正文後資訊
正文前資訊
- Title
 - i. Releases of the TEI Guidelines
 - ii. Dedication
 - iii. Preface and Acknowledgments
 
iv. About These Guidelines
v. A Gentle Introduction to XML- v.1. What's special about XML?
 - v.2. Textual structures
 - v.3. XML structures
 - v.4. Complicating the issue
 - v.5. Attributes
 - v.6. Other components of an XML document
 - v.7. Putting it all together
 

vi. Languages and Character Sets- vi.1. Language identification
 -   vi.2. Characters and Character Sets
- Historical considerations
 - Terminology and key concepts
 - Abstract characters, glyphs and encoding scheme design
 - Entry of characters.
 - Output of characters
 - Unicode and XML
 - Special aspects of Unicode character definitions
 - Character entities in non-validated documents
 - Issues arising from the internal representations of Unicode
 
 
正文

 1 The TEI Infrastructure- 1.1 TEI Modules
 -    1.2 Defining a TEI Schema
- 1.2.1 A Simple Customization
 - 1.2.2 A Larger Customization
 
 -    1.3 The TEI Class System
-   1.3.1 Attribute Classes
- 1.3.1.1 Global Attributes
 
 -   1.3.2 Model Classes
- 1.3.2.1 Informal element classifications
 
 
 -   1.3.1 Attribute Classes
 -    1.4 Macros
- 1.4.1 Standard Content Models
 - 1.4.2 Datatype Macros
 
 - 1.5 The TEI Infrastructure Module
 

 2 The TEI Header- 2.1 Organization of the TEI Header
 -    2.2 The File Description
- 2.2.1 The Title Statement
 - 2.2.2 The Edition Statement
 - 2.2.3 Type and Extent of File
 - 2.2.4 Publication, Distribution, Licencing, etc.
 - 2.2.5 The Series Statement
 - 2.2.6 The Notes Statement
 - 2.2.7 The Source Description
 - 2.2.8 Computer Files Derived from Other Computer Files
 
 -    2.3 The Encoding Description
- 2.3.1 The Project Description
 - 2.3.2 The Sampling Declaration
 - 2.3.3 The Editorial Practices Declaration
 - 2.3.4 The Tagging Declaration
 - 2.3.5 The default style definition language declaration
 -   2.3.6 The Reference System Declaration
- 2.3.6.1 Prose Method
 - 2.3.6.2 Search-and-Replace Method
 - 2.3.6.3 Milestone Method
 
 - 2.3.7 The Classification Declaration
 - 2.3.8 The Geographic Coordinates Declaration
 - 2.3.9 The Schema Specification
 - 2.3.10 The Application Information Element
 - 2.3.11 Module-Specific Declarations
 
 -    2.4 The Profile Description
- 2.4.1 Creation
 - 2.4.2 Language Usage
 - 2.4.3 The Text Classification
 - 2.4.4 Calendar Description
 
 - 2.5 The Revision Description
 - 2.6 Minimal and Recommended Headers
 - 2.7 Note for Library Cataloguers
 - 2.8 The TEI Header Module
 

 3 Elements Available in All TEI Documents- 3.1 Paragraphs
 -    3.2 Treatment of Punctuation
- 3.2.1 Functions of Punctuation
 - 3.2.2 Hyphenation
 
 -    3.3 Highlighting and Quotation
- 3.3.1 What Is Highlighting?
 -   3.3.2 Emphasis, Foreign Words, and Unusual Language
- 3.3.2.1 Foreign Words or Expressions
 - 3.3.2.2 Emphatic Words and Phrases
 - 3.3.2.3 Other Linguistically Distinct Material
 
 - 3.3.3 Quotation
 - 3.3.4 Terms, Glosses, Equivalents, and Descriptions
 - 3.3.5 Some Further Examples
 
