to turn it into something our reviewers and copyeditors can work with.
  
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The solution to this is, obviously, a constrained schema, and that's what this is, basically. The downloadable package includes a RelaxNG schema and an additional Schematron schema, which, in combination, provide a relatively simple and robust set of encoding rules for submitting TEI documents to the journal.
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However, it's a little bit more than that. We've framed it in the form of an Oxygen project, which means that, if you're using Oxygen and you follow the basic instructions, you should be able to see, while you're encoding, a helpful CSS-based "author" view of the document, and also generate a word-processor version (in Open Document Format) for easy proofing.
  
 
== Who is it for? ==
 
== Who is it for? ==

Revision as of 21:27, 8 September 2014

What is this?

Since the beginning of the Journal of the Text Encoding Initiative, article submissions have been accepted in TEI XML. However, since everyone's notion of how journal articles should be encoded in TEI is completely different, and the TEI Guidelines provide many different ways of encoding similar textual features, no two submissions have ever really resembled each other much, and every XML submission has needed substantial initial work to turn it into something our reviewers and copyeditors can work with.

The solution to this is, obviously, a constrained schema, and that's what this is, basically. The downloadable package includes a RelaxNG schema and an additional Schematron schema, which, in combination, provide a relatively simple and robust set of encoding rules for submitting TEI documents to the journal.

However, it's a little bit more than that. We've framed it in the form of an Oxygen project, which means that, if you're using Oxygen and you follow the basic instructions, you should be able to see, while you're encoding, a helpful CSS-based "author" view of the document, and also generate a word-processor version (in Open Document Format) for easy proofing.

Who is it for?

How do I use it?

Who do I complain to?