Introduction to Markup and the TEI Guidelines
Overview
Overview
Introduction
The steps of a project (really)
For More Information
Document Analysis
What is 'Document Analysis' ?
Why is Document Analysis Essential?
Steps in Document Analysis
Step 1a: Define Your Goals
Step 1b: Identify Relevant Standards
Step 1c: Document Universe
Step 1d: Gathering Samples
Step 2: Define Features
How Big is a Feature?
Principles of Feature Definition
How Many Features?
How Many features?
Choosing a Feature Analysis
Why Identify features at All?
Step 3: Identify Relationships
Step 4: Enrich the Collection
Knowing When to Stop
What is Good Enough?
Document Analysis: Conclusions
Summary of SGML/XML
Markup and SGML/XML Basics
Basic Problems of Markup
Text Encoding
Text, not Pages
Markup
Markup Languages
SGML
Goals of SGML
XML
Goals of XML
Recent developments of XML
Adding Intelligence to Data
Major Features of SGML/XML
Markup within the SGML/XML Document
SGML/XML is not:
SGML/XML Processing Model
Introduction to the TEI
Introduction to the TEI
Where does the TEI come from?
TEI today
Goals of the TEI
TEI Deliverables
TEI DTD Structure
How Many DTDs?
The TEI DTDs
The Pizza Model (XML version)
User View of the TEI DTD
Selecting Tag Sets
Element Classes
Modifying the TEI DTD
Ordering a DTD from the Pizza-Chef
TEI Lite
TEI Lite
The Structure(s) of a TEI text
TEI Structures Summarized
Text divisions
Global Attributes
Text 'components'
Phrase level elements include...
Boundary Points
Notes and Cross References
Extended Pointers
(Not in TEILite, but...) XML Pointers
Lists
Bibliographic References
Character Encoding Recommendations
The TEI Header
The File Description contains...
The Encoding Description contains...
The Profile Description contains...
Tagging Texts
Tagging Texts
Starting a new document
For example with Emacs and PSGML
Tagging an existing document
The TEI Header
Applying specific tags
Appendix
Acknowledgments
How this document was created