 - 3.4 Simple Editorial Changes
 -    3.5 Names, Numbers, Dates, Abbreviations, and Addresses
- 3.5.1 Referring Strings
 - 3.5.2 Addresses
 - 3.5.3 Numbers and Measures
 - 3.5.4 Dates and Times
 - 3.5.5 Abbreviations and Their Expansions
 
 - 3.6 Simple Links and Cross-References
 - 3.7 Lists
 -    3.8 Notes, Annotation, and Indexing
- 3.8.1 Notes and Simple Annotation
 -   3.8.2 Index Entries
- 3.8.2.1 Pre-existing indexes
 - 3.8.2.2 Auto-generated indexes
 
 
 - 3.9 Graphics and other non-textual components
 -    3.10 Reference Systems
- 3.10.1 Using the xml:id and n Attributes
 - 3.10.2 Creating New Reference Systems
 - 3.10.3 Milestone Elements
 - 3.10.4 Declaring Reference Systems
 
 -    3.11 Bibliographic Citations and References
- 3.11.1 Elements of Bibliographic References
 -   3.11.2 Components of Bibliographic References
- 3.11.2.1 Analytic, Monographic, and Series Levels
 - 3.11.2.2 Authors, Titles, and Editors
 - 3.11.2.3 Imprint, Pagination, and Other Details
 - 3.11.2.4 Series Information
 - 3.11.2.5 Related items
 - 3.11.2.6 Notes, Languages, and Other Additional Information
 - 3.11.2.7 Order of Components within References
 
 - 3.11.3 Bibliographic Pointers
 - 3.11.4 Relationship to Other Bibliographic Schemes
 
 -    3.12 Passages of Verse or Drama
- 3.12.1 Core Tags for Verse
 - 3.12.2 Core Tags for Drama
 
 - 3.13 Overview of the Core Module
 

 4 Default Text Structure-    4.1 Divisions of the Body
- 4.1.1 Un-numbered Divisions
 - 4.1.2 Numbered Divisions
 - 4.1.3 Numbered or Un-numbered?
 - 4.1.4 Partial and Composite Divisions
 
 -    4.2 Elements Common to All Divisions
- 4.2.1 Headings and Trailers
 - 4.2.2 Openers and Closers
 - 4.2.3 Arguments, Epigraphs, and Postscripts
 - 4.2.4 Content of Textual Divisions
 
 -    4.3 Grouped and Floating Texts
- 4.3.1 Grouped Texts
 - 4.3.2 Floating Texts
 
 - 4.4 Virtual Divisions
 - 4.5 Front Matter
 - 4.6 Title Pages
 - 4.7 Back Matter
 - 4.8 Module for Default Text Structure
 
-    4.1 Divisions of the Body
 
 5 Representation of Non-standard Characters and Glyphs
 6 Verse
 7 Performance Texts-    7.1 Front and Back Matter
 
- 7.1.1 The Set Element
 - 7.1.2 Prologues and Epilogues
 - 7.1.3 Records of Performances
 - 7.1.4 Cast Lists
 
 -    7.2 The Body of a Performance Text
- 7.2.1 Major Structural Divisions
 - 7.2.2 Speeches and Speakers
 - 7.2.3 Grouped speeches
 - 7.2.4 Stage Directions
 - 7.2.5 Speech Contents
 - 7.2.6 Embedded Structures
 - 7.2.7 Simultaneous Action
 
 -    7.3 Other Types of Performance Text
- 7.3.1 Technical Information
 
 - 7.4 Module for Performance Texts
 
-    7.1 Front and Back Matter
 
 
 8 Transcriptions of Speech- 8.1 General Considerations and Overview
 - 8.2 Documenting the Source of Transcribed Speech
 -    8.3 Elements Unique to Spoken Texts
- 8.3.1 Utterances
 - 8.3.2 Pausing
 - 8.3.3 Vocal, Kinesic, Incident
 - 8.3.4 Writing
 - 8.3.5 Temporal Information
 - 8.3.6 Shifts
 
