PhiloLogic
Contents
- 1 Synopsis
- 2 Features
- 3 User commentary
- 4 System requirements
- 5 Source code and licensing
- 6 Support for TEI
- 7 Language(s)
- 8 Documentation
- 9 Tech support
- 10 User community
- 11 Sample implementations
- 12 Current version number and date of release
- 13 History of versions
- 14 How to download or buy
- 15 Additional notes
Synopsis
From http://philologic.uchicago.edu/manual.php :
"PhiloLogic, developed by the ARTFL Project at the University of Chicago in collaboration with The University of Chicago Library's Electronic Text Services, provides sophisticated searching of a wide variety of large encoded databases on the World Wide Web. It is an easy to use, yet powerful, full-text search, retrieval, and reporting system for large multimedia databases (texts, images, sound) with the ability to understand complex text structures (e.g., SGML, BetaCode) with rich metadata. Its functions were originally designed and continue to be for scholarly research in databases of literary, religious, philosophical, and historical texts.
"This version of PhiloLogic has been developed by the ARTFL Project in collaboration with the University of Chicago Library's Electronic Text Services (ETS). Other versions of PhiloLogic, including those developed for dictionaries and encyclopedias, have somewhat different functionality."
From http://philologic.uchicago.edu/developer.php :
"Originally implemented to support large databases of French literature, PhiloLogic has been extended to support a wide variety of textual and hypermedia databases in collaboration with numerous academic institutions and, more recently, commercial organizations. PhiloLogic is a modular system, in which a textbase is treated as a set of coordinated or related databases, typically including an object (units of text such as a letter, scene, document, etc) database, a word forms database, a word concordance index mapped to textual objects, and an object manager mapping text objects to byte offsets in data files. Each of these databases is stored and managed using its own subsystem."
Features
From http://philologic.uchicago.edu/ :
- light, fast, robust, extensively used and tested
- few dependencies, basic installation almost wholly self-contained
- out of the box operation with many configuration options
- TEI-Lite XML/SGML (and variants such as MEP and CES) with Unicode support
- support for plaintext, Dublin Core/HTML, and DocBook
- MySQL back-end for bibliographic searching
- optional XML-aware or non-XML bibliographic loaders
- interoperability across certain systems
- fault tolerant
- open source
User commentary
Please sign all comments.
System requirements
Runs on Linux or Mac OSX.
Source code and licensing
GNU license
Support for TEI
TEI Lite supported "out of the box"
Language(s)
Documentation is in English.
Documentation
Tech support
User community
http://philologic.uchicago.edu/wiki/index.php/Main_Page
Sample implementations
- http://philologic.uchicago.edu/samples.php
- Philologica Indica et Buddhica: Description - Implementation - Registration
- SARIT: Search and Retrieval of Indic Texts: Basic search - Advanced search - Available texts
Current version number and date of release
3.1 (YYYY-MM-DD)
History of versions
- 3.002 (YYYY-MM-DD)
- 3.001 (YYYY-MM-DD)
- 2.9pre9 (YYYY-MM-DD)
How to download or buy
http://philologic.uchicago.edu/download.php