Difference between revisions of "Third party formatting conventions"

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* For certain well-known Scriptures or their component works, it is often the case (whether in the original rendering and/or in the desired output formatting) that these may be an exception to the application of italics for <title>s. Feel free to expand the listing for the sake of others who might develop a common stylesheet for avoiding the rendering of these titles in italic (granted, one might use @rend, etc. with <title> if the original document made such a formatting distinction, but if not, there should be some common means of specifying that a transformation should make this distinction):
 
* For certain well-known Scriptures or their component works, it is often the case (whether in the original rendering and/or in the desired output formatting) that these may be an exception to the application of italics for <title>s. Feel free to expand the listing for the sake of others who might develop a common stylesheet for avoiding the rendering of these titles in italic (granted, one might use @rend, etc. with <title> if the original document made such a formatting distinction, but if not, there should be some common means of specifying that a transformation should make this distinction):
 
** the (Holy) Bible, the (Noble/Holy) Qur'an, ...
 
** the (Holy) Bible, the (Noble/Holy) Qur'an, ...
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==Add other formatting conventions in separate headings like this...==
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 17:29, 4 March 2008

While stylesheets offers specific stylesheets, this page might host some specific conventions, independent of a specific stylesheet implementation. While not formally associated with TEI, these might be of interest to a wider audience,

Scriptural titles

  • For certain well-known Scriptures or their component works, it is often the case (whether in the original rendering and/or in the desired output formatting) that these may be an exception to the application of italics for <title>s. Feel free to expand the listing for the sake of others who might develop a common stylesheet for avoiding the rendering of these titles in italic (granted, one might use @rend, etc. with <title> if the original document made such a formatting distinction, but if not, there should be some common means of specifying that a transformation should make this distinction):
    • the (Holy) Bible, the (Noble/Holy) Qur'an, ...

Add other formatting conventions in separate headings like this...

See also