 -    8.4 Elements Defined Elsewhere
- 8.4.1 Segmentation
 - 8.4.2 Synchronization and Overlap
 - 8.4.3 Regularization of Word Forms
 - 8.4.4 Prosody
 - 8.4.5 Speech Management
 - 8.4.6 Analytic Coding
 
 - 8.5 Module for Transcribed Speech
 

 9 Dictionaries- 9.1 Dictionary Body and Overall Structure
 -    9.2 The Structure of Dictionary Entries
- 9.2.1 Hierarchical Levels
 - 9.2.2 Groups and Constituents
 
 -    9.3 Top-level Constituents of Entries
- 9.3.1 Information on Written and Spoken Forms
 - 9.3.2 Grammatical Information
 -   9.3.3 Sense Information
- 9.3.3.1 Definitions
 - 9.3.3.2 Translation Equivalents
 
 - 9.3.4 Etymological Information
 -   9.3.5 Other Information
- 9.3.5.1 Examples
 - 9.3.5.2 Usage Information and Other Labels
 - 9.3.5.3 Cross-References to Other Entries
 - 9.3.5.4 Notes within Entries
 
 - 9.3.6 Related Entries
 
 - 9.4 Headword and Pronunciation References
 -    9.5 Typographic and Lexical Information in Dictionary Data
- 9.5.1 Editorial View
 - 9.5.2 Lexical View
 - 9.5.3 Retaining Both Views
 
 - 9.6 Unstructured Entries
 - 9.7 The Dictionary Module
 

10 Manuscript Description- 10.1 Overview
 - 10.2 The Manuscript Description Element
 -   10.3 Phrase-level Elements
- 10.3.1 Origination
 - 10.3.2 Material and object type
 - 10.3.3 Watermarks and Stamps
 - 10.3.4 Dimensions
 -   10.3.5 References to Locations within a Manuscript
- 10.3.5.1 Identifying a location
 - 10.3.5.2 Linking a location to a transcription or an image
 - 10.3.5.3 Using multiple location schemes
 
 - 10.3.6 Names of Persons, Places, and Organizations
 - 10.3.7 Catchwords, Signatures, Secundo Folio
 - 10.3.8 Heraldry
 
 - 10.4 The Manuscript Identifier
 - 10.5 The Manuscript Heading
 -   10.6 Intellectual Content
- 10.6.1 The msItem and msItemStruct Elements
 - 10.6.2 Authors and Titles
 - 10.6.3 Rubrics, Incipits, Explicits, and Other Quotations from the Text
 - 10.6.4 Filiation
 - 10.6.5 Text Classification
 - 10.6.6 Languages and Writing Systems
 
 -   10.7 Physical Description
- 10.7.1 Object Description
 -   10.7.2 Writing, Decoration, and Other Notations
- 10.7.2.1 Writing
 - 10.7.2.2 Decoration
 - 10.7.2.3 Musical Notation
 - 10.7.2.4 Additions and Marginalia
 
 -   10.7.3 Bindings, Seals, and Additional Material
- 10.7.3.1 Binding Descriptions
 - 10.7.3.2 Seals
 - 10.7.3.3 Accompanying Material
 
 
 - 10.8 History
 -   10.9 Additional information
-   10.9.1 Administrative information
- 10.9.1.1 Record History
 - 10.9.1.2 Availability and Custodial History
 
 - 10.9.2 Surrogates
 
 -   10.9.1 Administrative information
 - 10.10 Manuscript Parts
 - 10.11 Module for Manuscription Description
 

11 Representation of Primary Sources- 11.1 Digital Facsimiles
 -   11.2 Combining Transcription with Facsimile
- 11.2.1 Parallel Transcription
 - 11.2.2 Embedded Transcription
 
