Published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License
Published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License
Published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License
Encoding of this text has followed the recommendations of the LombardPress 1.0.0 guidelines for a diplomatic edition
Created file for the first time.
Created file for the first time
In principio Deus creavit caelumet cetera ``` Recommended indication with `xml:id`: ``` xml Librum sic incipitur
In principio Deus creavit caelumet cetera ``` Use of the `@ana` attribute: ``` xml Librum sic incipitur
In principio Deus creavit caelumet cetera ``` # Punctuation ## pc ### Description `pc` is reserved for the use of marking punctuation characters within the text. ### Rules 1. `pc` **MAY** take a `@type` attribute indicating the type of punctuation that corresponds to the punctuation character inserted as a child text node. * Possible values of the `@type` attribute are: * pilcrow * punctus * punctus-elevatus * punctus-medius * punctus-interrogativus * virgula For now, we recommend a small subset of the many possible punctuation marks are included by the unicode glyph. Any unicode code point can be encoded, but not all media will be able to represent the adequately, so here we include some that are in a standard font set. Names, code points and renderings of the punctuation marks: | Name | Code point | Rend | Note | | ----------|:-------------:|:-----:|:--------------| | pilcrow | U+00B6 | ¶ | | | punctus | U+002E | . | regular full stop | | punctus elevatus | U+003B | ; | regular semi colon | | punctus medius | U+00B7 | · | middle dot | | virgula | U+002F | / | solidus, regular slash | | punctus interrogativus | U+003F | ? | regular question mark | Aficionados for medieval font encoding will find glyphs and font suggestions at http://folk.uib.no/hnooh/mufi/. ### Examples ``` xml
this marginal note
is in the right margin
and spans three lines in the margin
there is a marginal note
in the margin near
this line. And now the text continues.
The word
this is a gloss on the
word fides that spans
three lines
more lines continue
in the margin near
this line. And now the text continues.
Augustine says
the commonwealth is united by a common love
this is still part of the first line of the main text,
Augustine, City of God
and this is then a new line in the main text