 -   11.3 Scope of Transcriptions
-   11.3.1 Altered, Corrected, and Erroneous Texts
- 11.3.1.1 Core elements for Transcriptional Work
 - 11.3.1.2 Abbreviation and Expansion
 - 11.3.1.3 Correction and Conjecture
 - 11.3.1.4 Additions and Deletions
 - 11.3.1.5 Substitutions
 - 11.3.1.6 Cancellation of Deletions and Other Markings
 - 11.3.1.7 Text Omitted from or Supplied in the Transcription
 
 -   11.3.2 Hands and Responsibility
- 11.3.2.1 Document Hands
 - 11.3.2.2 Hand, Responsibility, and Certainty Attributes
 
 - 11.3.3 Damage and Conjecture
 -   11.3.4 Marking up the Writing Process
- 11.3.4.1 Generic Modification
 - 11.3.4.2 Metamarks
 - 11.3.4.3 Fixation and Clarification
 - 11.3.4.4 Confirmation, Cancellation, and Reinstatement of Modifications
 - 11.3.4.5 Transpositions
 - 11.3.4.6 Alternative Readings
 - 11.3.4.7 Instant Corrections
 
 
 -   11.3.1 Altered, Corrected, and Erroneous Texts
 - 11.4 Advanced uses of Surface and Zone
 - 11.5 Aspects of Layout
 - 11.6 Headers, Footers, and Similar Matter
 - 11.7 Changes
 - 11.8 Other Primary Source Features not Covered in these Guidelines
 - 11.9 Module for Transcription of Primary Sources
 

12 Critical Apparatus-   12.1 The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses
- 12.1.1 The Apparatus Entry
 - 12.1.2 Readings
 - 12.1.3 Indicating Subvariation in Apparatus Entries
 -   12.1.4 Witness Information
- 12.1.4.1 Witness Detail Information
 - 12.1.4.2 Witness Information in the Source
 - 12.1.4.3 The Witness List
 
 - 12.1.5 Fragmentary Witnesses
 
 -   12.2 Linking the Apparatus to the Text
- 12.2.1 The Location-referenced Method
 - 12.2.2 The Double End-Point Attachment Method
 - 12.2.3 The Parallel Segmentation Method
 - 12.2.4 Other Linking Methods
 
 - 12.3 Using Apparatus Elements in Transcriptions
 - 12.4 Module for Critical Apparatus
 
-   12.1 The Apparatus Entry, Readings, and Witnesses
 
13 Names, Dates, People, and Places-   13.1 Attribute Classes Defined by this
Module
- 13.1.1 Linking Names and their Referents
 - 13.1.2 Dating Attributes
 
 -   13.2 Names
- 13.2.1 Personal Names
 - 13.2.2 Organizational Names
 -   13.2.3 Place Names
- 13.2.3.1 Geo-political Place Names
 - 13.2.3.2 Geographic Names
 - 13.2.3.3 Relative Place Names
 
 
 -   13.3 Biographical and Prosopographical Data
- 13.3.1 Basic Principles
 -   13.3.2 The Person Element
- 13.3.2.1 Personal Characteristics
 - 13.3.2.2 Personal Events
 - 13.3.2.3 Personal Relationships
 
 - 13.3.3 Organizational Data
 -   13.3.4 Places
- 13.3.4.1 Varieties of Location
 - 13.3.4.2 Multiple Places
 - 13.3.4.3 States, Traits, and Events
 - 13.3.4.4 Relations Between Places
 
 - 13.3.5 Names and Nyms
 -   13.3.6 Dates and Times
- 13.3.6.1 Relative Dates and Times
 - 13.3.6.2 Absolute Dates and Times
 - 13.3.6.3 More Expressive Normalizations
 
 
 - 13.4 Module for Names and Dates
 
-   13.1 Attribute Classes Defined by this
Module
 
14 Tables, Formulæ, Graphics and Notated Music-   14.1 Tables
- 14.1.1 TEI Tables
 - 14.1.2 Other Table Schemas
 
 - 14.2 Formulæ and Mathematical Expressions
 - 14.3 Notated music in written text
 - 14.4 Specific Elements for Graphic Images
 - 14.5 Overview of Basic Graphics Concepts
 -   14.6 Graphic Image Formats
- 14.6.1 Vector Graphic Formats
 - 14.6.2 Raster Graphic Formats
 - 14.6.3 Photographic and Motion Video Formats
 
 - 14.7 Module for Tables, Formulæ, Notated Music, and Graphics
 
-   14.1 Tables
 
15 Language Corpora- 15.1 Varieties of Composite Text
 -   15.2 Contextual Information
- 15.2.1 The Text Description
 - 15.2.2 The Participant Description
 - 15.2.3 The Setting Description
 
 -   15.3 Associating Contextual
Information with a Text
- 15.3.1 Combining Corpus and Text Headers
 - 15.3.2 Declarable Elements
 - 15.3.3 Summary
 
 -   15.4 Linguistic Annotation of Corpora
- 15.4.1 Levels of Analysis
 
 - 15.5 Recommendations for the Encoding of Large Corpora
 - 15.6 Module for Language Corpora
 

16 Linking, Segmentation, and Alignment-   16.1 Links
- 16.1.1 Pointers and Links
 - 16.1.2 Using Pointers and Links
 - 16.1.3 Groups of Links
 - 16.1.4 Intermediate Pointers
 
 -   16.2 Pointing Mechanisms
- 16.2.1 Pointing Elsewhere
 - 16.2.2 Pointing Locally
 - 16.2.3 W3C element() Scheme
 -   16.2.4 TEI XPointer Schemes
- 16.2.4.1 Introduction to TEI Pointers
 - 16.2.4.2 xpath1(Expr)
 - 16.2.4.3 left() and right()
 - 16.2.4.4 range()
 - 16.2.4.5 string-range(fragmentIdentifier, offset [, length])
 - 16.2.4.6 match(fragmentIdentifier, string [, index])
 
 -   16.2.5 Canonical References
- 16.2.5.1 Worked Example
 - 16.2.5.2 Complete and Partial URI Examples
 - 16.2.5.3 Miscellaneous Usages
 
 
 - 16.3 Blocks, Segments, and Anchors
 -   16.4 Correspondence and Alignment
- 16.4.1 Correspondence
 - 16.4.2 Alignment of Parallel Texts
 - 16.4.3 A Three-way Alignment
 
 - 16.5 Synchronization
 - 16.6 Identical Elements and Virtual Copies
 - 16.7 Aggregation
 - 16.8 Alternation
 -   16.9 Stand-off Markup
- 16.9.1 Introduction
 - 16.9.2 Overview of XInclude
 - 16.9.3 Stand-off Markup in TEI
 - 16.9.4 Well-formedness and Validity of Stand-off Markup
 - 16.9.5 Including Text or XML Fragments
 
 - 16.10 Connecting Analytic and Textual Markup
 - 16.11 Module for Linking, Segmentation, and Alignment
 
-   16.1 Links
 
17 Simple Analytic Mechanisms
18 Feature Structures- 18.1 Organization of this Chapter
 - 18.2 Elementary Feature Structures and the Binary Feature Value
 - 18.3 Other Atomic Feature Values
 - 18.4 Feature Libraries and Feature-Value Libraries
 - 18.5 Feature Structures as Complex Feature Values
 - 18.6 Re-entrant Feature Structures
 - 18.7 Collections as Complex Feature Values
 -   18.8 Feature Value Expressions
- 18.8.1 Alternation
 - 18.8.2 Negation
 - 18.8.3 Collection of Values
 
 - 18.9 Default Values
 - 18.10 Linking Text and Analysis
 -   18.11 Feature System Declaration
- 18.11.1 Linking a TEI Text to Feature System Declarations
 - 18.11.2 The Overall Structure of a Feature System Declaration
 - 18.11.3 Feature Declarations
 - 18.11.4 Feature Structure Constraints
 - 18.11.5 A Complete Example
 
 - 18.12 Formal Definition and Implementation
 

19 Graphs, Networks, and Trees-   19.1 Graphs and Digraphs
- 19.1.1 Transition Networks
 - 19.1.2 Family Trees
 - 19.1.3 Historical Interpretation
 
 - 19.2 Trees
 - 19.3 Another Tree Notation
 - 19.4 Representing Textual Transmission
 - 19.5 Module for Graphs, Networks, and Trees
 
-   19.1 Graphs and Digraphs
 
20 Non-hierarchical Structures
21 Certainty, Precision, and Responsibility-   21.1 Levels of Certainty
- 21.1.1 Using Notes to Record Uncertainty
 -   21.1.2 Structured Indications of Uncertainty
- 21.1.2.1 Contingent conditions
 - 21.1.2.2 Pervasive conditions
 - 21.1.2.3 Content uncertainty
 - 21.1.2.4 Target or Match?
 
 
 - 21.2 Indications of Precision
 - 21.3 Attribution of Responsibility
 - 21.4 The Certainty Module
 
-   21.1 Levels of Certainty
 
22 Documentation Elements-   22.1 Phrase Level Documentary
Elements
- 22.1.1 Phrase Level Terms
 - 22.1.2 Element and Attribute Descriptions
 
 - 22.2 Modules and Schemas
 - 22.3 Specification Elements
 -   22.4 Common Elements
- 22.4.1 Description of Components
 - 22.4.2 Exemplification of Components
 - 22.4.3 Classification of Components
 -   22.4.4 Element Specifications
- 22.4.4.1 Content models
 - 22.4.4.2 Additional constraints
 
 -   22.4.5 Attribute List Specification
- 22.4.5.1 Datatypes
 - 22.4.5.2 Value Specification
 - 22.4.5.3 Examples
 
 - 22.4.6 Element Classes
 - 22.4.7 Pattern Documentation
 
 - 22.5 Building a Schema
 - 22.6 Combining TEI and Non-TEI Modules
 - 22.7 Linking Schemas to XML Documents
 - 22.8 Module for Documention Elements
 
-   22.1 Phrase Level Documentary
Elements
 
23 Using the TEI- 23.1 Serving TEI files with the TEI media type
 - 23.2 Obtaining the TEI Schemas
 -   23.3 Personalization and Customization
-   23.3.1 Kinds of Modification
- 23.3.1.1 Deletion of Elements
 - 23.3.1.2 Renaming of Elements
 - 23.3.1.3 Modification of Content Models
 - 23.3.1.4 Modification of Attribute and Attribute Value Lists
 - 23.3.1.5 Class Modification
 - 23.3.1.6 Addition of New Elements
 
 - 23.3.2 Modification and Namespaces
 - 23.3.3 Documenting the Modification
 - 23.3.4 Examples of Modification
 
 -   23.3.1 Kinds of Modification
 -   23.4 Conformance
- 23.4.1 Well-formedness criterion
 - 23.4.2 Validation Constraint
 -   23.4.3 Conformance to the TEI Abstract Model
- 23.4.3.1 Semantic Constraints
 - 23.4.3.2 Mandatory Components of a TEI Document
 
 - 23.4.4 Use of the TEI Namespace
 - 23.4.5 Documentation Constraint
 - 23.4.6 Varieties of TEI Conformance
 
 -   23.5 Implementation of an ODD System
- 23.5.1 Making a Unified ODD
 - 23.5.2 Generating Schemas
 - 23.5.3 Names and Documentation in Generated Schemas
 - 23.5.4 Making a RELAX NG Schema
 - 23.5.5 Making a DTD
 - 23.5.6 Generating Documentation
 -   23.5.7 Using TEI Parameterized Schema Fragments
- 23.5.7.1 Selection of Modules
 - 23.5.7.2 Inclusion and Exclusion of Elements
 - 23.5.7.3 Changing the Names of Generic Identifiers
 - 23.5.7.4 Embedding Local Modifications (DTD only)
 
 
 
